There is so much to love about this play: an honest and complicated yet deeply compassionate story about an adopted son and his mother; a masterful use of a natural parent-child vernacular and Mateo's own poetic beat woven throughout the text; and a cross-country road trip that brings the audience both into the awkward confines of a car with your parent and out into a greater world that transcends the one we understand as lines on a map. Themes of identity, culture, how to move forward, family, and love make this play deeply personal and unequivocally universal.
There is so much to love about this play: an honest and complicated yet deeply compassionate story about an adopted son and his mother; a masterful use of a natural parent-child vernacular and Mateo's own poetic beat woven throughout the text; and a cross-country road trip that brings the audience both into the awkward confines of a car with your parent and out into a greater world that transcends the one we understand as lines on a map. Themes of identity, culture, how to move forward, family, and love make this play deeply personal and unequivocally universal.