Recommendations of Maybe Tomorrow

  • Gina Stevensen: Maybe Tomorrow

    Funny, theatrical, and totally unique! "Maybe Tomorrow" is a delicious two-hander that wrestles
    with parenthood, marriage, and career, turning these seemingly familiar subjects completely upside down and forcing the reader and audience to question all the pre-conceived notions they brought with them into this play. As the action moves forward, we increasingly wonder what is real and what our responsibility as an audience is -- and the playwright keeps us on the edge of our seats the whole time.

    Funny, theatrical, and totally unique! "Maybe Tomorrow" is a delicious two-hander that wrestles
    with parenthood, marriage, and career, turning these seemingly familiar subjects completely upside down and forcing the reader and audience to question all the pre-conceived notions they brought with them into this play. As the action moves forward, we increasingly wonder what is real and what our responsibility as an audience is -- and the playwright keeps us on the edge of our seats the whole time.

  • Cheryl Bear: Maybe Tomorrow

    A hilarious situation to find oneself in where community can be found in the bathroom, but will the marriage withstand it? Riveting and well done!

    A hilarious situation to find oneself in where community can be found in the bathroom, but will the marriage withstand it? Riveting and well done!

  • Jeffrey James Keyes: Maybe Tomorrow

    Nuanced, hilarious at times, and rich in depth and truth. I was absolutely engrossed in this play from start to finish. Max is a sharp and daring writer that everyone should lean into. I can't wait to read more of his work.

    Nuanced, hilarious at times, and rich in depth and truth. I was absolutely engrossed in this play from start to finish. Max is a sharp and daring writer that everyone should lean into. I can't wait to read more of his work.

  • Nick Malakhow: Maybe Tomorrow

    Funny and tragic, MAYBE TOMORROW is a highly engaging play that is impossible not to be taken in by! Mondi matches absurdity with a hilariously wrenching story that explores the growing complications of a relationship and marriage in which each partner seems to emotionally and ideologically stray from one another even as they grow into a codependent rut. Gail is charming (which makes her character's arc even more poignant and sad) and the relationship she builds with the audience is unique and well-told; Mondi provides a great blueprint for a skilled actor and improviser to flourish with.

    Funny and tragic, MAYBE TOMORROW is a highly engaging play that is impossible not to be taken in by! Mondi matches absurdity with a hilariously wrenching story that explores the growing complications of a relationship and marriage in which each partner seems to emotionally and ideologically stray from one another even as they grow into a codependent rut. Gail is charming (which makes her character's arc even more poignant and sad) and the relationship she builds with the audience is unique and well-told; Mondi provides a great blueprint for a skilled actor and improviser to flourish with.

  • Alix Sobler: Maybe Tomorrow

    Inspired by a true story, but wholly theatrical and original, MAYBE TOMORROW has all the elements that I love in plays. It's very funny, and somehow familiar and surprising at the same time. Despite the absurd setting, it is almost eerily relatable, examining what it means to stay in a relationship when one person simply can't move forward, and how a moment of panic can turn into a lifetime of denial.

    Inspired by a true story, but wholly theatrical and original, MAYBE TOMORROW has all the elements that I love in plays. It's very funny, and somehow familiar and surprising at the same time. Despite the absurd setting, it is almost eerily relatable, examining what it means to stay in a relationship when one person simply can't move forward, and how a moment of panic can turn into a lifetime of denial.

  • Erik Champney: Maybe Tomorrow

    MAYBE TOMORROW pretends to be a slice of life, examining a marriage deeply affected by agoraphobia. But this is a Max Mondi play, so his heroine isn’t simply hiding from the world. She’s taken up residence in the bathroom, so distanced from everything in her former life, she begins to question if her baby, just outside the door (or is it?) even exists. Dark stuff on the surface, but Max’s characters gravitate between joy, wonder, and desperation. It’s impossible not to be fascinated by their bittersweet war with disintegrating reality. Hilarious. Profound. Read it.

    MAYBE TOMORROW pretends to be a slice of life, examining a marriage deeply affected by agoraphobia. But this is a Max Mondi play, so his heroine isn’t simply hiding from the world. She’s taken up residence in the bathroom, so distanced from everything in her former life, she begins to question if her baby, just outside the door (or is it?) even exists. Dark stuff on the surface, but Max’s characters gravitate between joy, wonder, and desperation. It’s impossible not to be fascinated by their bittersweet war with disintegrating reality. Hilarious. Profound. Read it.

  • Stephen Foglia: Maybe Tomorrow

    I've loved this play from the first time I read it. It's hilarious and heartfelt and full of delightful inventions. Mondi captures his characters with such warmth that you love to spend a whole night in a mobile home toilet with them. Its wisdom about relationships and difficult life transitions sneaks up in ways too clever to spoil. I'm dying to see it in production!

    I've loved this play from the first time I read it. It's hilarious and heartfelt and full of delightful inventions. Mondi captures his characters with such warmth that you love to spend a whole night in a mobile home toilet with them. Its wisdom about relationships and difficult life transitions sneaks up in ways too clever to spoil. I'm dying to see it in production!

  • Jacob Marx Rice: Maybe Tomorrow

    A delightfully funny and strange play. Every time you think you've gotten it figured out, the play pulls the rug out from under you until you're not sure what's real (and then it somehow pulls the rug out again.) The characters are vivid and delightful, the jokes are funny, and the structure is clearly the work of a mad genius. An absolute pleasure to read.

    A delightfully funny and strange play. Every time you think you've gotten it figured out, the play pulls the rug out from under you until you're not sure what's real (and then it somehow pulls the rug out again.) The characters are vivid and delightful, the jokes are funny, and the structure is clearly the work of a mad genius. An absolute pleasure to read.

  • e.k. doolin: Maybe Tomorrow

    This is a great play - immersive and intimate. The playwright invites you in and I didn't want to leave.

    This is a great play - immersive and intimate. The playwright invites you in and I didn't want to leave.

  • Kitchen Dog Theater: Maybe Tomorrow

    We are pleased to support this play! It was a Finalist for the 2019 New Works Festival at Kitchen Dog Theater in Dallas, Texas.

    We are pleased to support this play! It was a Finalist for the 2019 New Works Festival at Kitchen Dog Theater in Dallas, Texas.