Old Familiar Faces
by Nat Cassidy
Nominated for the 2014 New York Innovative Theatre Award for Outstanding Full Length Script.
"Where are they gone, the old familiar faces?" In 1786, author Mary Lamb commits a horrifying act of bloodshed and she and her brother Charles must learn to survive. In 2013, a talented man refuses to compromise and his brilliant lover must learn to evolve. The only place in which these four people are able to find a...
Nominated for the 2014 New York Innovative Theatre Award for Outstanding Full Length Script.
"Where are they gone, the old familiar faces?" In 1786, author Mary Lamb commits a horrifying act of bloodshed and she and her brother Charles must learn to survive. In 2013, a talented man refuses to compromise and his brilliant lover must learn to evolve. The only place in which these four people are able to find a little sanity is the madness of Shakespeare. OLD FAMILIAR FACES is a heartbreaking, time-jumping drama about four lives, bound by obsession, rocked by madness, and saved by blank verse. Based on the true life story of Charles and Mary Lamb, interwoven with a contemporary American "adaptation" of the true romance between Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh.
******PRESS: "[A] wise and moving new play ... The play enacts some of the most tender connections and most honest and aware accounts of mental illness and disintegrating relationships I’ve ever seen ... As heartbreaking as anything in the theatrical canon." - Adam McGovern, Fanchild.
"[M]agical ... [Shakespeare's] verse is so beautifully illuminated by Cassidy’s storytelling, knowledge of Shakespeare is not a pre-requisite for enjoying the show. ... [S]o poetic, so full of insight and understanding, so much brilliance on stage." - Sarah Tuft, Usher Nonsense
"Brimming with acerbic wit ... Ingenious ... The counterpoint here is spectacular, not to mention ballsy. It takes a lot of nerve for a playwright to put his own text right next to – literally – the greatest words ever written for the theater. Cassidy pulls it off, mostly thanks to the dry sense of humor sneaking through the piece and giving it mischievous life." - Mitch Montgomery, Surreal Time Press.
"Cassidy [is] a seismic talent ... He is a craftsman of the stage, and earns one’s trust from the start. ... I can’t imagine another contemporary playwright who would think to use the slang, insults, and bawdy humor of Shakespeare as a way to inform the inner and outer lives of his non-Shakespearean characters. It’s a gutsy move characteristic of Cassidy, and one that perhaps only he could pull off successfully." - Nathaniel Kressen, nytheatre.com.
"Impressionistic, funny and personal ... Gorgeously written." - Susyanne Dottino, Show Business Weekly | "This new play reinvents and thrills. ... Cassidy weaves an ornate tapestry full of little gems of searing humor, haunting violence, deep regret, and profound love. ... Cassidy's language envelops you. At times, it is reminiscent of Christopher Durang and even Tony Kushner. One moment you are laughing hysterically and the next you are questioning everything you know." - Shawna Cormier, Theatre is Easy.
"Combining quotations from Shakespeare and his own blank verse, Cassidy presents us with much that is beautiful and moving. To combine his own writing with Shakespeare's takes, what?, daring, courage, ego, balls? But Cassidy pulls it off, and the play is an aural pleasure." - Wendy Caster, Show Showdown.
"We’re nearing the point that when Nat Cassidy is in something or writes something or produces something, we just show up without needing any further information." - Maxamoo
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