Summer Shorts 2016: Series A
Closed 1h 20m
Summer Shorts 2016: Series A
69

Summer Shorts 2016: Series A NYC Reviews and Tickets

69%
(14 Ratings)
Positive
50%
Mixed
43%
Negative
7%
Members say
Entertaining, Quirky, Disappointing, Edgy, Clever

About the Show

This annual festival of new American short plays from top playwrights (like Tony nominee Neil Labute) returns to 59E59 for its 10th consecutive year.

Read more Show less

Show-Score Member Reviews (14)

Sort by:
  • Default
  • Standing in our community
  • Highest first
  • Lowest first
  • Newest first
  • Oldest first
  • Only positive
  • Only negative
  • Only mixed
318 Reviews | 61 Followers
94
Ambitious, Entertaining, Edgy, Hilarious, Raunchy

See it if Like cuss words, controversial topics, 1-acts, minimal staging, humor, good dialogue, homosexuality. I enjoyed Series A, more than B overall

Don't see it if Hate all the above and are too religious where anything anti-Christ offends you...

73 Reviews | 5 Followers
86
Ambitious, Delightful, Entertaining, Edgy, Great acting

See it if You love short plays about people and their flaws. Great acting. Wonderful Staging.

Don't see it if You want character development and a long story. They are short for a reason. If you don't like slice of life.

546 Reviews | 65 Followers
76
Quirky, Refreshing, Great writing, Entertaining

See it if Like short plays by known and upcoming playwrights. Grounded was really good and the O'Hara pkay broke the fourth wall like usual.

Don't see it if Want standard dramas. These are a bit quirky.

784 Reviews | 249 Followers
75
Clever, Entertaining, Original, Quirky, Refreshing

See it if You enjoy variety. I loved the characters in Helpers and the unfolding truth in After the Wedding. I thought How It Ends was awful.

Don't see it if You aren't willing to sit through one bad play in order to see two good ones.

79 Reviews | 20 Followers
70
Quirky, Original, Hit and miss

See it if If you want an evening that crosses genres. You are willing to take a chance on 3 plays when you may only like 1.

Don't see it if You aren't into plays about death. Irreverent religious plays are offensive to you, or you don't like short plays

273 Reviews | 47 Followers
68
Thought-provoking, Quirky

See it if you are interested in new work by three playwrights or are a fan of the three playwrights featured here.

Don't see it if you are interested in seeing these playwrights at their best-much of the work seems underdeveloped and hurried...each has done better work.

633 Reviews | 152 Followers
68
Good acting, Disappointing, Edgy, Uneven, Forgetable

See it if you have a prepaid subscription or you have a special interest in one or more of the playwrights.

Don't see it if you are looking for something special and/or memorable.

477 Reviews | 121 Followers
65
Tepid, Uneven, Indulgent, Sketchy, Disappointing

See it if are a LaBute fan or if you are a fan of short plays that don't go very deep

Don't see it if like theater with more meat on its bones

Critic Reviews (12)

The New York Times
July 31st, 2016

“‘After the Wedding’ is the type of one-act play that suggests a larger picture outside of its diminutive frame. The other works in the program are more self-contained...'This Is How It Ends' feels like an extended high-concept joke that emerged from a merry late-night gab session...'The Helpers' is an amuse-bouche...One-act plays are the tapas of the theater world. They can be small and beautiful-but the ones here mostly leave you wanting more."
Read more

Time Out New York
July 31st, 2016

“Cram’s 20-minute piece is the least substantial: an anodyne park-bench reunion scene...Neil LaBute’s equally brief but more substantial ‘After the Wedding’...Tautly written, well acted and directed with cool assurance by Maria Mileaf, it delivers a quick and dirty jab...A. Rey Pamatmat’s ‘This Is How It Ends’...Is a hot-messy mix of amorphous theology, outré humor and redemptive gay sex. It’s at once too big and too small to satisfy, but the flavors are certainly bold.”
Read more

BroadwayWorld
August 3rd, 2016

"'The Helpers' is a bittersweet comedy about two captivating characters that shows how difficult it can be to embrace others. It is superbly written and wonderfully performed…In 'After the Wedding' the dialogue is completely compelling and seamlessly delivered...'This is How it Ends' is a well-staged, creative show that uses clever characterizations to develop its theme. The creative team has done a great job of bringing this fascinating variety of plays to the 59E59 stage."
Read more

Lighting & Sound America
August 2nd, 2016

"The most amusing piece is also the thinnest: 'The Helpers'...Provides further evidence of Cram's wry way with a line and difficulty with plotting…'After the Wedding' shows the playwright Neil LaBute spinning his wheels...'This Is How It Ends' may have looked good on paper, but it suffers from poor construction and a marked deficit of wit…If these plays were the best of what was available, I shudder to think what else was on tap."
Read more

Talkin' Broadway
July 31st, 2016

“The most fully realized, is a small bijou of a work, Cusi Cram's 'The Helpers'...Thanks to smart and often funny dialog and bang-up performances by the players, the play is a touching charmer in every way...A. Rey Pamatmat's ‘This Is How It Ends,’ is a fanciful consideration of the very last day of life...The play is too over-the-top to find its footing...One will make you smile wistfully; one is likely to disturb; and one will possibly leave you scratching your head.”
Read more

TheaterScene.net
August 1st, 2016

“One of the advantages of one-act play festivals is that even if you don’t like all of the offerings, you are certain to like at least one. Unfortunately, the three that make up 'Summer Shorts: Series A' are all a disappointment. This is particularly surprising considering one of the plays is by the usually reliable Neil LaBute. All of the new works in this evening seem like either pieces of longer plays yet to come or undeveloped ideas that have not been fleshed out.”
Read more

CurtainUp
August 3rd, 2016

"In ‘The Helpers’ despite naturalistic direction, the play attempts to move too far, too fast…In LaBute's 'After the Wedding' the dialogue here is typically fast and clever, with direction and acting to match…'This is How It Ends’ stands in noted contrast...There's something intriguing about how out-there this play is...The cohesion between all three pieces feels rocky, and Series A totals up as an uneven collection, leaving you more weary of the one-act rather than energized by it. "
Read more

Front Row Center
August 2nd, 2016

"LaBute’s ‘After The Wedding’ is a seductive and disturbing bit of sleight of hand…Labute’s pen is still lethal and his aim true. The other two plays do not fare nearly as well…Burke and Dubliner do everything they can to keep ‘The Helpers’ afloat, but it is not enough to keep our interest...In ‘This Is How It Ends’ Mr. Pamatmat’s writing rises to the level of an original high school play, and these actors carry out their duties as well as they can. Mr. Iskander’s direction is no help."
Read more