Recommendations of Would You Like Fries With That? (Beauregard and Zeke #2)

  • Ian Donley: Would You Like Fries With That? (Beauregard and Zeke #2)

    Scott Sickles continues the story between two boys figuring themselves out and adds more relatable nuances to them while still giving them their individuality.

    Scott Sickles continues the story between two boys figuring themselves out and adds more relatable nuances to them while still giving them their individuality.

  • Cheryl Bear: Would You Like Fries With That? (Beauregard and Zeke #2)

    A fun and authentic look at the relationship between two teens as they come of age, with McNuggets of course.

    A fun and authentic look at the relationship between two teens as they come of age, with McNuggets of course.

  • Paul Donnelly: Would You Like Fries With That? (Beauregard and Zeke #2)

    Beauregard and Zeke could not be more distinct, sympathetic or relatable. The most mundane aspects of this encounter are suffused with wit and powerful subtext. And I will never again look at a container of McNuggets without smiling.

    Beauregard and Zeke could not be more distinct, sympathetic or relatable. The most mundane aspects of this encounter are suffused with wit and powerful subtext. And I will never again look at a container of McNuggets without smiling.

  • Scott Cantrell: Would You Like Fries With That? (Beauregard and Zeke #2)

    I adore this relationship. Both of them are so realistic. I feel like I've known them my entire life, and I relate to both of them. Can't wait to read more!

    I adore this relationship. Both of them are so realistic. I feel like I've known them my entire life, and I relate to both of them. Can't wait to read more!

  • Charles Gershman: Would You Like Fries With That? (Beauregard and Zeke #2)

    This play was deliciously uncomfortable. These characters feel real, specific, and authentic. I wanted to leap away from the laptop screen, but I also couldn't look away from the script. Would love to see this staged.

    This play was deliciously uncomfortable. These characters feel real, specific, and authentic. I wanted to leap away from the laptop screen, but I also couldn't look away from the script. Would love to see this staged.

  • Philip Middleton Williams: Would You Like Fries With That? (Beauregard and Zeke #2)

    The way that these two boys interact at the drive-thru is both adorable and cringe-worthy, thereby making it the most honest way to depict what happens here. The discussion about the dipping sauce is as important as what comes after, and the bravado that masks the nervousness makes this more than just the beginning, however awkwardly, of the intimacy that they crave.

    The way that these two boys interact at the drive-thru is both adorable and cringe-worthy, thereby making it the most honest way to depict what happens here. The discussion about the dipping sauce is as important as what comes after, and the bravado that masks the nervousness makes this more than just the beginning, however awkwardly, of the intimacy that they crave.

  • Hilary Bluestein-Lyons: Would You Like Fries With That? (Beauregard and Zeke #2)

    I'm am so grateful to have more of Beauregard and Zeke! Would You Like Fries With That is cringy, endearing, awkward, frustrating, comical, painful and sweet, which is everything this kind of interaction between two teens should be.

    I'm am so grateful to have more of Beauregard and Zeke! Would You Like Fries With That is cringy, endearing, awkward, frustrating, comical, painful and sweet, which is everything this kind of interaction between two teens should be.

  • Mark Loewenstern: Would You Like Fries With That? (Beauregard and Zeke #2)

    Sickles shows us the raw and comical, hot yet sweet moments of sexual awakening in the fumbling experiences of these two endearing boys. They're chowderheads, but at some point most of us were when it came to sex, and to read or watch this play is to go back to those days.

    Sickles shows us the raw and comical, hot yet sweet moments of sexual awakening in the fumbling experiences of these two endearing boys. They're chowderheads, but at some point most of us were when it came to sex, and to read or watch this play is to go back to those days.

  • Steven G. Martin: Would You Like Fries With That? (Beauregard and Zeke #2)

    Teenage years: that dangerous time when everything is brand new and completely foreign to experience, and affects a person 1,000,000 times harder than it should.

    These times are rife for comedy and, as Scott Sickles shows in this short play, compassion. "Would You Like Fries With That?" shows two teenage boys trying to figure out some basics together because there is nothing to guide them otherwise.

    And even though thee are funny moments and responses, Sickles gifts Beau and Zeke a connection -- there's a quiet camaraderie brewing, an understanding. This is a generous play.

    Teenage years: that dangerous time when everything is brand new and completely foreign to experience, and affects a person 1,000,000 times harder than it should.

    These times are rife for comedy and, as Scott Sickles shows in this short play, compassion. "Would You Like Fries With That?" shows two teenage boys trying to figure out some basics together because there is nothing to guide them otherwise.

    And even though thee are funny moments and responses, Sickles gifts Beau and Zeke a connection -- there's a quiet camaraderie brewing, an understanding. This is a generous play.