Recommendations of Rock Egg Spoon

  • Cheryl Bear: Rock Egg Spoon

    A revealing journey of discovery that keeps us fully engaged for the answers we seek. Fantastic!

    A revealing journey of discovery that keeps us fully engaged for the answers we seek. Fantastic!

  • Katherine Gwynn: Rock Egg Spoon

    a stunning piece full of rage and tenderness and empathy, spilling over with questions about being heard and hearing others.

    a stunning piece full of rage and tenderness and empathy, spilling over with questions about being heard and hearing others.

  • Emily Krause: Rock Egg Spoon

    oh wow I love this play so deeply and for so many reasons. noah's voice is so sharp, and gentle, and sincere, and satirical, all at once. if I wrote out a list of favorite lines, it would pretty much be the entire script. read it and produce it! it's a seriously special piece of work.

    oh wow I love this play so deeply and for so many reasons. noah's voice is so sharp, and gentle, and sincere, and satirical, all at once. if I wrote out a list of favorite lines, it would pretty much be the entire script. read it and produce it! it's a seriously special piece of work.

  • Ramona Rose King: Rock Egg Spoon

    This play is sprawling, raw, and thrilling. It asks huge questions and gives no easy answers. I love it!

    This play is sprawling, raw, and thrilling. It asks huge questions and gives no easy answers. I love it!

  • Nick Malakhow: Rock Egg Spoon

    So incredibly inventive and highly original. Whimsical and hilarious in the best way, while so powerful and grounded in part two. I found myself consistently and pleasantly surprised by both what was happening onstage as well as the profundity of the straightforward language. Huge themes of legacy, impact, history, access, and isolation are all explored so deftly and imaginatively here. Would love to see this highly theatrical piece onstage!

    So incredibly inventive and highly original. Whimsical and hilarious in the best way, while so powerful and grounded in part two. I found myself consistently and pleasantly surprised by both what was happening onstage as well as the profundity of the straightforward language. Huge themes of legacy, impact, history, access, and isolation are all explored so deftly and imaginatively here. Would love to see this highly theatrical piece onstage!

  • Mathilde Dratwa: Rock Egg Spoon

    THIS PLAY. The language is so inventive that I started listing the phrases that made me laugh or gasp, and then the list got so long I realized I would never get to the end of the play... And once I stopped, I realized that the undercurrents of the play are heartbreaking. The play "quietly hurt my ears" with the themes of "sadness and displacement." It is a smart subversion of the myths that "stay in suitcases so they can be carried around and never unpacked." Noah questions how big our footprints really are with a voice that will echo.

    THIS PLAY. The language is so inventive that I started listing the phrases that made me laugh or gasp, and then the list got so long I realized I would never get to the end of the play... And once I stopped, I realized that the undercurrents of the play are heartbreaking. The play "quietly hurt my ears" with the themes of "sadness and displacement." It is a smart subversion of the myths that "stay in suitcases so they can be carried around and never unpacked." Noah questions how big our footprints really are with a voice that will echo.

  • Jennifer Kokai: Rock Egg Spoon

    This is a wonderful, imaginative script. There were so many beautiful, surprising moments and I loved it from beginning to end. I'd love to see it on the stage and I highly encourage theatres to produce it.

    This is a wonderful, imaginative script. There were so many beautiful, surprising moments and I loved it from beginning to end. I'd love to see it on the stage and I highly encourage theatres to produce it.