WACKY JACKIE AND AUNT EVANGELINE: A ONE-ACT PLAY

by Asher Wyndham

ONE-ACT. Unproduced. An aunt and niece clash behind Walmart at midnight in Tucson. Aunt Evangeline wants to know why Jackie left the store without letting her know, but Jackie wants to just leave for the bus stop so she can get home. Jackie's disobedience forces Evangeline to make a terrible decision that will change their lives forever. 10-15 minutes.

ONE-ACT. Unproduced. An aunt and niece clash behind Walmart at midnight in Tucson. Aunt Evangeline wants to know why Jackie left the store without letting her know, but Jackie wants to just leave for the bus stop so she can get home. Jackie's disobedience forces Evangeline to make a terrible decision that will change their lives forever. 10-15 minutes.

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WACKY JACKIE AND AUNT EVANGELINE: A ONE-ACT PLAY

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  • Cheryl Bear: WACKY JACKIE AND AUNT EVANGELINE: A ONE-ACT PLAY

    A very real and honest clash between two relatives who honestly want to connect and be there for each other underneath it all. Funny and well done.

    A very real and honest clash between two relatives who honestly want to connect and be there for each other underneath it all. Funny and well done.

  • Quinn Xavier Hernandez: WACKY JACKIE AND AUNT EVANGELINE: A ONE-ACT PLAY

    Life tends to be full of awful people and Asher Wyndham has put two incredibly awful people onstage in this gut-punch of a play. Great roles for two women that are unlike the typical ingenues and mother figures that fill most plays.

    Life tends to be full of awful people and Asher Wyndham has put two incredibly awful people onstage in this gut-punch of a play. Great roles for two women that are unlike the typical ingenues and mother figures that fill most plays.

  • Paul Donnelly: WACKY JACKIE AND AUNT EVANGELINE: A ONE-ACT PLAY

    Wyndham paints a powerful portrait of two women with ferocious, desperate, mutual need who are tragically unable to connect. Both are drawn with painstaking specificity and could, with just a touch more self-awareness, be deliciously comic instead of devastatingly lost.

    Wyndham paints a powerful portrait of two women with ferocious, desperate, mutual need who are tragically unable to connect. Both are drawn with painstaking specificity and could, with just a touch more self-awareness, be deliciously comic instead of devastatingly lost.

View all 6 recommendations