Recommendations of The Interrobangers

  • Evan Turissini: The Interrobangers

    If you're a theatre that is scratching your head over finding productions to program to attract much sought after millennial/older Gen Z audience members, Sloth Levine has gift-wrapped the solution and laid it in your lap.

    The characters are engaging and distinct right from the get-go. The concepts are complex, heartfelt, and thoughtfully explored but the dialogue never feels stilted. Reading the stage directions from the perspective of a designer, director, or actor makes you feel like a kid in a candy store.

    If you're a theatre that is scratching your head over finding productions to program to attract much sought after millennial/older Gen Z audience members, Sloth Levine has gift-wrapped the solution and laid it in your lap.

    The characters are engaging and distinct right from the get-go. The concepts are complex, heartfelt, and thoughtfully explored but the dialogue never feels stilted. Reading the stage directions from the perspective of a designer, director, or actor makes you feel like a kid in a candy store.

  • Nick Malakhow: The Interrobangers

    Sloth Levine has a knack for creating fantastical worlds that incorporate, illuminate, and interrogate queerness in new and interesting ways! Here, they use a satirical riff on the "Scooby Gang" to examine the processing of trauma and to ask what kinds of monsters keep us up at night. "Interrobangers" manages to be funny, whimsical, theatrically fantastical, and a little sexy while articulating some profound truths about queerness, otherness, and the compartmentalization of traumatic events. I love how spooky, ambiguous, hopeful, and satisfying the ending is. I look forward to following this...

    Sloth Levine has a knack for creating fantastical worlds that incorporate, illuminate, and interrogate queerness in new and interesting ways! Here, they use a satirical riff on the "Scooby Gang" to examine the processing of trauma and to ask what kinds of monsters keep us up at night. "Interrobangers" manages to be funny, whimsical, theatrically fantastical, and a little sexy while articulating some profound truths about queerness, otherness, and the compartmentalization of traumatic events. I love how spooky, ambiguous, hopeful, and satisfying the ending is. I look forward to following this play's trajectory as it develops!

  • John J King: The Interrobangers

    Hot Dog, this play is so good! Incredibly funny, while also genuinely eerie and mysterious. A genre piece that's also full of heart. And the theatricality is so exciting: from ghost hauntings, to talking dogs, and visions of your own younger self. This is genuinely one of the most delightful new play reads I've had in a while.

    Hot Dog, this play is so good! Incredibly funny, while also genuinely eerie and mysterious. A genre piece that's also full of heart. And the theatricality is so exciting: from ghost hauntings, to talking dogs, and visions of your own younger self. This is genuinely one of the most delightful new play reads I've had in a while.