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Silin Chen

Misterman

June 28, 2026

Walsh has long been fascinated by characters imprisoned within the architecture of their own memories, people condemned to relive the past not because they have forgotten it, but because they remember it with unbearable precision. "Misterman" may be his most devastating examination of that obsession. Thomas Magill, a profoundly isolated young man living alone in the Irish village of Inishfree, believes himself chosen to shepherd his neighbors toward God's grace. Every morning he ventures into town with his pen and pad noting what his flock must work on to improve their paths to heaven, determined to save their souls, convinced that he alone sees their hidden sins and their capacity for redemption. Yet beneath this evangelical certainty lies a psyche splintering under the weight of grief, abuse, loneliness, and delusion. Walsh transforms what could have been a familiar portrait of mental illness into something metaphysical: an inquiry into the terrible cost of constructing a reality so complete that it ultimately devours its creator. [more]

Constance: A Confession

May 20, 2026

The evening’s pleasures derive less from narrative surprise than from tonal dexterity. Sindelar knows exactly how ridiculous this world is, but resists the temptation to become smug about it. The libretto and score gleefully catalogue the linguistic debris of internet spirituality—“divine feminine,” trauma jargon, gut-health evangelism, pseudo-mystical affirmations—yet the satire lands because it is rooted in recognizable human hunger. These characters are not fools so much as spiritually malnourished people searching for coherence in a culture that increasingly offers branding in place of meaning. [more]