Recommendations of Riot and Dishonor

  • B. T. Roen: Riot and Dishonor

    This play has so much fun, lovable chaos. Its scrappy, underdog Guardians-of-the-Galaxy-meets-Shakespeare heart wins us from the word “go” and doesn’t let us off the hook throughout the wild rollercoaster of Falstaff and Bardolph’s adventures. I loved every minute of these messy teens fighting for life and joy.

    This play has so much fun, lovable chaos. Its scrappy, underdog Guardians-of-the-Galaxy-meets-Shakespeare heart wins us from the word “go” and doesn’t let us off the hook throughout the wild rollercoaster of Falstaff and Bardolph’s adventures. I loved every minute of these messy teens fighting for life and joy.

  • Rachel Feeny-Williams: Riot and Dishonor

    At its heart this piece is one of fabulous adventure supported by vivid dialogue with a pace that allows it to delicately waltz in some places and deliver hard jabs in others. All of this while offering a lovely sized cast to make this more of a theatrical experience then something an audience will just observe. Its a fabulous experience of poetry and performance in one!

    At its heart this piece is one of fabulous adventure supported by vivid dialogue with a pace that allows it to delicately waltz in some places and deliver hard jabs in others. All of this while offering a lovely sized cast to make this more of a theatrical experience then something an audience will just observe. Its a fabulous experience of poetry and performance in one!

  • Kevin B: Riot and Dishonor

    An absolutely knockout. Bold, brash, clever, and fresh.

    An absolutely knockout. Bold, brash, clever, and fresh.

  • David Hansen: Riot and Dishonor

    Brett joyfully mangles English, creating absurd metaphor, and laugh out loud abusive language. This Pythonesque insanity set to imabic pentameter put me in mind of the works of Kirk Wood Bromley, whose delirious forays into verse were nearly psychedelic. It is a non-stop riot, indeed, from beginning to end. Highly recommended!

    Brett joyfully mangles English, creating absurd metaphor, and laugh out loud abusive language. This Pythonesque insanity set to imabic pentameter put me in mind of the works of Kirk Wood Bromley, whose delirious forays into verse were nearly psychedelic. It is a non-stop riot, indeed, from beginning to end. Highly recommended!