

Great Falls
Lee Blessing
Awards & Recognition
Nominee: 2026 Tony Award for Best Play Winner! 2026 New York Drama Critics’ Circle Award for Best Play
In the outer limits of rural Idaho, the last two estranged members of the Fernsby family tree, a reclusive aunt and her gay nephew, reunite to sort the mess left behind after a troubled father’s passing.
They now face an uncomfortable and universal question: How do we deal with other people?
And is connection more trouble than it’s worth?
As their relationship begins anew, the two reluctant Fernsbys – separated by age and experience – start to understand the joys and perils of letting someone else into your own story, even if only for a moment.
"A jewel of a play… a singularly beautiful piece that shifts almost imperceptibly from acerbic comedy to searing pathos before an ending whose bleakness is broken by a slender but luminous beam of hope... This is a gorgeous play – unassuming and concise but emotionally expansive, attentive to its characters’ interior lives as much as their quotidian routines… Hunter’s work is deceptively modest… but its rewards are as immense as the Idaho night skies."
— Hollywood Reporter
"Mr. Hunter’s writing has a clarity, delicacy and crisp simplicity that allows us to watch as Sarah and Ethan negotiate the minefields of their relationship, drawing comfort from one another’s company even though both would be loath to admit it."
— Wall Street Journal
"A gorgeous new drama whose touching central relationship coexists with a larger exploration of the intimate and cosmic… The play is a multifaceted gem, exquisitely shaped and cut, that shines out from the simplest of settings."
— TimeOut NY
"An intimate Pacific-Northwest-set drama about lonely, struggling souls… It’s a hard-hitting, hard-laughing show that combines topics that you arrive at the theater not itching to confront – the COVID pandemic, meth addiction, health insurance, shift pay – into an absorbing story you leave wanting much more of."
— New York Post
"[A] keen-eyed, compassionate play… about the poisonous effects of social disconnection and the double-edged ideal of self-reliance… [Sarah] is also one of the funniest and most thoroughly human characters seen lately on a New York stage."
— The New York Times
| Character |
|---|
| Ethan Early to mid-30s, male. |
| James Late 20s or early 30s, male. |
| Paulette 40s or 50s, female. |
| Kenny Male, voice only. Can be played by the actor playing JAMES. |
| Vickie Female, voice only. Can be played by the actor playing PAULETTE. |
| Sarah 60s, female. |
Little Bear Ridge Road – First Look on Broadway
Little Bear Ridge Road is a play written by Samuel D. Hunter and published by Samuel French .
No community reviews yet
Plays with similar themes, style, and content.
More plays from Samuel D. Hunter that we think you'll enjoy.