Recommended by Paul Donnelly

  • The Aloha Life
    7 Feb. 2019
    Lovely, just lovely. A perfect snapshot of mature love responding to an extraordinary circumstance. NIcely structured and punctuated with well-observed humor.
  • Champagne
    7 Feb. 2019
    Watching Nicole overplay her hand in this tart, honest two-hander brought to mind Lena Horne's description of Pal Joey as someone who "ain't always quite as slick as he's s'posed to be." She's got her money and she's got her attitude and she's as alone at the ending as she was at the start, but her time with Steph had clearly disrupted her complacency about many aspects of her life.
  • Beasts of Number Nine
    7 Feb. 2019
    This extraordinary play offers an exploration of many kinds of hunger - spiritual, emotional, sexual, and literal - that manages to be both astringent and lyrical. The hurtling narrative grabs you by the throat and doesn't let go. Each character is rich, compelling, and precisely drawn. The play's more fantastic elements, which feel deeply earned and are quite breathtaking, lead to an unexpected and deeply satisfying conclusion.
  • In Full Bloom
    16 Jan. 2019
    The simplicity and clarity of the exchanges between Roger and Beth makes their loss all the more shattering. This play gets at the truth of how people endure the unendurable and how sometimes they just don't for a time. Zubel offers an extraordinarily humane portrait of life in the midst of harrowing grief.
  • Baby Einstein on the Beach
    16 Jan. 2019
    A witty parody of the Robert Wilson/Philip Glass collaboration (which I admit to only knowing from criticism and snippets on YouTube) that also gets at some of the strengths of the Wilson/Glass reliance on images as the central narrative device. There is also real poignancy in Hamlet's recollection of the burial and retrieval of toy cars despite the absurdity of the premise. There are many levels of meaning contained in these three brief pages.
  • PERFORMANCE REVIEW
    15 Jan. 2019
    Charlene's dilemma is appallingly familiar, but her mechanisms for addressing it are refreshingly original and direct. While there is much that is very funny in this short piece, our laughter has to be rueful as the workplace prejudices and consequences at its core seem to remain intractable.
  • Skin and Bone
    12 Jan. 2019
    I came to Skin and Bone after finishing The Arsonists hungry for more by Jacqueline Goldfinger and was not disappointed. Skin and Bone has a different tone, more overtly comic and macabre, with a suspenseful story line and an ending that I did not see coming. Although I do have to say that I would root for two aging cannibals over Walmart any day!
  • Arsonist
    12 Jan. 2019
    The Arsonists offers vigorous, vital and wholly compelling storytelling, both by the characters and in the central narrative. M. faces the excruciatingly difficult task of letting go and there is real suspense in watching her reluctantly make the choices and take the actions that allow her to finally do so. There were so many moments in which I was shaken in a way that "moved" doesn't quite capture by scenes of harrowing emotional resonance enacted with clarity or described with elegant simplicity.
  • Mrs. Harrison
    4 Jan. 2019
    Mrs. Harrison is an extraordinarily compelling two-hander about the construction and ownership of memory and the impact of race on both life and art. Holly's casual racism and sense of grievance slam hard against Aisha's identity, both the real and constructed parts. The riveting question pulsing under their confrontation is, does one own a story for having experienced it or must one also truly understand it? This is a piece that should be produced widely for its skill as well as for the issues it raises.
  • OLD COWBOY CHUCK: A MONOLOGUE FOR A GAY SENIOR
    31 Dec. 2018
    Chuck is vivid and sympathetic and his dilemma is rendered poignantly but without self-pity. It's still chilling to see a man have to ask not to be hated in his old age.

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