See it if you want to have a glimpse on the struggles and challenges of refugees and migrants lives
Don't see it if you want to continue closing the eyes before suffering, discrimination and a struggle for a better life
See it if You like plays based on real events. If you like immersive experiences. If you are ready to cry and laugh.
Don't see it if You are looking for entertainment and don’t want to get involved. This play will reach out to you and make you think, nobody is safe.
See it if you want your world rocked by a play.
Don't see it if ............I can't think of a reason not to see this play. Repeat attended it and it was just as good the second time.
See it if you are hungry for challenging and reality-based theatre.
Don't see it if you’re xenophobic.
See it if you want a unique, deeply affecting experience featuring remarkable performances, immersive staging, and harrowing subject matter
Don't see it if you're looking to sit back, relax, and enjoy some light escapism; you'll struggle with a loud, chaotic, non-traditional setting Read more
See it if Insanely gripping and innovative work based on true events; even a few of actors were from the camp. Captivating, daring.
Don't see it if I couldn't have been comfortable without the chair with a back but still would have wanted to see it.
See it if you can.
Don't see it if you can’t handle the seating. Read more
See it if You are interested in social justice, theatre as activism and incredible performances.
Don't see it if You may be triggered by images of death, descriptions/depictions of violence or gunshots.
“Go see it—because not only is it extremely important to witness, it is completely and utterly entertaining, as great theater should be.”
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CRITIC'S PICK! "The show summons, with uncanny clarity, the vigorous chaos from which a provisional order gradually emerges...There is tension, of course, and apprehension and suspicion...But the clashes are often comic, and the pure energy of actors creating a world of people creating a world of their own is exhilarating...A work of absorbing theater, which uses the immediacy of that art to conjure the paradoxes and confusions of a world dealing with an unprecedented flux of uprooted lives."
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"If you’re looking for effortless exposition or delicate characterization, this nearly three-hour immersive play won’t afford it. It’s not artful as a piece of drama; rather, it’s a deliberate cacophony of voices...The piece is impressive, and it has moments of virtuosity, especially in the music...But when the gorgeously openhearted gesture of making theater for refugees turns into a show for the wealthy about refugees, part of its moral beauty slips away."
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"In spite of exquisite design and a substantial production, the play itself is shaky...Despite extreme efforts at verisimilitude, a noble purpose, and a vitally important subject, the storytelling comes across as heavy-handed...substituting atmosphere for dramaturgy...It’s devastating to spend all this time in a room with these characters and in this place, and emerge knowing less than when we went in. Disillusion may be part of the point, but it also feels like a lost opportunity."
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"It's a stunning feat of design, but it's not the only aspect that makes this marvelously realized production...essential viewing...The work packs a powerful punch in the current political era...The play's writing sometimes lacks cohesion and feels manipulative, making it not always as artful as the production. But 'The Jungle' nonetheless registers with a throbbing authenticity only amplified by the superb performances of the large, multinational ensemble and the virtuosic immersive staging."
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"Anyone who is capable of a scintilla of human decency could not help but be moved by the human face this intense and powerfully immersive play puts on people fleeing oppression in their homelands...To be sure, the two-hour, 45-minute production has its excesses...The drama’s success in imbuing with personality those trapped in the camp...may be its most important achievement. No weak link exists in the 18-member ensemble, and some actors offer particularly vivid accounts."
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“An emotionally jarring production that has been transplanted from London's Young Vic...vibrates with truth through every flattering and unflattering circumstance surrounding a momentary epicenter of Europe's refugee crisis. Led by directors Stephen Daldry and Justin Martin, the piece is more an experience than a play, physically and psychologically rebuilding a slice of life to ultra-realistic effect in the middle of Dumbo, Brooklyn."
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"Even if you've read or heard a lot about the refugees and some of the shocking things they've been through, nothing will prepare you for being in the thick of it as the characters pour their hearts out right in front of you. This is thanks to some stellar work from the entire company...There's no mistaking that this is one of the most vital pieces of theatre ever to grace the stage, at once dispiriting and inspiring - the human capacity for hope in adversity is quite an extraordinary thing."
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