When an online adoption process goes sideways, the young boy caught in the middle launches himself into a lone wolf’s journey to find a pack he can call his own. From South Korean playwright Hansol ...
Occasionally, you learn things at the theater. For instance, a recent Playbill quotes from news articles about Americans using “Yahoo! message boards, Facebook groups and other online sites to ...
Left to right, Inés de la Cruz as Robin, Minh-Anh Day as Wolf/Jeenu and Tonasia Jones as Ash in "Wolf Play." (Courtesy Andrew James Wang) The protagonist of “Wolf Play” thinks he’s a wolf — though ...
"Wolf Play" by Hansol Jung is presented by arrangement with Concord Theatricals on behalf of Samuel French, Inc. www.concordtheatricals.com A Korean boy is ushered into a new house by his adopted ...
Plus, get the best of BroadwayWorld delivered to your inbox, and unlimited access to our editorial content across the globe. Jackson McHenry, Vulture: Wolf Play might be unbearable if not for ...
Rarely do discussions of adoption go beyond its presumed benevolence. It is assumed that those who adopt do so with a caring heart and a sincere desire to raise a child as part of their family.
The figurative wolf in Wolf Play is actually a six-year-old Korean boy, who is actually a puppet, manned and given voice by an actor (Alan Kim) who manipulates him around the small stage at Rec Room ...
It's only a few weeks before Wolf Play premieres at Artists Repertory Theatre, but playwright Hansol Jung still isn't totally sure what the production will look like. Wolf Play is about an adopted boy ...
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