Written & Performed by: Tracy Thorne Directed by: Nicholas Cotz Produced by All For One Theater Producing Director: Nicholas Cotz
Consulting Producer: Jami Floyd
Venue: ZOOM (Quarantine)
"How could you just sit there?"
For 10 years, that’s what they’ve asked Jack’s wife.
Well, now she's talking.
All For One Theater, in association with Jami Floyd, presents a new solo play about our complicity in oppressive systems intended to keep us silent.
This intimate, confessional story examines long-seated issues of privilege and complicity at the core of America, as well as our current and explosive political moment. Jack Was Kind gives an imagined and painfully human backstory to an actual, American event that will affect the country for generations to come.
Each performance will be immediately followed by a discussion with the playwright and a guest on complicity in American power structures.
September 16 through October 10, 2020
Photos by Bella Lewis
"A nerve-racking monologue of timeliness and Greek-drama intensity." - The New York Times
"Tracy Thorne’s terrifying performance as a woman spectacularly ill-informed about herself, barely able to understand her complicity in the abuses of power, is devastating.” - The New York Times
Written & Performed by: Tracy Thorne Directed by: Nicholas Cotz Produced by All For One Theater Producing Director: Nicholas Cotz
Consulting Producer: Jami Floyd
Venue: ZOOM (Quarantine)
"How could you just sit there?"
For 10 years, that’s what they’ve asked Jack’s wife.
Well, now she's talking.
All For One Theater, in association with Jami Floyd, presents a new solo play about our complicity in oppressive systems intended to keep us silent.
This intimate, confessional story examines long-seated issues of privilege and complicity at the core of America, as well as our current and explosive political moment. Jack Was Kind gives an imagined and painfully human backstory to an actual, American event that will affect the country for generations to come.
Each performance will be immediately followed by a discussion with the playwright and a guest on complicity in American power structures.
September 16 through October 10, 2020
Photos by Bella Lewis
"A nerve-racking monologue of timeliness and Greek-drama intensity." - The New York Times
"Tracy Thorne’s terrifying performance as a woman spectacularly ill-informed about herself, barely able to understand her complicity in the abuses of power, is devastating.” - The New York Times