SICKLE

by Abbey Fenbert

Stalin’s man-made famine rages against the Ukrainian peasantry. Nadya, an idealistic young communist, is assigned to helm a small village’s collective farm. When she walks into a pastoral apocalypse, she must question everything she believes about the world.

Stalin’s man-made famine rages against the Ukrainian peasantry. Nadya, an idealistic young communist, is assigned to helm a small village’s collective farm. When she walks into a pastoral apocalypse, she must question everything she believes about the world.

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SICKLE

Recommended by

  • Cheryl Bear: SICKLE

    A fascinating and rich play that tells the story of a heartbreaking experience where hope and strength continue on through the worst. Well done.

    A fascinating and rich play that tells the story of a heartbreaking experience where hope and strength continue on through the worst. Well done.

  • Victor Lesniewski: SICKLE

    Abbey writes fascinating self-contained little worlds whose rules slowly, and often devastatingly, reveal themselves over time. This piece is no different, merging both history and her own unique voice. It is both darkly comic and irreverent. And let's not forget: devastating.

    Abbey writes fascinating self-contained little worlds whose rules slowly, and often devastatingly, reveal themselves over time. This piece is no different, merging both history and her own unique voice. It is both darkly comic and irreverent. And let's not forget: devastating.

  • Jacob Juntunen: SICKLE

    I had the pleasure of seeing SICKLE at Red Theatre in Chicago. Fenbert takes on a difficult, important topic, but does so through skillful characterization and plotting rather than didactic docudrama. The fact that she does so with an all female cast makes the play that much more commendable. But what I'm going to take away from the play is its realistic portrayal of these people in an impossible situation. Fenbert finds a way to make a satisfying script out of an unbearable topic, with sardonic humor, a Slavic sensibility, and politics based in human beings' suffering.

    I had the pleasure of seeing SICKLE at Red Theatre in Chicago. Fenbert takes on a difficult, important topic, but does so through skillful characterization and plotting rather than didactic docudrama. The fact that she does so with an all female cast makes the play that much more commendable. But what I'm going to take away from the play is its realistic portrayal of these people in an impossible situation. Fenbert finds a way to make a satisfying script out of an unbearable topic, with sardonic humor, a Slavic sensibility, and politics based in human beings' suffering.

View all 5 recommendations

Development History

  • Type Reading, Organization Playwrights' Center of Minneapolis, Year 2016
  • Type Workshop, Organization Boston Playwrights' Theatre, Year 2014

Production History

  • Type Professional, Organization Red Theatre Chicago, Year 2018
  • Type Workshop, Organization Boston Playwrights' Theatre, Year 2015

Awards

  • National Playwrights Conference
    O'Neill Theater Center
    Finalist
    2016