Past and present collide on a snowy Christmas Eve for a troubled family of five. Humorous and heart-wrenching, this play proves that magic can be found in the simplest breaths of life.
Past and present collide on a snowy Christmas Eve for a troubled family of five. Humorous and heart-wrenching, this play proves that magic can be foun...
"Indecent reminds us of the power of art to tell us truths long before we are able to recognize them as such." -- Los Angeles Times
"Indecent sheds an eye-opening light on a little-known time when theatrical history, Jewish culture, and the frank depiction of homosexuality intersected, with explosive results." -- New York Times
When Sholem Asch wrote God of Vengeance in 1907, he didn't imagine the height of controversy the play would eventually reach. Performing at first in Yiddish and German, the play's subject matter wasn't deemed...
"Indecent reminds us of the power of art to tell us truths long before we are able to recognize them as such." -- Los Angeles Times
"The play is steeped in a gentle lyricism we associate with nostalgic portraits of American youth. The tone, the setting, the characters seem at first so familiar, so, well, normal, that it's only by degrees that we sense the poison within the pastels. By then we feel both locked into, and complicit with, this portrait of a warping relationship. That's the art of Drive."--Ben Brantley, The New York Times
Paula Vogel's widely celebrated masterpiece, How I Learned to Drive, winner of the 1998 Pulitzer Prize for Drama and many other accolades, is published here for the...
"The play is steeped in a gentle lyricism we associate with nostalgic portraits of American youth. The tone, the setting, the characters seem at fi...