All of Us: A Celebration of BIPOC Voices
All of Us: A Celebration of BIPOC Voices
A collection of exciting short plays to celebrate and amplify important, too-often-unheard voices. These plays offer a meaningful theatrical journey for, All of Us.
The Day the Music Came Back
by Alvaro Saar Patel
A quasi-dystopian play about a group of teens who meet up to discuss something they know nothing about--music. It was banned before they were born. Around the time their parents were babies. So this is a generation that has never heard music on a radio, an iPod, or even at a concert.
A New Story from Rabbit and Frog
by Randy Reinholz
What do you do when your audition in front of the all-school showcase selection committee is in minutes...and your partner is nowhere to be found? If you're Lou and Alex, you're trying to turn your three-person performance of "Rabbit and Frog," an old Kumeyaay story, into a two-person show. But when River, whose grandmother was the one who taught it to them, finally arrives fresh from a family crisis, it becomes clear that there's a new story "to bring the past and present together "they need to tell.
Anatomy
by Hope Villanueva
When a video of two high school boys grading the body parts of their female classmates goes viral, a group of girls find themselves the subject of unwanted attention "lots of it, and it just won't go away. With nerves fraying and tempers flaring, one of the girls finally strikes back, landing both the girls and boys in front of the school administration. But whose job is policing the internet?
sunset on seb and hiro.
by christopher oscar peña
Something bad happened at school today "and Sebastian has made it out, but not unharmed. Now, he waits for Hiro at their spot. As the waves crash before him, Hiro arrives "and the two rehash the past, trying to find their way back to each other in the present. But some damage can't be repaired, and a once close friendship may be as fleeting as the sunset itself in this haunting, poetic play.
re'open our eyes
by Matthew Paul Olmos
A history class awakens to a mysterious change of scenery just beyond their classroom window, the familiar busted-up parking lot transformed into a lush landscape "if only they could get out of the room to live in this educational Eden.
Saturday: 02:00 PM - 03:00 PM