The play meanders with nary a sign of tension, sexual or otherwise, until the final minutes, when Rosebrock suddenly puts on the turbo — and promptly crashes into a wall. At least you leave the theater with a jolt.
Critics' Reviews
‘Lowcountry’ Review: A Flat-Footed First Date
‘Trophy Boys’ and ‘Lowcountry’ Review: Off-Broadway Debates and Bad Dates
But ‘Lowcountry’ springs a few too many shock, or shock-adjacent, twists to be believable, among them the revelation that Tally and David knew each other as kids (he doesn’t recognize her), and Tally has sought him out for a confusion of reason...
‘Why Are Men Like This?’ Ask Trophy Boys and Lowcountry
All of it is solid context for the world that these two characters occupy, but most of it is told and not felt. As their mismatched date barrels onward, David starts to worry that Tally is making a show of her own empathy by being interested in him, ...
Deadly first date in ‘Lowcountry’ Off-Broadway at Atlantic Theater Company
While everyone has a different sense of humor, I found the behavior of the damaged and deleterious characters in Lowcountry to be more dark, twisted, off-putting, and disturbing than romantic or funny, many of the plot points to strain credibility, t...
Review: Lowcountry at Atlantic Theater Company
Lowcountry makes compelling points about how actions, and interactions, shape the trajectory of our lives. I’d love to see it again, in a production with a touch more sizzle.
Lowcountry Review. An exasperating first date.
Eventually, there are revelations. Abby Rosebrock’s new play is evidently intended to be intriguing, even seductive in the slow way it parses out the info, with a payoff of an ending that is deliberately shocking. But from the get-go “Lowcountry�...
'Lowcountry' Off-Broadway review — a dark rom-com between wretched lovers
These slow-boiling dynamics build up to a raw sexual act staged, by intimacy coordinator Ann James, as coldly mechanical yet achingly balletic.
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