How to Be A Virgin (in 12 morally ambiguous steps)

comedy · lucid dramatics · Ages 17+ · United States of America

world premiere
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BRENDAN WEINHOLD certified reviewer June 20, 2016
tagged as: sex
Delivers on its premise. Powerful performances, clear direction, and a script with perspective.... full review
ED SHARROW certified reviewer June 19, 2016
tagged as: Best Actress
Top caliber acting, strong writing, great direction. Best of the Fringe material.... full review
TINKS LOVELACE certified reviewer June 21, 2016
tagged as: awesome · Brave · strong · exciting · new · fresh
I am in love with all these people. ... full review
ERICA WILLIAMS certified reviewer June 22, 2016
The writing and acting was great. I mean how can you not love a bit about a woman's first foray into fingering. How Josh managed to be all male characters was quite amazing; and Katelyn really made you feel for her rollercoaster of dealing with being a sexualized virgin.... full review
TERRY ANNE HOLZMAN uncertified reviewer June 16, 2016
Go see and be prepared to laugh and have a great time. Brava to Carla Neuss for her stellar writing and to Katelyn Schiller for her hilarious yet natural and authentic portrayal of "The Virgin". The audience was laughing throughout the entire show. It's just the kind of show that makes you really happy. Maybe a movie is the next step??? Highly recommended!... full review
JULIA GRISWOLD certified reviewer June 22, 2016
Funny, smart, different. I'd recommend you see it but I'm pretty sure it's sold out/over?... full review
ANDREW OXENHAM uncertified reviewer June 26, 2016
tagged as: comedy · drama · sexy
Pithy, witty, and brutally real, How To Be A Virgin will make you examine your own life amidst the laughter and tense situations this play has to offer. ... full review
JENNY HOWARD certified reviewer June 30, 2016
HOW TO BE A VIRGIN was one of the most honest, funny, and intelligent shows I've ever seen. In the midst of our modern hook-up culture, which seems dominated by penetrative, Tinder-type abandonment (or its backlash: Bible Belt scaremongering), it's refreshing to see a different kind of sexual com(/cumm)ing-of-age. This is not really a play about Faith, but rather about what to DO with one's Faith in a secular landscape, about the implications of Faith for femininity, feminism, and one's hymen. It is about eschewing the dominant narrative, the pre-written script of "normal" sexual experience, and having the courage and commitment to write our own weird journeys. Absolutely loved this play. Loved it. ... full review