Recommended by Aly Kantor

  • Aly Kantor: The After-Life of Sir Edmund Orme (adapted from Henry James)

    This adaptation begins with an engaging, direct-address framing device that immediately has the audience leaning in! We know from the first monologue that this is going to be a uniquely theatrical play. The stylistic dialogue does a lot to add to the late 19th-century atmosphere. I was a fan of how much of the story is told without words. There is so much room for an eager director to play! Although I wasn't familiar with the original story, I find myself intrigued enough to look it up after reading!

    This adaptation begins with an engaging, direct-address framing device that immediately has the audience leaning in! We know from the first monologue that this is going to be a uniquely theatrical play. The stylistic dialogue does a lot to add to the late 19th-century atmosphere. I was a fan of how much of the story is told without words. There is so much room for an eager director to play! Although I wasn't familiar with the original story, I find myself intrigued enough to look it up after reading!

  • Aly Kantor: She Tunes the Violin: The Life of Martha Jefferson

    Full disclosure: I am writing this recommendation with tears still in my eyes! It can be hard to write a "historical play" that is truly about people rather than events, but Lisa (as always) has absolutely nailed it. This tightly constructed piece uses absolutely every moment of negative space to tell the emotional story of the life of Martha Jefferson. I commend Lisa for allowing this piece to be complicated. There is a lot of pain in this story, but also a lot of beauty - it's such a well-balanced account. It's also full of incredible, strong roles for women!

    Full disclosure: I am writing this recommendation with tears still in my eyes! It can be hard to write a "historical play" that is truly about people rather than events, but Lisa (as always) has absolutely nailed it. This tightly constructed piece uses absolutely every moment of negative space to tell the emotional story of the life of Martha Jefferson. I commend Lisa for allowing this piece to be complicated. There is a lot of pain in this story, but also a lot of beauty - it's such a well-balanced account. It's also full of incredible, strong roles for women!

  • Aly Kantor: @thespeedofJake

    Grief is impossible to pin down, but how do you tell that to two scientists who recently lost a child? In this beautiful, heartbreaking play, hope is both the cruelest and kindest force. This piece is truly agonizing in its specificity. Maisel has an incredibly precise hand when it comes to knowing where to start and end a scene. The dialogue is natural, showing characters at their best and their worst, and contains some fantastic, truthful monologues that are so relatable that they hurt. The final scene is an inevitable exhale, and very well earned. A challenging, relatable play.

    Grief is impossible to pin down, but how do you tell that to two scientists who recently lost a child? In this beautiful, heartbreaking play, hope is both the cruelest and kindest force. This piece is truly agonizing in its specificity. Maisel has an incredibly precise hand when it comes to knowing where to start and end a scene. The dialogue is natural, showing characters at their best and their worst, and contains some fantastic, truthful monologues that are so relatable that they hurt. The final scene is an inevitable exhale, and very well earned. A challenging, relatable play.

  • Aly Kantor: The Magic Word

    Sometimes defining a relationship is as simple as asking for what you want - politely! While short plays are all about the austerity of language, this piece uses spare, effective dialogue with near surgical precision to reveal and elevate the complexity in the central relationship. Even so, it feels effortless, with a natural back and forth rhythm and plenty of humor! It's both specific and broadly relatable, and would be a wonderful challenge for two actors with strong chemistry and a great sense of timing.

    Sometimes defining a relationship is as simple as asking for what you want - politely! While short plays are all about the austerity of language, this piece uses spare, effective dialogue with near surgical precision to reveal and elevate the complexity in the central relationship. Even so, it feels effortless, with a natural back and forth rhythm and plenty of humor! It's both specific and broadly relatable, and would be a wonderful challenge for two actors with strong chemistry and a great sense of timing.

  • Aly Kantor: Recess

    This short, two-hander play is embued with such a simple theatricality! As the characters in this piece transition seamlessly from the past to the present, we get to experience a carefully curated selection of their shared childhood memories. Each moment, though brief, reveals so much about the adults that both characters have become. What begins as a collage slowly resolves into a crystal clear narrative with a surprising reversal. Though heartbreaking, this piece is full of genuine empathy.

    This short, two-hander play is embued with such a simple theatricality! As the characters in this piece transition seamlessly from the past to the present, we get to experience a carefully curated selection of their shared childhood memories. Each moment, though brief, reveals so much about the adults that both characters have become. What begins as a collage slowly resolves into a crystal clear narrative with a surprising reversal. Though heartbreaking, this piece is full of genuine empathy.

  • Aly Kantor: ALEXANDRIA

    Every character in this play tells you exactly who they are, clearly and unapologetically - and they do so through natural, distinct, and thought-provoking dialogue. This is a tightly plotted and structured play that asks a lot of questions that don't have easy answers. It's full of distinct, layered characters who will make you laugh and make you rage. It's full of tension and high stakes, but they are all earned through tremendously subtle hints that accumulate until the play's heartwrenching, utterly visceral conclusion. The is the sort of play that an empathic reader will physically feel...

    Every character in this play tells you exactly who they are, clearly and unapologetically - and they do so through natural, distinct, and thought-provoking dialogue. This is a tightly plotted and structured play that asks a lot of questions that don't have easy answers. It's full of distinct, layered characters who will make you laugh and make you rage. It's full of tension and high stakes, but they are all earned through tremendously subtle hints that accumulate until the play's heartwrenching, utterly visceral conclusion. The is the sort of play that an empathic reader will physically feel in their body.

  • Aly Kantor: We're All Girls Here

    Just when you think you've seen the scene before - two girls obsessing over their appearances in a high school bathroom - everything gets turned on its head, and we're treated to a weird and wonderful meditation on the basis of our contemporary beauty standards. Somehow, this play sits firmly in the uncanny valley, where everything is foreign and familiar at once. It's full of action and hilarious visual gags that will stay with the audience after the applause. Quirky, memorable, and thought-provoking!

    Just when you think you've seen the scene before - two girls obsessing over their appearances in a high school bathroom - everything gets turned on its head, and we're treated to a weird and wonderful meditation on the basis of our contemporary beauty standards. Somehow, this play sits firmly in the uncanny valley, where everything is foreign and familiar at once. It's full of action and hilarious visual gags that will stay with the audience after the applause. Quirky, memorable, and thought-provoking!

  • Aly Kantor: Death Bites

    A vampire with sympathy for his victims! A sassy, opinionated heroine who just happens to be on her deathbed! It seems like a match made in heaven, but the characters in this clever, pathos-filled two-hander are a bit too complex for easy endings. It's full of beautiful language, laugh-out-loud one-liners (and one recurring bit that had me howling), and an enemies-to-friends conclusion that will leave you with a wonderful, satisfying feeling.

    A vampire with sympathy for his victims! A sassy, opinionated heroine who just happens to be on her deathbed! It seems like a match made in heaven, but the characters in this clever, pathos-filled two-hander are a bit too complex for easy endings. It's full of beautiful language, laugh-out-loud one-liners (and one recurring bit that had me howling), and an enemies-to-friends conclusion that will leave you with a wonderful, satisfying feeling.

  • Aly Kantor: I Blame the Parents

    This silly two-hander is a costume designer's dream, filled with clever quips and mythology-inspired in-jokes that had me laughing out loud! This clever piece takes liberties and imagines the gorgon Medusa attending a parent-teacher conference. While comedic, the play is also an interesting interrogation into the challenges of empathic perspective-taking, touching on everything from disability accommodation to the way we teach history in schools. Who is really the "monster" in this situation, and is compromise possible? This is certainly a fun yet thought-provoking read!

    This silly two-hander is a costume designer's dream, filled with clever quips and mythology-inspired in-jokes that had me laughing out loud! This clever piece takes liberties and imagines the gorgon Medusa attending a parent-teacher conference. While comedic, the play is also an interesting interrogation into the challenges of empathic perspective-taking, touching on everything from disability accommodation to the way we teach history in schools. Who is really the "monster" in this situation, and is compromise possible? This is certainly a fun yet thought-provoking read!

  • Aly Kantor: The Greater and Lesser Edmunds of the World: a short play about bastards and birthright

    Do you know what's an awesome problem to have with a two-hander? When you're unable to decide which character is your favorite because they're both so delightfully funny, specific, and vivid, even on the page! The dialogue in this piece is quick and witty, and the exposition is hidden brilliantly in the natural (if occasionally melodramatic) patter between these "brothers!" This short but vibrant Shakespearean comedy is a treat full of laughs and language, with a tender, well-earned ending.

    Do you know what's an awesome problem to have with a two-hander? When you're unable to decide which character is your favorite because they're both so delightfully funny, specific, and vivid, even on the page! The dialogue in this piece is quick and witty, and the exposition is hidden brilliantly in the natural (if occasionally melodramatic) patter between these "brothers!" This short but vibrant Shakespearean comedy is a treat full of laughs and language, with a tender, well-earned ending.