
cover art by David Prittie
“GIRLS
IN TROUBLE
is the most thought-provoking (and also the funniest) play I’ve seen in New York
since—well, since May 1997, when I saw (twice)
STONEWALL
JACKSON’S HOUSE,
Reynolds’s razor-sharp play about race and political correctness….
In
GIRLS IN
TROUBLE,
Reynolds tackles another impossible subject: abortion….
The adjective “Shavian” occurs frequently in discussions of Jonathan
Reynolds’s work. Old Bernard was in many ways a crackpot; he was certainly a
political ignoramus of the first water. But he was an effective playwright
because he excelled in dramatizing difficult ideas—ideas, that is, that were
difficult because they were at odds with his audience’s prejudices and
preconceptions. Reynolds is indeed Shavian in this sense. In articles and
interviews, he is invariably described as “conservative” or listing rightwards.
I have no idea about the nature of his personal political convictions. But
GIRLS
IN TROUBLE
is not a
conservative play….”
Roger Kimball, The Weekly Standard
“…GIRLS IN TROUBLE, Jonathan Reynolds’s bracing assault on assumptions about the
right to choose abortion.
…he also goes places intellectually and dramatically that no left-wing
dramatist would dare. At times that’s thrilling. In a Shavian provocation for
the age of Fox News, this play tells three disturbing and loosely connected
stories—from the 1960s, the 1980s and the present—about the conflicts
surrounding abortion….”
Jason Zinoman, The New York Times
originally produced by The Flea Theater, New York
3 M, 4 F
I S B N 978-0-88145-461-1
$14.95
read the first scene or scenes on line