Recommended by John Busser

  • John Busser: But What Do We Do With the Plane?

    Sharp as a knife and blisteringly funny, Michael Tricca posits a seriously funny scenario which is so fitting for this time and place in America today. Like throwing a bag of fireworks on a dumpster fire, the result is chaotically funny and fun as hell to look at. This play made me laugh out loud a number of times in the reading. I can only imagine how much an audience would howl at seeing it performed.

    Sharp as a knife and blisteringly funny, Michael Tricca posits a seriously funny scenario which is so fitting for this time and place in America today. Like throwing a bag of fireworks on a dumpster fire, the result is chaotically funny and fun as hell to look at. This play made me laugh out loud a number of times in the reading. I can only imagine how much an audience would howl at seeing it performed.

  • John Busser: Ida Invisible

    It's not the destination, it's the journey that makes life so satisfying. And with that, we have a valuable life lesson for all the Ida Invisibles out there, barely registering through their own sense of (or lack thereof) worth. Jacquie Floyd presents us with a fairy tale that is anything but ordinary and a heroine who is extraordinary, but would never acknowledge it. But maybe living life with all it's problems and pitfalls is where we truly find a happy ending. Ida makes me believe in that.

    It's not the destination, it's the journey that makes life so satisfying. And with that, we have a valuable life lesson for all the Ida Invisibles out there, barely registering through their own sense of (or lack thereof) worth. Jacquie Floyd presents us with a fairy tale that is anything but ordinary and a heroine who is extraordinary, but would never acknowledge it. But maybe living life with all it's problems and pitfalls is where we truly find a happy ending. Ida makes me believe in that.

  • John Busser: Margie's Interview

    For every academic who forgets that there are some things in life that can't be learned with a book or a video, comes this sweetly funny play by Kate Danley. Playing against the stereotype of a hardened outdoorsman (or woman, in this case) a lumberjack looking to impart wisdom teaches an elementary school principal the satisfying art of ripping through wood with a chainsaw. Fast and funny, this play will bring the house down (or at least a desk). Great stuff.

    For every academic who forgets that there are some things in life that can't be learned with a book or a video, comes this sweetly funny play by Kate Danley. Playing against the stereotype of a hardened outdoorsman (or woman, in this case) a lumberjack looking to impart wisdom teaches an elementary school principal the satisfying art of ripping through wood with a chainsaw. Fast and funny, this play will bring the house down (or at least a desk). Great stuff.

  • John Busser: THE BADDEST KID ON EMERSON

    This play could have been subtitled, "Never Beat Your Heroes." The perception we have of people we've never met, but worship from afar is so misleading, and the disappointment that follows is inevitable. In this case, that disappointment manifests as rage. This is a chilling example of people acting out on their anger, and it couldn't be more timely. This is ugliness at it's best (and I totally understand the irony of that statement). Steve Martin's play should be required viewing, if only to make you uncomfortable.

    This play could have been subtitled, "Never Beat Your Heroes." The perception we have of people we've never met, but worship from afar is so misleading, and the disappointment that follows is inevitable. In this case, that disappointment manifests as rage. This is a chilling example of people acting out on their anger, and it couldn't be more timely. This is ugliness at it's best (and I totally understand the irony of that statement). Steve Martin's play should be required viewing, if only to make you uncomfortable.

  • John Busser: FLOATING BUBBLES

    There is a charm to Jack Levine's play that transcends story and allows us to just bask in two characters who meet cute on a park bench, discuss an absurd invention and fall for each other. The real invention here is their budding relationship, which, after reading the delightful interaction between these two, seems a lot more likely to hold water than a bubble machine holds up swimmers. Feather-light and extremely accessible, this play would be a gift for any two actors.

    There is a charm to Jack Levine's play that transcends story and allows us to just bask in two characters who meet cute on a park bench, discuss an absurd invention and fall for each other. The real invention here is their budding relationship, which, after reading the delightful interaction between these two, seems a lot more likely to hold water than a bubble machine holds up swimmers. Feather-light and extremely accessible, this play would be a gift for any two actors.

  • John Busser: Tooth Or Dare

    Disney meets the Sopranos in this charmingly funny little takedown of our need to get likes and stars and good reviews. A Tooth Fairy with a need for high ratings takes a leg breaker's (or in this case, jaw breaker's) course of action with a couple of parents who didn't keep up their end of the "arrangement". The TF may have gotten a bad writeup, but this play won't.

    Disney meets the Sopranos in this charmingly funny little takedown of our need to get likes and stars and good reviews. A Tooth Fairy with a need for high ratings takes a leg breaker's (or in this case, jaw breaker's) course of action with a couple of parents who didn't keep up their end of the "arrangement". The TF may have gotten a bad writeup, but this play won't.

  • John Busser: The Language Bear

    That. Was. Creepy. As. Hell. I read this with a sense of dread knowing it wouldn't end well for Daddy. And like the best horror, it's more about what you DON'T see, instead of what you do. Dominica Plummer ratchets up the tension, and then lowers the boom in the final line of dialogue. I would love to see this produced!

    That. Was. Creepy. As. Hell. I read this with a sense of dread knowing it wouldn't end well for Daddy. And like the best horror, it's more about what you DON'T see, instead of what you do. Dominica Plummer ratchets up the tension, and then lowers the boom in the final line of dialogue. I would love to see this produced!

  • John Busser: Power

    This is an amazing play, both for what it says, but more importantly, what it doesn't say, or better yet, what the characters say to each other , not in words, but in deference or defiance to each other. Using an ever changing system of bestowing status above or below one another, the drama unfolds differently each performance. The words may be the same in most cases, but the body language, delivery and intent around those words mixes into an awkward stew of boiling tension. I was riveted from page 1. Spellbinding work.

    This is an amazing play, both for what it says, but more importantly, what it doesn't say, or better yet, what the characters say to each other , not in words, but in deference or defiance to each other. Using an ever changing system of bestowing status above or below one another, the drama unfolds differently each performance. The words may be the same in most cases, but the body language, delivery and intent around those words mixes into an awkward stew of boiling tension. I was riveted from page 1. Spellbinding work.

  • John Busser: Eucalyptus Drops, Cobblestone Alleyways, Sodium Pentathol and You

    Dominica Plummer's what-if? of a play is fast, historically suspect, and fun as all get out. A time-traveling grad student with a loose interpretation of events and an even looser desire to see it play out as it's supposed to is held in check by a talking cat. Does that make sense? Who cares, this is what we're dealing with and it's a blast to see unfold. And that title alone makes this worth your time.

    Dominica Plummer's what-if? of a play is fast, historically suspect, and fun as all get out. A time-traveling grad student with a loose interpretation of events and an even looser desire to see it play out as it's supposed to is held in check by a talking cat. Does that make sense? Who cares, this is what we're dealing with and it's a blast to see unfold. And that title alone makes this worth your time.

  • John Busser: The Ballad of Leslie

    Life doesn't always go our way, but if it's going to go awry, why not have it go in style! A narrator, or in this case, a chorus of one (budget cuts, you understand) arrives just in time to make an inconvenience seem more epic. Lisa Dellagiarino Feriend's written a zippy little play about making epic lemonade out of one of life's lemons. And does it in a way that is perfect, by adding a mistaken identity to the mix. Fast and fun!

    Life doesn't always go our way, but if it's going to go awry, why not have it go in style! A narrator, or in this case, a chorus of one (budget cuts, you understand) arrives just in time to make an inconvenience seem more epic. Lisa Dellagiarino Feriend's written a zippy little play about making epic lemonade out of one of life's lemons. And does it in a way that is perfect, by adding a mistaken identity to the mix. Fast and fun!