Hageman has crafted a wonderful script for young actors that shows understanding for its main character, Dean, but acknowledges he has done bad things. Empathy, yes. Sympathy, no. She uses the strengths inherit in theatre to tell Dean's story -- Greek chorus, compression of time, overlapping dialogue, double and triple casting. And Dean's story is nothing less than a story all of us want to hear: we have value, we deserve to be loved and understood. We can't tell Dean's future, but we see he has the strength to do good.
Hageman has crafted a wonderful script for young actors that shows understanding for its main character, Dean, but acknowledges he has done bad things. Empathy, yes. Sympathy, no. She uses the strengths inherit in theatre to tell Dean's story -- Greek chorus, compression of time, overlapping dialogue, double and triple casting. And Dean's story is nothing less than a story all of us want to hear: we have value, we deserve to be loved and understood. We can't tell Dean's future, but we see he has the strength to do good.