Recommended by Emma Goldman-Sherman

  • Emma Goldman-Sherman: The Owl Who Saw The World

    Wonderful work! Waking up is hard to do, but this owl does it. Just like meditation, I get like a moment, and then ... this is so relatable. With a killer ending! (pun intended)

    Wonderful work! Waking up is hard to do, but this owl does it. Just like meditation, I get like a moment, and then ... this is so relatable. With a killer ending! (pun intended)

  • Emma Goldman-Sherman: How You Get Burned

    Wow - Barrett writes some great lines in this short play. I love the metaphors that seem to fly out of her keyboard. The smoking PI, his attention to strangers and lack of attention to his own family, getting caught when you're trying to do the catching, the apps covering the photo - this is packed full of great work! And the lighting ideas... very cool script!

    Wow - Barrett writes some great lines in this short play. I love the metaphors that seem to fly out of her keyboard. The smoking PI, his attention to strangers and lack of attention to his own family, getting caught when you're trying to do the catching, the apps covering the photo - this is packed full of great work! And the lighting ideas... very cool script!

  • Emma Goldman-Sherman: After Happily Ever After

    I love fairy tales, and I love them debunked and shown for the (potentially damaging) nonsense that they really are! After Happily Ever After is an adorable comedy that debunks the Happily Ever After idea with verve and sass. I love the costume change, and the great one-liners! These are well-written roles and the whole world (including the woodsman!) feels rich and well-conceived. Thank you!

    I love fairy tales, and I love them debunked and shown for the (potentially damaging) nonsense that they really are! After Happily Ever After is an adorable comedy that debunks the Happily Ever After idea with verve and sass. I love the costume change, and the great one-liners! These are well-written roles and the whole world (including the woodsman!) feels rich and well-conceived. Thank you!

  • Emma Goldman-Sherman: Early Decision

    It's so hard to move forward in life all alone! This is such a sweet play with great roles and surprises. I love the floating bottle and the fact that no one has to figure out how to make that happen technically. Wonderfully relatable work!

    It's so hard to move forward in life all alone! This is such a sweet play with great roles and surprises. I love the floating bottle and the fact that no one has to figure out how to make that happen technically. Wonderfully relatable work!

  • Emma Goldman-Sherman: Stephanie. From the Posters.

    I enjoyed this stoop conversation between two dads of teenage girls. The dads are coming from such different places, it's great to see them misunderstand each other the way they do. Marchant sets this on Halloween appropriately because she is writing about fear, and she works a kind of subtextual magic to get us to understand just how scary it is to be the dad of a teenage girl. Wonderful roles for 2 men!

    I enjoyed this stoop conversation between two dads of teenage girls. The dads are coming from such different places, it's great to see them misunderstand each other the way they do. Marchant sets this on Halloween appropriately because she is writing about fear, and she works a kind of subtextual magic to get us to understand just how scary it is to be the dad of a teenage girl. Wonderful roles for 2 men!

  • Emma Goldman-Sherman: Who Will Sing for Lena

    BRILLIANT, 1 of the most theatrical, moving experiences I've ever had (and I saw it online), this play sings/moans & begs us to pay attention, and I will never forget. Liddell uses her incredible gifts of language and focus so that 1 actor/character and her pov inhabits a whole world (not by shifting into other characters) but by staying with the story, with the body, with the experience from Lena's point of view in such a way that it remains emblazoned on my memory. A great blessing!

    BRILLIANT, 1 of the most theatrical, moving experiences I've ever had (and I saw it online), this play sings/moans & begs us to pay attention, and I will never forget. Liddell uses her incredible gifts of language and focus so that 1 actor/character and her pov inhabits a whole world (not by shifting into other characters) but by staying with the story, with the body, with the experience from Lena's point of view in such a way that it remains emblazoned on my memory. A great blessing!

  • Emma Goldman-Sherman: Tracy Jones

    I love how much time and specificity Kaplan takes w/the opening sequence. I had a palpable sense of how long Tracy has been waiting and how much it is costing her, so that there is a world of waiting alone that I was relating to by the time the others show up. Such a great attention to detail amid all the farcical elements, the physical comedy and the language play! But the best parts are the monologues, so revealing and moving! Succor -- great work!

    I love how much time and specificity Kaplan takes w/the opening sequence. I had a palpable sense of how long Tracy has been waiting and how much it is costing her, so that there is a world of waiting alone that I was relating to by the time the others show up. Such a great attention to detail amid all the farcical elements, the physical comedy and the language play! But the best parts are the monologues, so revealing and moving! Succor -- great work!

  • Emma Goldman-Sherman: It's an Espresso Drink with Foamy Steamed Milk

    The title is hilarious. The setting, a cafe called Les Imbeciles, is a comment on the play itself and works to set the tone, but the tone is abundantly clear. These siblings are doomed, and we know it, but they don't. It just doesn't register in their iphone-sized worlds. ("Where even is Iowa?") So in a way it's like a horror film with the audience wanting to scream "run!" and another way, it's a great satire about our obsessions with the mundane. But it's wonderfully entertaining, edge of your seat wacky fun!

    The title is hilarious. The setting, a cafe called Les Imbeciles, is a comment on the play itself and works to set the tone, but the tone is abundantly clear. These siblings are doomed, and we know it, but they don't. It just doesn't register in their iphone-sized worlds. ("Where even is Iowa?") So in a way it's like a horror film with the audience wanting to scream "run!" and another way, it's a great satire about our obsessions with the mundane. But it's wonderfully entertaining, edge of your seat wacky fun!

  • Emma Goldman-Sherman: Alone, Alone, Alone, Alone, Alone [a 1-minute play]

    Ah, the abyss! I know this. I relate to this. And the play is a beautiful and healing moment in the dark. This is what theatre can do for us. And Martin takes a whole minute to do it. And it works so well. Wonderful!

    Ah, the abyss! I know this. I relate to this. And the play is a beautiful and healing moment in the dark. This is what theatre can do for us. And Martin takes a whole minute to do it. And it works so well. Wonderful!

  • Emma Goldman-Sherman: BEFORE, I TALKED TO SHOES

    What a stunning play about going mental or maybe Rose is merely dealing with overwhelming grief - I could relate to her enormously (but when I talk to objects, they don't respond). But the bright lights and the people and the discomfort and sensory issues over touch are very relatable! The play is filled with sensory experience. And the missing child is heart-wrenching. Great writing that cuts to the quick. I wanted more.

    What a stunning play about going mental or maybe Rose is merely dealing with overwhelming grief - I could relate to her enormously (but when I talk to objects, they don't respond). But the bright lights and the people and the discomfort and sensory issues over touch are very relatable! The play is filled with sensory experience. And the missing child is heart-wrenching. Great writing that cuts to the quick. I wanted more.