Until You Come Back to Me

by Carl Holder

2020 Winner Goldberg Play Prize
2019 Finalist for the Neukom Institute Literary Arts Awards for Playwrighting

It's the future! Everybody is in love with their phone but even so, Zita's connection to her device Eve is...unusual? When Eve breaks beyond repair, Zita will do whatever it takes to restore her, even if it means diving into the underbelly of back-alley phone operations. How deep has our relationship to...

2020 Winner Goldberg Play Prize
2019 Finalist for the Neukom Institute Literary Arts Awards for Playwrighting

It's the future! Everybody is in love with their phone but even so, Zita's connection to her device Eve is...unusual? When Eve breaks beyond repair, Zita will do whatever it takes to restore her, even if it means diving into the underbelly of back-alley phone operations. How deep has our relationship to technology gone? What has it cost us along the way?

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Until You Come Back to Me

Recommended by

  • Allyson Dwyer: Until You Come Back to Me

    I thankfully saw a wonderful online reading of this during lockdown and still find myself thinking about its tender absurdities. Carl has such a gift for nuance, whether its the spaces between how we communicate or how he animates onomatopoeia on the page, as if the script were a comic book. His writing becomes animated in how specific his choices are. But the most lasting image to me is the deceitful intimacy of our phones, how we supplant our IRL relationships with the false warmth of an inanimate device. It may feel real, but it is anything but.

    I thankfully saw a wonderful online reading of this during lockdown and still find myself thinking about its tender absurdities. Carl has such a gift for nuance, whether its the spaces between how we communicate or how he animates onomatopoeia on the page, as if the script were a comic book. His writing becomes animated in how specific his choices are. But the most lasting image to me is the deceitful intimacy of our phones, how we supplant our IRL relationships with the false warmth of an inanimate device. It may feel real, but it is anything but.

  • Nick Malakhow: Until You Come Back to Me

    A sharply funny (hilarious even!) look into a fully realized future where technological dependence has taken on a new meaning. I love the theatrical conceit of phones being realized as humans and gaining sentience. It provides a direct but never overdone metaphor for the distinctly oxymoronic ways technology has changed/improved/ruined our lives--connected and detached people from one another, diluted and distorted information hunting while making us reliant on it...Zita's journey manages to be hilarious, cringeworthy at times, and a poignant exploration of someone trying to hold onto humanity...

    A sharply funny (hilarious even!) look into a fully realized future where technological dependence has taken on a new meaning. I love the theatrical conceit of phones being realized as humans and gaining sentience. It provides a direct but never overdone metaphor for the distinctly oxymoronic ways technology has changed/improved/ruined our lives--connected and detached people from one another, diluted and distorted information hunting while making us reliant on it...Zita's journey manages to be hilarious, cringeworthy at times, and a poignant exploration of someone trying to hold onto humanity and connection in a world sometimes preventing that.

  • Rose T.M.: Until You Come Back to Me

    By taking us into a darkly comic future that could be years away or just around the corner, Holder brings our relationship with technology to its amatory – and possibly inevitable – extreme. In doing so, he turns one woman's journey to replace her old phone into a search for meaningful connection, as well as an examintion of how people can manipulate their connections into meaning. It's a story that's funny, disturbing and heartfelt all at once.

    By taking us into a darkly comic future that could be years away or just around the corner, Holder brings our relationship with technology to its amatory – and possibly inevitable – extreme. In doing so, he turns one woman's journey to replace her old phone into a search for meaningful connection, as well as an examintion of how people can manipulate their connections into meaning. It's a story that's funny, disturbing and heartfelt all at once.

View all 4 recommendations

Awards

  • Goldberg Play Prize
    NYU/Tisch Rita and Burton Department of Dramatic Writing
    Winner
    2020
  • Neukom Institute Literary Arts Awards for Playwrighting
    Finalist
    2019