INFERNA uses great theatricality, physical comedy, and one-of-a-kind characters to examine the ways in which abusive structures live inside the theatrical canon and field.
The play, which in part follows Joanna through her youth theater career, illustrates how religious and conservative values and sexism find their way into theater.
But what most sticks with me about INFERNA is that it’s damn funny, with a warm, silly relationship between narrative and audience. The final minutes, which dramatize what a reconciliation between young women impacted by the same terrible theater man might look...
INFERNA uses great theatricality, physical comedy, and one-of-a-kind characters to examine the ways in which abusive structures live inside the theatrical canon and field.
The play, which in part follows Joanna through her youth theater career, illustrates how religious and conservative values and sexism find their way into theater.
But what most sticks with me about INFERNA is that it’s damn funny, with a warm, silly relationship between narrative and audience. The final minutes, which dramatize what a reconciliation between young women impacted by the same terrible theater man might look like, are both hopeful and chilling.