Recommendations of I Think We're Lost

  • Christopher Soucy: I Think We're Lost

    A Neverland tour de force! All your favorites, and some fresh faces, giving the fans of Pan a welcome addition to the mythos. Peter Fenton draws us in with a clever alchemy. Mixing the familiar with the boldly original to produce a new classic. As a lifelong fan of Peter, Wendy, Tink, Smee, and Hook, I whole heartedly endorse this tale!

    A Neverland tour de force! All your favorites, and some fresh faces, giving the fans of Pan a welcome addition to the mythos. Peter Fenton draws us in with a clever alchemy. Mixing the familiar with the boldly original to produce a new classic. As a lifelong fan of Peter, Wendy, Tink, Smee, and Hook, I whole heartedly endorse this tale!

  • Donald E. Baker: I Think We're Lost

    I love it when a writer takes well-known literary characters, keeps them in their accustomed milieu, but totally reimagines their personalities and their relationships. Fenton does that here with the familiar denizens of Neverland, supplemented with a couple of new people of his own devising. The result is a grittier Neverland than Barrie could ever have imagined, and some of the characters we have always loved turn out to be not so lovable. This is super work, forcing us to re-think our previous impressions of Peter, Wendy, Hook, and, especially, Tinker Bell.

    I love it when a writer takes well-known literary characters, keeps them in their accustomed milieu, but totally reimagines their personalities and their relationships. Fenton does that here with the familiar denizens of Neverland, supplemented with a couple of new people of his own devising. The result is a grittier Neverland than Barrie could ever have imagined, and some of the characters we have always loved turn out to be not so lovable. This is super work, forcing us to re-think our previous impressions of Peter, Wendy, Hook, and, especially, Tinker Bell.

  • Brenton Kniess: I Think We're Lost

    Peter Fenton’s I Think We’re Lost is a whimsically creative approach to JM Barrie’s story. The world in which Fenton places his characters is so vivid and full of wonder that brings us closer to these characters and their journey. Many beautiful moments that will touch your heart. This is a unique theatrical experience that audiences will not forget!

    Peter Fenton’s I Think We’re Lost is a whimsically creative approach to JM Barrie’s story. The world in which Fenton places his characters is so vivid and full of wonder that brings us closer to these characters and their journey. Many beautiful moments that will touch your heart. This is a unique theatrical experience that audiences will not forget!

  • Aly Kantor: I Think We're Lost

    This play is not quite an adaptation and not quite a sequel - I'd call it two things: an inventive, time-bending remix of a classic and TONS of feisty, feminist fun! The playwright has kept everything we love about Neverland but updated the narrative so it's relevant to today's audiences. I fell in love with this saucy, sinister take on "the jealous Tinkerbell" (and this play's clever use of the "clap if you believe" gambit!) - but there's a complete ensemble cast here ready to be embodied and brought to life! A fun, active, high-energy play about growing up!

    This play is not quite an adaptation and not quite a sequel - I'd call it two things: an inventive, time-bending remix of a classic and TONS of feisty, feminist fun! The playwright has kept everything we love about Neverland but updated the narrative so it's relevant to today's audiences. I fell in love with this saucy, sinister take on "the jealous Tinkerbell" (and this play's clever use of the "clap if you believe" gambit!) - but there's a complete ensemble cast here ready to be embodied and brought to life! A fun, active, high-energy play about growing up!