Recommended by Nora Louise Syran

  • Nora Louise Syran: Imaginary Friends

    Great fun! Short, sweet and far from simple; the tears are real! We all have to grow up... Bravo

    Great fun! Short, sweet and far from simple; the tears are real! We all have to grow up... Bravo

  • Nora Louise Syran: Sit While Dancing

    A lovely homage to fabulous teachers everywhere, dancing or not. Many rich visual possibilities in this short play and the potential to expand it, and the dance as life metaphor.

    A lovely homage to fabulous teachers everywhere, dancing or not. Many rich visual possibilities in this short play and the potential to expand it, and the dance as life metaphor.

  • Nora Louise Syran: Joyeux Noel: A Ten Minute Play

    Super! Laughed out loud. I could hear Emile perfectly! It's like Ingmar Bergman's Death has set up shop at the North Pole with hilarious results. A little moderation in holiday cheer is a very welcome thing.

    Super! Laughed out loud. I could hear Emile perfectly! It's like Ingmar Bergman's Death has set up shop at the North Pole with hilarious results. A little moderation in holiday cheer is a very welcome thing.

  • Nora Louise Syran: Christmas Stories

    So sweet! Loved this snapshot of a tight-knit little family with some well-kept secrets and some lessons to share. A perfect play for the holidays.

    So sweet! Loved this snapshot of a tight-knit little family with some well-kept secrets and some lessons to share. A perfect play for the holidays.

  • Nora Louise Syran: TWELFTH DAY

    A lovely retelling of the Christ story set in a modern day busy city street. Clever characterizations of the Three Wise Men, snappy dialogue and an effortless tying together of the threads of a story which this play reminds us is worth telling over and over again for its humility and humanity. You won't look at the homeless this holiday without wishing you'd brought along a gift as well. Nice.

    A lovely retelling of the Christ story set in a modern day busy city street. Clever characterizations of the Three Wise Men, snappy dialogue and an effortless tying together of the threads of a story which this play reminds us is worth telling over and over again for its humility and humanity. You won't look at the homeless this holiday without wishing you'd brought along a gift as well. Nice.

  • Nora Louise Syran: No More Tea?

    Feeny-Williams serves up another quick-paced hilarious ("Run!") comedy full of clever one-liners in this her second play in the "My Chatter" collection. https://www.rfwscripts.co.uk/product-page/my-chatter-10-original-comedy….

    Feeny-Williams serves up another quick-paced hilarious ("Run!") comedy full of clever one-liners in this her second play in the "My Chatter" collection. https://www.rfwscripts.co.uk/product-page/my-chatter-10-original-comedy….

  • Nora Louise Syran: CORNUCOPIA

    Thoroughly enjoyable! Some hysterically funny lines. A real Thanksgiving feast: a pressure cooker of obligations from ironing Gran's linen napkins to squeezing 12 "locusts" round a ...table! Great fun.

    Thoroughly enjoyable! Some hysterically funny lines. A real Thanksgiving feast: a pressure cooker of obligations from ironing Gran's linen napkins to squeezing 12 "locusts" round a ...table! Great fun.

  • Nora Louise Syran: WE HAVE TO TALK

    As they say, never assume; it makes an "ass" out of "u" and "me"! Adorable. I love your snapshots of real life, Vivian.

    As they say, never assume; it makes an "ass" out of "u" and "me"! Adorable. I love your snapshots of real life, Vivian.

  • Nora Louise Syran: FUMBLEWINTER (Full-length version)

    Carnes takes us on a wild ride starting with a "Waiting for Godot"-like opening with its cyclical dialogue to the icy business jargon and chaos at the "Thing" --like no other Thing!--to an ending we'd like very much to go back and find the threads to, to change, but in true norse style, we cannot. Great! Favorite line: "I scoop out my earwax with a spoon!"

    Carnes takes us on a wild ride starting with a "Waiting for Godot"-like opening with its cyclical dialogue to the icy business jargon and chaos at the "Thing" --like no other Thing!--to an ending we'd like very much to go back and find the threads to, to change, but in true norse style, we cannot. Great! Favorite line: "I scoop out my earwax with a spoon!"

  • Nora Louise Syran: Stop Laughing Without Me

    "Art is not what you see, but what you make others see" --Edgar Degas This is no easy task. We can relate to both playwright and producer. I very much appreciated the ending's final twist of the proverbial knife. Great cringeworthy fun!

    "Art is not what you see, but what you make others see" --Edgar Degas This is no easy task. We can relate to both playwright and producer. I very much appreciated the ending's final twist of the proverbial knife. Great cringeworthy fun!