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Jon Robin Baitz

    Robbie Baitz crée des pièces de théâtre profondément personnelles qui explorent fréquemment les complexités des dynamiques familiales et la condition humaine. Son écriture plonge dans les thèmes de l'identité, de la mémoire et de la quête de sens. Le travail de Baitz est connu pour sa perspicacité psychologique aiguë et ses dialogues captivants. Son style est à la fois intime et universel, résonnant auprès d'un public aux horizons divers.

    The Paris Letter
    I'll Be Seein' Ya: A Play
    • Two searing, incisive plays from Jon Robin Baitz, Tony Award nominee and two-time Pulitzer Prize finalist.Allie Murchow, a retired Hollywood makeup artist, is stuck inside her apartment, stuck in her daydreams of bygone celebrity and glamour, and stuck on hold with her pharmacist. She tries to make sense of the Los Angeles outside her windows, the LA of 2020, but she can’t hear herself think over the echo of sirens and her chatty brother’s interjections. I’ll Be Seein’ Ya , written by Jon Robin Baitz, the author of Other Desert Cities and Vicuña , is an unflinchingly funny new play that takes on our anxieties and delusions and reveals new truths about our strange reality.In The Insolvencies , two men―one younger, one older, one a professor, one a former student―recall their relationship and the time they felt “the piercing sting of simply being seen.” A study of sex and pleasure, of justice and shame, this short, stirring play completes the affecting pair of new works from Baitz, “the American theatre’s most fascinating playwright of conscience” (Michael Kuchwara, Associated Press).

      I'll Be Seein' Ya: A Play
    • The Paris Letter

      A Play

      • 80pages
      • 3 heures de lecture
      3,8(50)Évaluer

      Set against the backdrop of urban New York City, this modern tragedy explores the destructive interplay of power, money, and personal identity. Wall Street executive Sandy Sonenberg faces a crisis as hidden truths from his past resurface, jeopardizing his relationships and career. The play delves into themes of unrequited love and betrayal, as Sandy grapples with his concealed sexual identity and the ramifications of a dangerous affair with a young associate. Baitz's work poignantly examines the toll of secrets on friendship and self-worth.

      The Paris Letter