Recommendations of Role Play

  • Jocelyn Price: Role Play

    As someone who grew up writing elaborate online roleplay with my friends, 'Role Play' certainly punched me right in the feels. Carter's utilization of the internet as an outlet for navigating your queerness is masterfully done. The four core teenage characters are all written with so much heart, and feel like real, awkward, nerdy teenagers from the 2000s. This play was a joy to read and got my director's brain buzzing. Queer narratives come in many forms, this is one that needs to be portrayed.

    As someone who grew up writing elaborate online roleplay with my friends, 'Role Play' certainly punched me right in the feels. Carter's utilization of the internet as an outlet for navigating your queerness is masterfully done. The four core teenage characters are all written with so much heart, and feel like real, awkward, nerdy teenagers from the 2000s. This play was a joy to read and got my director's brain buzzing. Queer narratives come in many forms, this is one that needs to be portrayed.

  • Aly Kantor: Role Play

    High school is supposed to be where young people learn to be together... but that doesn't work out well for all kids. In this play, those off-kilter loners find refuse in the RPG world, which just happens to be where I grew up. This theatrical piece allows us to see the vibrant internal worlds of these angsty, disenchanted teenagers as they test out different identities and attempt to connect in a world where they make all the rules. The "life or death" high school social stakes were painfully relatable. It's queer, quirky, and has a very satisfying ending!

    High school is supposed to be where young people learn to be together... but that doesn't work out well for all kids. In this play, those off-kilter loners find refuse in the RPG world, which just happens to be where I grew up. This theatrical piece allows us to see the vibrant internal worlds of these angsty, disenchanted teenagers as they test out different identities and attempt to connect in a world where they make all the rules. The "life or death" high school social stakes were painfully relatable. It's queer, quirky, and has a very satisfying ending!

  • Jacquelyn Floyd-Priskorn: Role Play

    I love the potential for design and staging this piece. I also love/hate that this is a "period piece" reflecting life from my high school days, doing RP with my friends via passed notebooks and then trying to bring it to life in chat rooms. Great opportunities for performers!

    I love the potential for design and staging this piece. I also love/hate that this is a "period piece" reflecting life from my high school days, doing RP with my friends via passed notebooks and then trying to bring it to life in chat rooms. Great opportunities for performers!

  • Cheryl Bear: Role Play

    An insightful look at the refuge one finds in coping with the trauma of school through escape as one works through the journey as well as the process of coming of age. Well done.

    An insightful look at the refuge one finds in coping with the trauma of school through escape as one works through the journey as well as the process of coming of age. Well done.

  • Lainie Vansant: Role Play

    Carter perfectly captures what it was like to be fifteen at the beginning of the Internet age. Her referenes are specific and real, and the play overall is a truly sweet story about teenagers who would (for the most part) hate being called sweet. If you loved Tamora Pierce or had to wait for someone to hang up the phone to use the internet, read this play!

    Carter perfectly captures what it was like to be fifteen at the beginning of the Internet age. Her referenes are specific and real, and the play overall is a truly sweet story about teenagers who would (for the most part) hate being called sweet. If you loved Tamora Pierce or had to wait for someone to hang up the phone to use the internet, read this play!

  • Prisca Jebet Kendagor: Role Play

    I. Love. This. Play. I had the privilege of being at a reading, and it was beautifully done. Emma is doing something that a lot of playwrights are slow to do. She's writing for millennial. If you're a millennial that grew up with RPG games, this show is for you. The nostalgia factor, and the memories (or traumas) of living life through junior high and high school...along with sexually waking up. They all come to the forefront in this forward thinking play. Such a beautiful and current piece of work.

    I. Love. This. Play. I had the privilege of being at a reading, and it was beautifully done. Emma is doing something that a lot of playwrights are slow to do. She's writing for millennial. If you're a millennial that grew up with RPG games, this show is for you. The nostalgia factor, and the memories (or traumas) of living life through junior high and high school...along with sexually waking up. They all come to the forefront in this forward thinking play. Such a beautiful and current piece of work.