Recommendations of Sparrowfall

  • James McLindon: Sparrowfall

    Sparrowfall is as wonderfully beautiful as it is wonderously sparse, the beginning, middle, and ending of a relationship in just six pages. Beautifully told. I would love to see a production.

    Sparrowfall is as wonderfully beautiful as it is wonderously sparse, the beginning, middle, and ending of a relationship in just six pages. Beautifully told. I would love to see a production.

  • Tyler Reynolds: Sparrowfall

    Wow, just wow. How does a Playwright fit so many emotions, so many moments between the two, into just 7 pages of a play? The entire marriage, placed like puzzle pieces in the dialogue, up to the audience to fit together.

    Wow, just wow. How does a Playwright fit so many emotions, so many moments between the two, into just 7 pages of a play? The entire marriage, placed like puzzle pieces in the dialogue, up to the audience to fit together.

  • Samantha Oty: Sparrowfall

    Wow. I don't know how Cabajal can pack so many emotions into such a compact play. In seven pages, we get to know these characters and see the most intimate moments of their lives, trying to piece together where it all went wrong.

    Wow. I don't know how Cabajal can pack so many emotions into such a compact play. In seven pages, we get to know these characters and see the most intimate moments of their lives, trying to piece together where it all went wrong.

  • Jacquelyn Floyd-Priskorn: Sparrowfall

    This is a living, breathing poem. A love poem. A loss poem. A human poem. There will be magic in the execution of this piece.

    This is a living, breathing poem. A love poem. A loss poem. A human poem. There will be magic in the execution of this piece.

  • James Perry: Sparrowfall

    A moving portrait of love's transient nature, seamlessly intertwining moments of connection and disconnection, leaving a haunting echo of the profound impact of fleeting encounters and the relentless passage of time.

    A moving portrait of love's transient nature, seamlessly intertwining moments of connection and disconnection, leaving a haunting echo of the profound impact of fleeting encounters and the relentless passage of time.

  • Cheryl Bear: Sparrowfall

    A revealing and beautifully constructed reflection on a relationship and the love still held. Excellent.

    A revealing and beautifully constructed reflection on a relationship and the love still held. Excellent.

  • Christopher Plumridge: Sparrowfall

    This is such a beautiful, rhythmic piece yet very sad. Although things are broken between them the author successfully shows how much love still remains for each other. To me the sadest way to break up. Very well told.

    This is such a beautiful, rhythmic piece yet very sad. Although things are broken between them the author successfully shows how much love still remains for each other. To me the sadest way to break up. Very well told.

  • Matt Harmon: Sparrowfall

    SPARROWFALL is perfectly sparse, allowing lines of poetic magnitude to float across the stage and reach the audience with full velocity. The characters speak of love, the trials and tribulations as well as the moments of pure elation. Thank you for gracing us with this piece.

    SPARROWFALL is perfectly sparse, allowing lines of poetic magnitude to float across the stage and reach the audience with full velocity. The characters speak of love, the trials and tribulations as well as the moments of pure elation. Thank you for gracing us with this piece.

  • Scott Sickles: Sparrowfall

    An EXQUISITE five-minute masterpiece, Sparrowfall is a beautiful autopsy of a relationship, and a paean to the simultaneously eternal and finite nature of love. It jumps around in time with a seamless alacrity. The economy of storytelling is staggering, given how the breadth and the depth of the tale are both vast, specific, vivid, heartfelt... it’s a deep kiss and a punch to the solar plexis and I am so glad I read it.

    An EXQUISITE five-minute masterpiece, Sparrowfall is a beautiful autopsy of a relationship, and a paean to the simultaneously eternal and finite nature of love. It jumps around in time with a seamless alacrity. The economy of storytelling is staggering, given how the breadth and the depth of the tale are both vast, specific, vivid, heartfelt... it’s a deep kiss and a punch to the solar plexis and I am so glad I read it.