Lisa K Wyatt is expressive, surprising and endlessly watchable as spinster-turned-witch Laura Willowes, whose put-upon, worried-looking vulnerability (peppered with slyly witty observations about her annoying family) gives way to an almost carnal desire for solitude (and the dark embrace of Satan).
The script, adapted by Sal Niccolazo and director Kate Motzenbacker, is full of rich descriptive language, dry comedy and subtle social commentary. The direction by Motzenbacker is elegant, often playful, letting Wyatt's performance shine. Within the miniature set, wreathed by a circle of flowers, Wyatt prepares tea, eats people-shaped scones, and listens to the voices of her pitch-perfectly awful family which pipe in as if from a vintage radi...
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Oh my, what a delightful little show! In a gentle, patient monologue, the show builds a complete picture of a woman who has made the best of circumstances in which she was thrown, despite the fact that it was contrary to her own dreams and desires. When she finally (spoiler!) finds a way to carve out for herself the life she always wanted, we are thrilled and tickled for her. ...
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BOB LEGGETTexaminer.comcertified reviewerJune 27, 2017
A good story well told by an amazing actress. See our full review at Indie Voice Blog....
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