The week after Thanksgiving.
A bed and breakfast in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. A cheerful innkeeper. A young couple struggling to stay together. Thousands of inanimate objects, watching.
John, an uncanny play by Annie Baker, was first seen Off-Broadway in 2015. The play had its UK premiere at the National Theatre, London, in 2018, in a production directed by James Macdonald.
Annie Baker's other plays include Pulitzer Prize-winning The Flick, The Antipodes, Circle Mirror Transformation, The Aliens, and an adaptation of Chekhov's Uncle Vanya. She has won many other awards, including a Guggenheim Fellowship and a MacArthur Grant.
'Annie Baker is one of the most singular talents in modern theatre… what the play does, remarkably, is use the trappings of a spooky thriller to explore universal emotions: above all the need to escape the sense of solitary confinement inside our own skins… there is something about John – as you often find in Pinter – that is not susceptible to rational analysis and that only adds to its teasing fascination' — Guardian
'A hypnotic, thrillingly audacious portrait of humanity… teeming with surprises and oddball mysteries... it's also brilliantly funny. Baker has a supreme gift for presenting social awkwardness in all its excruciatingly unhurried glory' — Broadway World
'An eerie and spellbinding odyssey into human loneliness' — Telegraph
'Utterly remarkable, virtually unclassifiable… there's an ocean of meaning behind each moment... a rich, strange and idiosyncratic play, unnerving and heartwarming in equal measures, that journeys wonderingly to the fringes of the human soul' — Time Out
'Annie Baker is the laureate of lost souls and – in a manner that feels quietly defiant in these attention-deficit days – she gives her characters the time to pause and register the awkwardness of failing to know what to say or just to sit in ruminative silence… quirkily funny and disquieting… John has many of the trappings of a ghost story but what makes it truly haunting is the way it avoids outright scariness and instead lays stress on characters whose loneliness and various disappointments in making connection lead us to reflect on what may lie beyond rationality' — Independent
'It's intricate, complex, profound, delivered at Baker's hallmark painstaking pace, hyper-realism rubbing up against the supernatural. It's about history and narrative, truth and lies, faith, ghosts, God and love… it is wildly stimulating, the wealth of possibilities beneath its unhurried surface dizzying, and as rich and mysterious as life itself. It connects with a deep, elemental fear and wonderment that is at the heart of humanity – the kind of awe you experience gazing into a limitless night sky' — The Stage
'A brave, magnificent play… behind the intense naturalism, the long silences, the way conversations unravel slowly as in life, there is audacious artistry and careful craft... Baker's dialogue seems to be simple but her words drop like stones in a pond, the ripples reverberating. They are both psychologically revealing and poetic… Like other great American dramatists such as Edward Albee and Eugene O'Neill before her, Baker makes the domestic universal, asking existential questions about the nature of being within a confined setting. Yet her voice and methods are entirely original… John is rich and magical, something special' — Whatsonstage.com
Show moreThe week after Thanksgiving.
A bed and breakfast in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. A cheerful innkeeper. A young couple struggling to stay together. Thousands of inanimate objects, watching.
John, an uncanny play by Annie Baker, was first seen Off-Broadway in 2015. The play had its UK premiere at the National Theatre, London, in 2018, in a production directed by James Macdonald.
Annie Baker's other plays include Pulitzer Prize-winning The Flick, The Antipodes, Circle Mirror Transformation, The Aliens, and an adaptation of Chekhov's Uncle Vanya. She has won many other awards, including a Guggenheim Fellowship and a MacArthur Grant.
'Annie Baker is one of the most singular talents in modern theatre… what the play does, remarkably, is use the trappings of a spooky thriller to explore universal emotions: above all the need to escape the sense of solitary confinement inside our own skins… there is something about John – as you often find in Pinter – that is not susceptible to rational analysis and that only adds to its teasing fascination' — Guardian
'A hypnotic, thrillingly audacious portrait of humanity… teeming with surprises and oddball mysteries... it's also brilliantly funny. Baker has a supreme gift for presenting social awkwardness in all its excruciatingly unhurried glory' — Broadway World
'An eerie and spellbinding odyssey into human loneliness' — Telegraph
'Utterly remarkable, virtually unclassifiable… there's an ocean of meaning behind each moment... a rich, strange and idiosyncratic play, unnerving and heartwarming in equal measures, that journeys wonderingly to the fringes of the human soul' — Time Out
'Annie Baker is the laureate of lost souls and – in a manner that feels quietly defiant in these attention-deficit days – she gives her characters the time to pause and register the awkwardness of failing to know what to say or just to sit in ruminative silence… quirkily funny and disquieting… John has many of the trappings of a ghost story but what makes it truly haunting is the way it avoids outright scariness and instead lays stress on characters whose loneliness and various disappointments in making connection lead us to reflect on what may lie beyond rationality' — Independent
'It's intricate, complex, profound, delivered at Baker's hallmark painstaking pace, hyper-realism rubbing up against the supernatural. It's about history and narrative, truth and lies, faith, ghosts, God and love… it is wildly stimulating, the wealth of possibilities beneath its unhurried surface dizzying, and as rich and mysterious as life itself. It connects with a deep, elemental fear and wonderment that is at the heart of humanity – the kind of awe you experience gazing into a limitless night sky' — The Stage
'A brave, magnificent play… behind the intense naturalism, the long silences, the way conversations unravel slowly as in life, there is audacious artistry and careful craft... Baker's dialogue seems to be simple but her words drop like stones in a pond, the ripples reverberating. They are both psychologically revealing and poetic… Like other great American dramatists such as Edward Albee and Eugene O'Neill before her, Baker makes the domestic universal, asking existential questions about the nature of being within a confined setting. Yet her voice and methods are entirely original… John is rich and magical, something special' — Whatsonstage.com
Show moreAnnie Baker is a leading American playwright whose plays include:
Infinite Life (Linda Gross Theater, New York, and National Theatre,
London, 2023); The Antipodes (Signature Theatre, New York, 2017;
National Theatre, London, 2019); John (Off-Broadway, 2015; National
Theatre, London, 2018); The Flick (Off-Broadway, 2013; National
Theatre, London, 2013; Pulitzer Prize for Drama, Susan Smith
Blackburn Award, Obie Award for Playwriting), Circle Mirror
Transformation (Obie Award for Best New American Play, Drama Desk
nomination for Best New American Play), The Aliens (Obie Award for
Best New American Play), Body Awareness (Drama Desk and Outer
Critics Circle nominations for Best Play/Emerging Playwright), and
an adaptation of Chekhov's Uncle Vanya (Drama Desk nomination for
Best Revival).
Her plays have been produced at over 150 theatres throughout the
U.S., and have been produced internationally in over a dozen
countries. Other recent honors include a Guggenheim Fellowship,
American Academy of Arts and Letters Award, Hull-Warriner Award,
Steinberg Award, and the Cullman Fellowship at the New York Public
Library.
'Annie Baker is one of the most singular talents in modern theatre…
what the play does, remarkably, is use the trappings of a spooky
thriller to explore universal emotions: above all the need to
escape the sense of solitary confinement inside our own skins…
there is something about John – as you often find in Pinter – that
is not susceptible to rational analysis and that only adds to its
teasing fascination'
*Guardian*
'A hypnotic, thrillingly audacious portrait of humanity… teeming
with surprises and oddball mysteries... it's also brilliantly
funny. Baker has a supreme gift for presenting social awkwardness
in all its excruciatingly unhurried glory'
*Broadway World*
'An eerie and spellbinding odyssey into human loneliness'
*Telegraph*
'Utterly remarkable, virtually unclassifiable… there’s an ocean of
meaning behind each moment... a rich, strange and idiosyncratic
play, unnerving and heartwarming in equal measures, that journeys
wonderingly to the fringes of the human soul'
*Time Out*
'Annie Baker is the laureate of lost souls and – in a manner that
feels quietly defiant in these attention-deficit days – she gives
her characters the time to pause and register the awkwardness of
failing to know what to say or just to sit in ruminative silence…
quirkily funny and disquieting… John has many of the trappings of a
ghost story but what makes it truly haunting is the way it avoids
outright scariness and instead lays stress on characters whose
loneliness and various disappointments in making connection lead us
to reflect on what may lie beyond rationality'
*Independent*
'It’s intricate, complex, profound, delivered at Baker’s hallmark
painstaking pace, hyper-realism rubbing up against the
supernatural. It’s about history and narrative, truth and lies,
faith, ghosts, God and love… it is wildly stimulating, the wealth
of possibilities beneath its unhurried surface dizzying, and as
rich and mysterious as life itself. It connects with a deep,
elemental fear and wonderment that is at the heart of humanity –
the kind of awe you experience gazing into a limitless night
sky'
*The Stage*
'A brave, magnificent play… behind the intense naturalism, the long
silences, the way conversations unravel slowly as in life, there is
audacious artistry and careful craft... Baker's dialogue seems to
be simple but her words drop like stones in a pond, the ripples
reverberating. They are both psychologically revealing and poetic…
Like other great American dramatists such as Edward Albee and
Eugene O'Neill before her, Baker makes the domestic universal,
asking existential questions about the nature of being within a
confined setting. Yet her voice and methods are entirely original…
John is rich and magical, something special'
*Whatsonstage.com*
'John is positively gothic—mysteries within mysteries, ghost
stories on top of ghost stories—without losing Baker’s power to
zoom in on the peculiarities in the oblique and blunt ways of real
people'
*Newsday*
'John is a haunting and haunted meditation on topics Baker has made
so singularly her own: the omnipresence of loneliness in human
life, and the troubled search for love and lasting connection'
*New York Times*
'Annie Baker's John is so good on so many levels that it casts a
unique and brilliant light... By not rushing things—by letting the
characters develop as gradually and inevitably as rain or
snowfall—Baker returns us to the naturalistic but soulful theater
that many of her contemporaries and near-contemporaries have
disavowed in their rush to be 'postmodern.''
*New Yorker*
'Baker's true masterpiece: an examination of the murkiness of human
relationships in which one of those relationships is the one
between an audience and a playwright… In John, Baker co-opts the
viewer for her own aesthetic use, heightening the tension onstage
and deepening the quiet relationships between her characters'
*Slate*
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