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A Permanent Image

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Siblings Bo and Ally are back in thier childhood home in Idaho for the funeral of their father. Their mother Carol has painted the whole house white and is suspected to have been drinking since their father's death. What Ally and Bo come to find out is that their mother has a method to her madness as she pulls out some home videos of their father just before he died. Called a fusion between realism and the absurd, A Permanent Image is a tense exploration of the distance families put betwe

86 pages, Paperback

Published April 15, 2016

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Samuel D. Hunter

20 books43 followers

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5 stars
6 (19%)
4 stars
14 (45%)
3 stars
9 (29%)
2 stars
1 (3%)
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1 (3%)
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Doug.
2,579 reviews933 followers
May 20, 2017
This seems like a low rent, small cast version of 'August: Osage County' (both begin with the suicide of the patriarch, and play out various family secrets in a combination of hysterics and comedy), crossed with ''Night, Mother' (family trying to talk a different family member out of another suicide). Had it not been for some animal cruelty (the shooting of a dog with a BB gun) and the repeated use of the word 'retard' (however germane to the characters), I'd be tempted to give this 5 stars, as I'm sure it plays very well. And Margo Martindale, who shined in the film version of Osage, would make a tremendous Carol. :-)
Profile Image for CaralineCasey.
23 reviews2 followers
November 17, 2022
I think that this would be a very dynamic play to watch in person. It also offers lots of juicy scene work and monologues for theatre students. My one critique is that there might be too much drama (whaaaat?!). I did enjoy how it jumped into the conflict immediately, however I think that since the characters were fighting so much throughout the entire play, it made the climax in the BIG FIGHT less impactful. On the other hand, this constant state of tension did make the one peaceful moment at the end of the play more goosebump-worthy.
Profile Image for Miquon.
16 reviews8 followers
February 24, 2022
I wholeheartedly agreed with the other reviewers even before seeing their reviews: this is a wonderfully written, compassionate, yet somehow 'modern' take on the same themes riled up in "August: Osage County."

It's as though "August" is the "Titus Andronicus" to "Permanent"'s "Hamlet."

Same themes, wholly different approaches.
Profile Image for Matthew Akers.
109 reviews1 follower
December 31, 2022
Solid play. Love Samuel D. Hunter's work. A good domestic drama, easy to produce, small cast. I agree with the other reviewer, it is s great alternative to August: Osage County.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

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