Dream House

FULL LENGTH - Life has been relatively easy for West, a 27 year old RISD graduate, who has just spent the past seven years of his life working as a customer service rep at an online banking company, that is until a collapse at work and subsequent diagnosis puts an expiration date on West’s life. Shocked by the news, West quits his job and moves back to semi-rural North Hampton, Massachusetts, back to his...

FULL LENGTH - Life has been relatively easy for West, a 27 year old RISD graduate, who has just spent the past seven years of his life working as a customer service rep at an online banking company, that is until a collapse at work and subsequent diagnosis puts an expiration date on West’s life. Shocked by the news, West quits his job and moves back to semi-rural North Hampton, Massachusetts, back to his estranged mother’s home. West enlists the help of his childhood, stoner-chick, friend Sammy, and sets out to build the tree house of his dreams, the one he started with his missing father, the first project in a slew of unfinished projects before time runs out. Excited about her son’s return, but struck with deep financial debt, Elyse, West’s mother, seeks guidance from her hippie Rabbi sister Diane, as they try to unearth the mystery behind West’s behavior, hoping he could bring the relief she needs. But when West’s symptoms grow too severe and expose his secret, he must not only face his devastated mother, but her secrets as well.

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Dream House

Recommended by

  • Matt Harmon: Dream House

    Seinuk has a profound ability to make the audience invest so wholly in her characters. Everything about this play is simultaneously heartbreaking and hopeful. As we watch West grapple with what he has left unfinished and unknown, we reflect on our own experiences and, after the lights go down, resolve to set things right. Theaters everywhere should be producing Seinuk's work, for its depiction of the human spirit and its lessons audiences can take away.

    Seinuk has a profound ability to make the audience invest so wholly in her characters. Everything about this play is simultaneously heartbreaking and hopeful. As we watch West grapple with what he has left unfinished and unknown, we reflect on our own experiences and, after the lights go down, resolve to set things right. Theaters everywhere should be producing Seinuk's work, for its depiction of the human spirit and its lessons audiences can take away.

  • Kevin Cirone: Dream House

    Poignant trip into the mind of someone struggling with his life's purpose and the things that have gotten in the way. Participated as part of New Repertory Theatre's Next Voices program and would love to see it get on its feet in the future.

    Poignant trip into the mind of someone struggling with his life's purpose and the things that have gotten in the way. Participated as part of New Repertory Theatre's Next Voices program and would love to see it get on its feet in the future.

  • Bridget O'Leary: Dream House

    This play was developed as part of New Repertory Theatre's Next Voices program. It is a beautiful, complex look at the pursuit of happiness and the things that get in the way from us being who we want to be. The play is both heart breaking and very funny. I love the use of the "greek chorus" throughout the play. Cassie is a terrific writer who investigates inner demons, fear and identity. This play encompasses all of those things.

    This play was developed as part of New Repertory Theatre's Next Voices program. It is a beautiful, complex look at the pursuit of happiness and the things that get in the way from us being who we want to be. The play is both heart breaking and very funny. I love the use of the "greek chorus" throughout the play. Cassie is a terrific writer who investigates inner demons, fear and identity. This play encompasses all of those things.

Character Information

This play has Chorus. Everyone except West is in the Chorus. CHORUS A (Elyse), B (Diane), D (Joe), and E (Sammy). They are sometimes fluid. Sometimes sharp. Sometimes Mass Effect. Sometimes real. CHORUS D, unless otherwise described, should be a projection of West's father Joe, hippie and woodsy and free.
  • West
    Studied design but got cozy in a day job, on the quiet side, introspective, good looking but maybe not aware of it. He should be in his physical peek. When WEST says nothing he says a lot in the nothing.
    Character Age
    27
    Character Race/Ethnic Identity
    Jewish
    Character Gender Identity
    Male
  • Elyse
    WEST's mom. She's overbearing, knows it, but denies it. Holds a secret too big for her which can make her a bit dizzy
    Character Age
    50s
    Character Race/Ethnic Identity
    Jewish
    Character Gender Identity
    Female
  • Diane
    Elyse's younger sister, and West's "Aunt Diane." A hip Lesbian renewal Rabbi. A bit of a meddler.
    Character Age
    40s-50s
    Character Race/Ethnic Identity
    Jewish
  • Sammy
    West's best and oldest friend, a stoner, joker, looking for more but you'd never know it. Should be ethnically ambiguous.
    Character Age
    27
    Character Race/Ethnic Identity
    Any
    Character Gender Identity
    Female
  • Doctor/Joe
    DOCTOR: Thinks he has a good sense of humor despite the bleak news he often has to give.
    JOE: West's father. He carries himself with the spirit of a sprite twenty something, he's excited by life, but also distracted. He appears as West would remember him. He's a woodsy hippy type.
    Character Age
    30s-40s
    Character Gender Identity
    Male

Development History

  • Type Reading, Organization The Nora Theatre Company, Year 2018
  • Type Reading, Organization Interim Writers Accomplice Writers' Group, Year 2014
  • Type Reading, Organization Sanctuary Playwrights Theatre, Year 2014

Awards

  • The Dr. R.J. Rodriguez Emerging Playwrights Contest
    Playhouse Creatures Theatre Company
    Finalist
    2018
  • Mass Cultural Council Artist Fellowship
    Mass Cultural Council
    2017