“This is Water” runs 90 minutes, for your planning purposes!
Online sales close two hours before curtain, but you can buy tickets at the door.
“highly relevant for our time…This Is Water opens up a conversation we need to have.” — Stage Takes
“good and true and necessary” — Fringe reviewer
“This production is a truly original story, told by a masterful storyteller, exquisite in every way and should not be missed.” — Fringe reviewer
“This play is right on time in this cultural moment.” – Fringe reviewer
“A very timely piece with a great performance!” – Fringe Reviewer
This Is Water, a thought-provoking new solo show by award-winning musician and playwright Rain Perry, premieres at the 2025 Hollywood Fringe Festival for a nine-show run.
As the pendulum swings dramatically from cultural soul-searching to non-White history being scrubbed from government websites, Perry asserts “I look at my life and I see what I see.”
After the social reckoning of 2020-2021, Perry—a singer-songwriter known for her heartfelt theme song for the CW series Life Unexpected and other deeply personal work—set out to examine race the best way she knew how: by looking inward. She began writing down every memory she had that touched on race, uncovering how her own history shaped her worldview. The result was her most recent record A White Album and her new theatrical memoir This Is Water — with a title inspired by the famous David Foster Wallace commencement address — a raw and engaging musical journey that blends storytelling, humor, and live music to challenge audiences to reflect on an honest retelling of American history, and the invisible forces that shape us all.
Through family photos, first-hand recollections, and historical insights, Perry revisits formative moments—from a childhood story about her (White) mother’s Black childhood friend to her own reckoning with white feminism. The show invites audiences to engage with history in a way that is both accessible and deeply personal.
“We feared ‘preaching to the choir’ when we first promoted the workshop production of this show,” Perry explains. "But we quickly realized—there is no choir. Even those who consider themselves ‘doing the work’ have blind spots. My hope is that audiences leave more curious and openhearted.