Recommended by Scott Sickles

  • Scott Sickles: Denny's Monologue (from Goodbye, Denny Jacobs)

    There’s a “which came first” conundrum in the moral pathology of this murderer. How can one not understand the anguish and reactivity of a man shamed by a family who paid people to imprison and torture him so he could be “fixed” when nothing was wrong. There’s much heartbreak to be had, especially because of a life wasted because the child he used to be though he ran out of options. Martin gives us a story of sacrifice and mercy with moral complexity and absolute heartbreak.

    There’s a “which came first” conundrum in the moral pathology of this murderer. How can one not understand the anguish and reactivity of a man shamed by a family who paid people to imprison and torture him so he could be “fixed” when nothing was wrong. There’s much heartbreak to be had, especially because of a life wasted because the child he used to be though he ran out of options. Martin gives us a story of sacrifice and mercy with moral complexity and absolute heartbreak.

  • Scott Sickles: DON'T LOOK AT ME LIKE THAT (a 2 minute monologue)

    How much does a person owe another when they’ve already given them a lifetime? Is “‘til death do us part” meant to be literal, when the spouse we know has degenerated - neurologically, emotionally, and behaviorally - into a hostile stranger? What happiness are you entitled to? Powerful questions both asked and answered in this searing and beautiful monologue. The answers are hard won and certainly not what everyone wants to hear, but the truth has weight in this argument. Terrific piece!

    How much does a person owe another when they’ve already given them a lifetime? Is “‘til death do us part” meant to be literal, when the spouse we know has degenerated - neurologically, emotionally, and behaviorally - into a hostile stranger? What happiness are you entitled to? Powerful questions both asked and answered in this searing and beautiful monologue. The answers are hard won and certainly not what everyone wants to hear, but the truth has weight in this argument. Terrific piece!

  • Scott Sickles: Checking In

    Marchant simultaneously captures mid-pandemic online corporate communication with remote workers and shines a spotlight on the hypcrisy of higher-ups to demand their employees unnecessarily return to office environs. The faux concern is as apalling now as it was then. A terrific Zoom piece that will embarrass upper management!

    Marchant simultaneously captures mid-pandemic online corporate communication with remote workers and shines a spotlight on the hypcrisy of higher-ups to demand their employees unnecessarily return to office environs. The faux concern is as apalling now as it was then. A terrific Zoom piece that will embarrass upper management!

  • Scott Sickles: A Fragile Mind - Press The Red Button

    Sublimely unsettling. There’s a jocularity that belies but never obscures the feeling that things are much graver than they seem in this customer service dystopia. Swenson uses absurdist rhythms and repetitions to amplify the unease and Jenny’s trepidation. As determined as she is apprehensive, she soldiers on sweeping us into an uncertain future.

    Deeply satisfying as a stand-alone piece because the questions we’re left with are thought provoking and more than a little terrifying. Fortunately, this is the first installment of a cycle. But even if it weren’t, it leaves your mind and soul...

    Sublimely unsettling. There’s a jocularity that belies but never obscures the feeling that things are much graver than they seem in this customer service dystopia. Swenson uses absurdist rhythms and repetitions to amplify the unease and Jenny’s trepidation. As determined as she is apprehensive, she soldiers on sweeping us into an uncertain future.

    Deeply satisfying as a stand-alone piece because the questions we’re left with are thought provoking and more than a little terrifying. Fortunately, this is the first installment of a cycle. But even if it weren’t, it leaves your mind and soul shaken.

  • Scott Sickles: A Fragile Mind - Recurring Nightmares

    Swenson is creating a complex puzzle of intimacy, memory, and accountability, raising troubling questions within an overarching story that both compels and consumes the psyche.

    While it’s troubling as a stand-alone, on the heels of PRESS THE RED BUTTON, questions about what’s happening loom even larger. What’s great is Tammy know’s something’s off and she’s actively responding. Not just by going to a therapist to confront her nightmares but calling her thearpist’s idiosyncrasies. We’re left with an opacity of trust: who’s playing who, who’s been played?

    I can’t wait!

    Swenson is creating a complex puzzle of intimacy, memory, and accountability, raising troubling questions within an overarching story that both compels and consumes the psyche.

    While it’s troubling as a stand-alone, on the heels of PRESS THE RED BUTTON, questions about what’s happening loom even larger. What’s great is Tammy know’s something’s off and she’s actively responding. Not just by going to a therapist to confront her nightmares but calling her thearpist’s idiosyncrasies. We’re left with an opacity of trust: who’s playing who, who’s been played?

    I can’t wait!

  • Scott Sickles: A Fragile Mind - Workplace Stressors

    There’s a moment when I was reading this when I slid back in my seat and just says, “F—ck…!” Swenson has a gift for unexpected turning points and revelations of perception. Here, he cranks those to 11, and more than once, turning his sublimely creepy dystopia into a pristine fluorescent hellscape.

    WORKPLACE STRESSORS is a masterpiece of escalating tension and pace. Suddenly, it shifts from existential unease to a pedal-to-the-floor detective story a la DARK CITY or (more obviously) SEVERANCE. Comparisons be damned, this is Swenson’s universe and there’s no escape for any of us!

    There’s a moment when I was reading this when I slid back in my seat and just says, “F—ck…!” Swenson has a gift for unexpected turning points and revelations of perception. Here, he cranks those to 11, and more than once, turning his sublimely creepy dystopia into a pristine fluorescent hellscape.

    WORKPLACE STRESSORS is a masterpiece of escalating tension and pace. Suddenly, it shifts from existential unease to a pedal-to-the-floor detective story a la DARK CITY or (more obviously) SEVERANCE. Comparisons be damned, this is Swenson’s universe and there’s no escape for any of us!

  • Scott Sickles: A Fragile Mind - Pretending to Exist

    More turns than a Grand Prix racetrack! Swenson has taken us from corporate hellscape to waking nightmare. My brain did a happy dance when Tammy reveals how close her experience is to the audience’s. It’s a terrific bit of meta-theatricality, completely organic while magnifying the horror exponentially.

    We feel claustrophobically trapped even as we get a glimpse into the larger plan.

    I’m curious to see how this piece functions as a stand-alone. SO MUCH HAPPEN in it’s brief running time, I’d love to see what an audience makes of it tabula rasa.

    More turns than a Grand Prix racetrack! Swenson has taken us from corporate hellscape to waking nightmare. My brain did a happy dance when Tammy reveals how close her experience is to the audience’s. It’s a terrific bit of meta-theatricality, completely organic while magnifying the horror exponentially.

    We feel claustrophobically trapped even as we get a glimpse into the larger plan.

    I’m curious to see how this piece functions as a stand-alone. SO MUCH HAPPEN in it’s brief running time, I’d love to see what an audience makes of it tabula rasa.

  • Scott Sickles: Sugar

    Taut and unsettling from the get-go. There’s an intrusion happening, even though the door is closed. All we know is something is wrong, a persistent danger is both present and looming, and if Lilia opens that door the danger will escalate. But is that a bad thing? SUGAR had me in the edge of my seat right up to the end. Even now I’m wondering if Lilia is okay. Urgent and necessary writing.

    Taut and unsettling from the get-go. There’s an intrusion happening, even though the door is closed. All we know is something is wrong, a persistent danger is both present and looming, and if Lilia opens that door the danger will escalate. But is that a bad thing? SUGAR had me in the edge of my seat right up to the end. Even now I’m wondering if Lilia is okay. Urgent and necessary writing.

  • Scott Sickles: BOOM - monologue about loss for any gender, any age

    As intimate as a journal entry, BOOM provides a shared experience of grief and loss as endured in a teeming crowd. Intimacy sans privacy. Privacy that manifests like a miracle from its own absence. Frankie is alone in a holiday crowd, untethered yet secure, held up because it’s impossible to fall. Yet unutterably alone.

    Rose conveys this with extraordinary balance, complexity and emotion. The details are striking. The acknowledgment about the things we never liked about the person we lost, things we suddenly can’t live without because now we have to.

    Reading this was an honor.

    As intimate as a journal entry, BOOM provides a shared experience of grief and loss as endured in a teeming crowd. Intimacy sans privacy. Privacy that manifests like a miracle from its own absence. Frankie is alone in a holiday crowd, untethered yet secure, held up because it’s impossible to fall. Yet unutterably alone.

    Rose conveys this with extraordinary balance, complexity and emotion. The details are striking. The acknowledgment about the things we never liked about the person we lost, things we suddenly can’t live without because now we have to.

    Reading this was an honor.

  • Scott Sickles: I LOVE A PARADE, a 10-minute dystopian political drama

    Harrowing.

    The most potent metaphors and symbols are grounded in reality and circumstance. The line, the masks, how some people are trapped on one path while others can come and go as they please… Rose grounds all of it in a death march. That march itself is grounded in real world fear.

    The aforementioned masks set this piece apart most. Execution as entertainment is a long-standing dystopian trope, but execution as an amplification of culture… there’s a self-serving vulgarity to it, like bedazzling an executioner’s hood. Something shiny/pretty to justify the ugly, adding a profoundly...

    Harrowing.

    The most potent metaphors and symbols are grounded in reality and circumstance. The line, the masks, how some people are trapped on one path while others can come and go as they please… Rose grounds all of it in a death march. That march itself is grounded in real world fear.

    The aforementioned masks set this piece apart most. Execution as entertainment is a long-standing dystopian trope, but execution as an amplification of culture… there’s a self-serving vulgarity to it, like bedazzling an executioner’s hood. Something shiny/pretty to justify the ugly, adding a profoundly disturbing dimension.