April 19, 2012

What Audiences Are Saying About THE LUCK OF THE IRISH


Have you seen The Luck of the Irish? Please share your comments with us.




  • Which characters or themes resonated most strongly with you?
  • Playwright Kirsten Greenidge touches on the rarely discussed topic of ghostbuying. Do you have any experiences with ghostbuying?
  • Did you attend a post-show conversation? What comments surprised you or made you think differently about the play? Would you attend a post-show conversation again? What were you thinking about on the way home from the theatre?

The Huntington Theatre Company's production of The Luck of the Irish has been extended by popular demand through May 6, 2012. It plays at the Calderwood Pavilion at the BCA. Get tickets and information or call our Box Office at 617 266-0800.

6 comments:

Patrick Gabridge on Facebook said...

Loved Kirsten Greenidge's play The Luck of the Irish at the Huntington. Great play and great production. Definitely a must see.

@opusaffair said...

Funny & sobering w beautiful set, clever costume-based time travel & fab characters/dialog. Go see it.

Goldstar member said...

Actors were great, interesting plot, very thought provoking. The set was excellent. I would recommend this play to anyone.

Goldstar member said...

The rough edges actually make it even more interesting and thought provoking. This is a playwright to watch. She has something to say that is worth pondering. We need lots more plays of this caliber and on meaty important social and personal themes. She manages to make you connect emotionally with even the nasty characters; the characters are real and 3 dimensional, not cardboard representations of a 'position' or a type. GO SEE IT.

Anonymous said...

Best show all season! Very well written, acted, and staged. Thought provoking and emotional, the characters really got to both of us.

Anonymous said...

While the subject was in line with Huntington's tendency to pick thought provoking issues, the actual writing was not very good. We have luxuriated in having lines graze past our ears from an array of excellent playwrights. The writing in The Luck of the Irish just wasn't in the same league.