Recommendations of Hyannis

  • Gina Femia: Hyannis

    This play, this play, this play. It's such a beautiful, heartbreaking play. It knocked all the wind out of me and left me trying to breathe. Cannot recommend enough. Produce, produce, produce!

    This play, this play, this play. It's such a beautiful, heartbreaking play. It knocked all the wind out of me and left me trying to breathe. Cannot recommend enough. Produce, produce, produce!

  • David Hilder: Hyannis

    Suuuuch a strong play. Terrific, plausible characters in uncomfortably plausible circumstances -- the constant and implacable threats addiction poses are treated unflinchingly but with great nuance and compassion. A wonderful play I'd love to see.

    Suuuuch a strong play. Terrific, plausible characters in uncomfortably plausible circumstances -- the constant and implacable threats addiction poses are treated unflinchingly but with great nuance and compassion. A wonderful play I'd love to see.

  • Rachel Bublitz: Hyannis

    This is a beautiful and gut wrenching play about love, family, addiction, and what happens when all three intersect. It had me in tears multiple times reading it off the page. Each character is so full and complex. I was grabbed from the very first page. Would love to see this produced. Excellent work.

    This is a beautiful and gut wrenching play about love, family, addiction, and what happens when all three intersect. It had me in tears multiple times reading it off the page. Each character is so full and complex. I was grabbed from the very first page. Would love to see this produced. Excellent work.

  • Tira Palmquist: Hyannis

    This play is a heartbreaking, gut-punch about the costs -- financial, emotional and physical -- of addiction. The choices that these characters make aren't easy, and the ripple effects of their decisions impact their relationships, their livelihoods, their homes. Just when we think that the characters are on solid ground, the play reminds us that, no, addiction's not like that. Like I said, a gut-punch. I'd love to see this play produced immediately.

    This play is a heartbreaking, gut-punch about the costs -- financial, emotional and physical -- of addiction. The choices that these characters make aren't easy, and the ripple effects of their decisions impact their relationships, their livelihoods, their homes. Just when we think that the characters are on solid ground, the play reminds us that, no, addiction's not like that. Like I said, a gut-punch. I'd love to see this play produced immediately.

  • Amy Berryman: Hyannis

    I read this play when it became a finalist for the Premiere Play Festival and I am so glad I did. A very honest look at the opioid epidemic with gorgeous characters, each one deep and complex, not only in their own makeup but in their relationship to the other characters in the play. Simply told - and has a killer, aching ending.

    I read this play when it became a finalist for the Premiere Play Festival and I am so glad I did. A very honest look at the opioid epidemic with gorgeous characters, each one deep and complex, not only in their own makeup but in their relationship to the other characters in the play. Simply told - and has a killer, aching ending.

  • Jason Tseng: Hyannis

    A heartbreaking, honest, and unflinching examination of the opioid epidemic and how it ravages the lives of not just addicts, but everyone connected to them. The play doesn't offer any easy answers, but rather cleaves close to the emotional truth of each character in a really beautiful way.

    A heartbreaking, honest, and unflinching examination of the opioid epidemic and how it ravages the lives of not just addicts, but everyone connected to them. The play doesn't offer any easy answers, but rather cleaves close to the emotional truth of each character in a really beautiful way.