This play was raw and painfully honest. While BK Wong purports to be overly sensitive to the judgment of others, none of it shows here as she reveals some of her most embarrassing moments with humor and self-reflection. The play is one of those that resonates, drawing the viewer to reassess it again and again long after the play has ended.
What I didn't like
I would have like an extended role for Adam Frost-Venrick’s character — the personification of self-doubt harbored by BK. His character provided the audience relief in the form of comedy. The antithesis of BK’s awkwardness, Adam is bold and brash. His devil-may-care attitude houses the antidote to the angst, and BK Wong would do well to extend the role of his character and further unify the message of hope for others.
My overall impression
This play succeeds in droves as a modern tale of social anxiety. BK Wong’s performance is as credible as it gets, oozing sincerity and awkwardness while drawing her audience in to her train-of-though narrative of bad decisions.