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Josh Oberlander

Silverback Mountain

June 16, 2026

June designated as Pride Month is a time when a great many plays and entertainments are geared specifically for the gay community. The latest is Mickey Gooch, Jr.’s "Silverback Mountain," a semi-musical comedy on relevant gay themes that has been given a less than irrelevant treatment and production. Gooch, Jr. has written and stars in the show which is probably more than one person should do at one time, with original songs by Alex Lewis. The subtitle “A new gay jungle play” suggests a farcical evening but Sam LaFrage’s scattershot direction undermines what real comedy is inherent in the premise. Some of the humor and gimmicks are reminiscent of "The Book of Mormon" which is much slicker and more successful at this kind of parody. [more]

The Glitch

October 7, 2025

Though it ends on a note of ambiguity—as any good speculative work should—'The Glitch" is resoundingly clear in its testament to the power of theater to interrogate our technological anxieties with grace, wit, and emotional intelligence. In this age of rapid AI proliferation, Koenig’s play reminds us that while machines may evolve by version number, human hearts upgrade by reckoning—and not always successfully. [more]

Hurricane Season

August 26, 2024

"Hurricane Season" is the sort of vanity production in which one assumes that the author thinks he or she has invented the next step in the avant-garde. Unfortunately, Estes’ production will give most theatergoers a headache attempting to follow his play as well as the unnecessary flashing video. Whatever the play wants to say about “erotic desire and national anxiety,” it is lost in the proceedings on stage. Incidentally in the cause of transparency, Hurricane Season is not the least bit erotic though there is a certain amount of simulated sex. [more]

Pretty Perfect Lives

August 26, 2024

Tarlton’s work is not without promise. As a social critique of people who are surgically attached to their smartphones, it is somewhat spot-on. (Heaven forbid we miss that recent post documenting what was ordered in the latest restaurant!) At points when actors were immersed in their phones rather than looking at or speaking to each other, the silence of audience realization, or rather revelation, was deafening. [more]