

Small Mouth Sounds
Bess Wohl
A boy and girl meet and speak as though in a novel: He said and then I said.
Small talk and awkward silences descend into blah blah blah.
Each considers breaking away but remembers how being alone is.
They reminisce about childhood, growing up and so on until they suddenly become animated and rise to witty banter, establishing a rapport with no more awkward silences.
In Off-Off Broadway Festival Plays, 19th Series .
"Vassallo orchestrates an intricate duel of wits between two embittered men struggling to validate their own bigotry."
— Steven Boone, Show Business
"Mr. Vassallo has taken an interesting approach. … There is some refreshingly honest talk from both characters—no political correctness here."
— Neil Genzlinger, New York Times"The strength of Vassallo’s 1995 playlet is that he balances griefs. Nothing … is black-and-white. Intolerance, the playwright observes, can sometimes grow from understandable resentments—but the problem with rational gripes is that they don't often lead to attempts at reconciliation. – David Finkle, Theater Mania“A bitter sampling of bigotry and racial epithets … Most blatantly challenging and angry …hints at social conventions, political correctness in universities, and the genesis of bigotry among the average folks on the street… offers some poignant moments of heated exchange.” – Kessa De Santis, Electronic Link“A highly theatrical exploration of ongoing racial g Mark Dundas Wood, Backstage
| Character |
|---|
| SHEILA O'KEEFE a nervous but determined young woman |
| MANWOMANWAITER |
| MARIE SALUZZO a blase young woman with a wit as sharp as a scalpel |
Awkward Silence is a comedy play written by Julianne Bernstein and published by Samuel French .
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