Recommendations of #WeToo: a dialogue

  • Martha Patterson: #WeToo: a dialogue

    Nikki and Everett have secrets to tell each other over the Internet...and it soon becomes clear they had similar experiences with teachers manipulating them. A sad story about the sexual abuse of kids -- might be difficult to stage without an intimacy coach. An engrossing little piece about a tough topic to cover.

    Nikki and Everett have secrets to tell each other over the Internet...and it soon becomes clear they had similar experiences with teachers manipulating them. A sad story about the sexual abuse of kids -- might be difficult to stage without an intimacy coach. An engrossing little piece about a tough topic to cover.

  • Lainie Vansant: #WeToo: a dialogue

    This play raises interesting questions about our responsibilities to one another and to the children who come after us. Is there a 'right' or 'wrong' way to deal with trauma? This piece is sure to inspire conversation, and it's the right length to leave the audience wanting more!

    This play raises interesting questions about our responsibilities to one another and to the children who come after us. Is there a 'right' or 'wrong' way to deal with trauma? This piece is sure to inspire conversation, and it's the right length to leave the audience wanting more!

  • Marylou DiPietro: #WeToo: a dialogue

    This eerie montage of past/present, personal/impersonal, truth/denial, detachment/ intimacy is quietly gripping and deeply moving. A beautiful portrait of two life stories come alive in 6 short pages. Bravo Bryan!

    This eerie montage of past/present, personal/impersonal, truth/denial, detachment/ intimacy is quietly gripping and deeply moving. A beautiful portrait of two life stories come alive in 6 short pages. Bravo Bryan!

  • Philip Middleton Williams: #WeToo: a dialogue

    The most powerful element of this short play about abuse is that it is told in such a calm and direct way, leaving the tension and the trauma of the event build in the mind of the audience, each one of us visualizing or recalling our own experience. That alone makes this piece worth producing, and the unflinching way Bryan Stubbles deals with the subject matter is powerful.

    The most powerful element of this short play about abuse is that it is told in such a calm and direct way, leaving the tension and the trauma of the event build in the mind of the audience, each one of us visualizing or recalling our own experience. That alone makes this piece worth producing, and the unflinching way Bryan Stubbles deals with the subject matter is powerful.

  • Adam Richter: #WeToo: a dialogue

    What I like most about Bryan Stubbles' "#WeToo: a dialogue" is how effectively it shows the characters growing up and moving on despite the trauma, yet never being able to shed the effects of the abuse. This is a short but powerful play about sexual assault.

    What I like most about Bryan Stubbles' "#WeToo: a dialogue" is how effectively it shows the characters growing up and moving on despite the trauma, yet never being able to shed the effects of the abuse. This is a short but powerful play about sexual assault.

  • Rachel Luann Strayer: #WeToo: a dialogue

    Beautifully concise with a painful punch. #WeToo deals with the brutal reality of sexual assault being both horrifying and commonplace. Very sad & very real.

    Beautifully concise with a painful punch. #WeToo deals with the brutal reality of sexual assault being both horrifying and commonplace. Very sad & very real.

  • Martha Patterson: #WeToo: a dialogue

    A tight, short script where two old friends recount experiences with sexual abuse...skillfully done with the actors who are playing the "abusees" changing roles into the abusers...quite moving.

    A tight, short script where two old friends recount experiences with sexual abuse...skillfully done with the actors who are playing the "abusees" changing roles into the abusers...quite moving.

  • Liz Dooley: #WeToo: a dialogue

    A heartbreaking, necessary cross-section view of the #MeToo movement and the various forms sexual assault can come in. Without giving too much away, the play’s ending is disquietingly open in a way that rings bitterly true and serves as a powerful call to action. It is also one of the most true-to-life explorations of reconnecting on the Internet that I’ve seen in a long time.

    A heartbreaking, necessary cross-section view of the #MeToo movement and the various forms sexual assault can come in. Without giving too much away, the play’s ending is disquietingly open in a way that rings bitterly true and serves as a powerful call to action. It is also one of the most true-to-life explorations of reconnecting on the Internet that I’ve seen in a long time.

  • Emma Goldman-Sherman: #WeToo: a dialogue

    Here is a timely piece that accomplishes a lot in a short amount of time. The way they downplay their experiences and never discuss the ramifications (or any lasting impact) are interesting choices that increase the audience's sense of outrage that is magnified by the final choice which I won't give away - well done!

    Here is a timely piece that accomplishes a lot in a short amount of time. The way they downplay their experiences and never discuss the ramifications (or any lasting impact) are interesting choices that increase the audience's sense of outrage that is magnified by the final choice which I won't give away - well done!

  • Rachael Carnes: #WeToo: a dialogue

    A mournful and resonant meditation on power and its abuses. Stubbles finds powerful theatrical transitions to voice past, present and... future.

    A mournful and resonant meditation on power and its abuses. Stubbles finds powerful theatrical transitions to voice past, present and... future.