Recommended by Jackie Martin

  • Jackie Martin: Character Points

    I love this play, I love these characters. I would absolutely watch a whole series about these young women. Clever, real, and touching. Highly recommend!

    I love this play, I love these characters. I would absolutely watch a whole series about these young women. Clever, real, and touching. Highly recommend!

  • Jackie Martin: GROWTH IN ISOLATION

    "Growth in Isolation" is inventive, charming, and peculiar. I love the concept & understand the paradox of feeling both rooted to someone (heh) and experiencing growth in their absence. So many questions arise: Which version of Ryan is the real Ryan? Is Kallie right in her assessment of the situation, or is she simply being narrow-minded?
    And excuse me, but this title is excellent.
    This is one of those plays that opens your mind to what a play can be. Produce it!

    "Growth in Isolation" is inventive, charming, and peculiar. I love the concept & understand the paradox of feeling both rooted to someone (heh) and experiencing growth in their absence. So many questions arise: Which version of Ryan is the real Ryan? Is Kallie right in her assessment of the situation, or is she simply being narrow-minded?
    And excuse me, but this title is excellent.
    This is one of those plays that opens your mind to what a play can be. Produce it!

  • Jackie Martin: Angel

    "Angel" is clever fun with a great twist I didn't see coming. Audiences will have plenty to talk about.

    "Angel" is clever fun with a great twist I didn't see coming. Audiences will have plenty to talk about.

  • Jackie Martin: This Year

    Many of us spent 2020 lamenting the myriad woes we had to contend with and wondering why we were still expected to continue to show up to work and pay bills on time in the midst of it all. With "This Year," Greg Lam takes the disaster(s) of 2020 and adds *just* one more little problem. Darkly funny and easy to produce no matter the venue. Highly recommended!

    Many of us spent 2020 lamenting the myriad woes we had to contend with and wondering why we were still expected to continue to show up to work and pay bills on time in the midst of it all. With "This Year," Greg Lam takes the disaster(s) of 2020 and adds *just* one more little problem. Darkly funny and easy to produce no matter the venue. Highly recommended!

  • Jackie Martin: They Say Music Makes Memories

    With "They Say Music Makes Memories," Cathro captures the weight of strained parental relationships without ever feeling heavy-handed. Lee's emotional journey is dynamic and powerful; her confusion, anger, and hurt will resonate with anyone who has ever known the feeling of "love but not like."

    With "They Say Music Makes Memories," Cathro captures the weight of strained parental relationships without ever feeling heavy-handed. Lee's emotional journey is dynamic and powerful; her confusion, anger, and hurt will resonate with anyone who has ever known the feeling of "love but not like."

  • Jackie Martin: Marcus and Sextus Take A Bloody Walk Around London

    Marcus and Sextus jump right off the page in this bloody brilliant 10 minute 'walking play.' The concept is delightful - ghostly Roman legionaries stuck in modern day London - and Plummer seamlessly injects historical and geographical facts into a very funny and engaging script.

    Marcus and Sextus jump right off the page in this bloody brilliant 10 minute 'walking play.' The concept is delightful - ghostly Roman legionaries stuck in modern day London - and Plummer seamlessly injects historical and geographical facts into a very funny and engaging script.

  • Jackie Martin: 180 Days

    In "180 Days," Emily McClain masterfully takes us through an entire school year with an engaging story, memorable characters, and incredible pacing. The setting of a teacher's lunch room, truly the epicenter of teacher bonding and gossip within a school, is so stageable and smart. This would be a great addition to your one act festival.

    In "180 Days," Emily McClain masterfully takes us through an entire school year with an engaging story, memorable characters, and incredible pacing. The setting of a teacher's lunch room, truly the epicenter of teacher bonding and gossip within a school, is so stageable and smart. This would be a great addition to your one act festival.

  • Jackie Martin: ON ROBOTS AND RAINDROPS

    A funny and moving contemplation of love, companionship, and loss.

    A funny and moving contemplation of love, companionship, and loss.

  • Jackie Martin: Black, White, & Red All Over

    Well, this is wonderful. This play is wildly funny and inventive, and I feel confident it would be a hit at any 10 minute play festival. Read, produce, repeat.

    Well, this is wonderful. This play is wildly funny and inventive, and I feel confident it would be a hit at any 10 minute play festival. Read, produce, repeat.

  • Jackie Martin: Drain

    "Facts change."
    Those two words, seemingly so Orwellian, so impossible, resonate so deeply in our world today.
    This play is powerful, upsetting, uncomfortable, and necessary. It is a call to action.

    "Facts change."
    Those two words, seemingly so Orwellian, so impossible, resonate so deeply in our world today.
    This play is powerful, upsetting, uncomfortable, and necessary. It is a call to action.