Recommendations of Closing Doors

  • Jackie Martin: Closing Doors

    As a teacher, I have run through the exact scenario from this play in my head a thousand times. What would I do in this situation? As a parent, I have run through the same scenario a thousand times: what would the teachers in charge of my children do? There are no easy answers in life, and this unbelievable play won't give you one either. What it will do is make you think and feel more than you thought would be possible in 10 pages. The highest of stakes from beginning to end.

    As a teacher, I have run through the exact scenario from this play in my head a thousand times. What would I do in this situation? As a parent, I have run through the same scenario a thousand times: what would the teachers in charge of my children do? There are no easy answers in life, and this unbelievable play won't give you one either. What it will do is make you think and feel more than you thought would be possible in 10 pages. The highest of stakes from beginning to end.

  • Donna Hoke: Closing Doors

    So good! The best plays leave you in that spot where you just don't know what you would do, which leads to the self-examination that can lead to questioning that can lead to change. "Closing Doors" is a perfect rock-and-a-hard-place example.

    So good! The best plays leave you in that spot where you just don't know what you would do, which leads to the self-examination that can lead to questioning that can lead to change. "Closing Doors" is a perfect rock-and-a-hard-place example.

  • Doug DeVita: Closing Doors

    This play. THIS play. I'm still shaking from reading it. John Minigan's "Closing Doors" is topical, political theater at its absolute best. It says everything that needs to be said, and says it with razor sharp economy. A must read for anyone at all concerned with the current state of the world, and how future generations are being affected. THIS! PLAY!

    This play. THIS play. I'm still shaking from reading it. John Minigan's "Closing Doors" is topical, political theater at its absolute best. It says everything that needs to be said, and says it with razor sharp economy. A must read for anyone at all concerned with the current state of the world, and how future generations are being affected. THIS! PLAY!

  • Laurie Allen: Closing Doors

    This is a powerful play! Equally strong opposing viewpoints that are gut wrenching, honest and painful. I couldn't decide whose viewpoint I favored as I tossed it back and forth. This play will stay with me.

    This is a powerful play! Equally strong opposing viewpoints that are gut wrenching, honest and painful. I couldn't decide whose viewpoint I favored as I tossed it back and forth. This play will stay with me.

  • Sharai Bohannon: Closing Doors

    I have so many emotions after reading this. I'm upset that active shooter drills even need to be common place, I'm upset that this teacher is in trouble for trying to protect a child's childhood, and I'm just upset with the lack of gun laws in America in general. This is one of my favorite plays from Minigan and I'm going to be chewing it for a long time. The tension between these friends made me forget to breathe.

    I have so many emotions after reading this. I'm upset that active shooter drills even need to be common place, I'm upset that this teacher is in trouble for trying to protect a child's childhood, and I'm just upset with the lack of gun laws in America in general. This is one of my favorite plays from Minigan and I'm going to be chewing it for a long time. The tension between these friends made me forget to breathe.

  • Ellen Koivisto: Closing Doors

    The play examines teaching in these days where teachers practice working in a combat zone and children rehearse for life-shattering trauma. This play, about a teacher deciding not to lock out a student during a drill, is honest, thoughtful, and horribly timely as school shootings come every week, if not every day. The decision of the administrator to protect bureaucracy over education, and to value c.y.a. over children, is all too familiar.

    The play examines teaching in these days where teachers practice working in a combat zone and children rehearse for life-shattering trauma. This play, about a teacher deciding not to lock out a student during a drill, is honest, thoughtful, and horribly timely as school shootings come every week, if not every day. The decision of the administrator to protect bureaucracy over education, and to value c.y.a. over children, is all too familiar.