"Room for One" is a play about how sufficatingly hard it can be to feel like a real person in New York when you're trying to be an artist. About how family can simultaneously keep you afloat but also hold you back, about the guilt of trying to balance your dependency and duty to them with your responsibilities to yourself. And it's about the terror of winding up alone with all of that, and how it makes us do some horrible, some hilarious, and some beautiful things.
Alec's play is equal parts funny, horrifying, and poignant, and it was afast, furious process to get such an intricate piece on its feet and in front of audiences. But the strength, skill, and resourcefulness of our fearless director Jenna Worsham and the multi-talented multi-hyphenates in the Middle Voice Company pulled it off with grace.
Alec's play is equal parts funny, horrifying, and poignant, and it was afast, furious process to get such an intricate piece on its feet and in front of audiences. But the strength, skill, and resourcefulness of our fearless director Jenna Worsham and the multi-talented multi-hyphenates in the Middle Voice Company pulled it off with grace.