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February 19, 2013

"Ow." That monosyllable may not be your idea of great dialogue. But as uttered by Zosia Mamet in “Really Really,” Paul Downs Colaizzo’s pitiless state-of-a-generation play at the Lucille Lortel Theater, it has my bid for one of the best lines of the season. This “ow” is the final word, and one of the few spoken, in the opening scene of “Really Really,” which opened on Tuesday night in an MCC production.

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Curtain Up
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Elyse
Sommer

February 19, 2013

Grace and Cooper, as well as their fellow undergraduates at an unnamed American college in Paul Downs Colaizzo’s Really Really, know what they want all right. If that calls for lies and betrayals, so be it. Maybe. . .hopefully. . . Colaizzo, who’s not much older than his attractive looking but unsympathetic characters, has emphasized the worst case scenario in the interest of giving this otherwise depressing Me-I-Generation group portrait some plot twists designed to keep you from wondering if this play is as revelatory and edgy as it wants to be.

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February 19, 2013

Judging by Really Really, 27-year-old playwright Paul Downs Colaizzo doesn’t hold a very favorable view of his generation. This drama depicting the aftermath of a sexual liaison at a raucous college party features wholly unpleasant characters doing and saying wholly unpleasant things. But there’s no denying the provocative impact of its portrait of what is derisively referred to as "Generation Me."

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Backstage
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Erik
Haagensen

February 19, 2013

It’s hard to fathom what convinced the estimable David Cromer to direct “Really Really,” Paul Downs Colaizzo’s ersatz, glaringly manipulative “Did it happen or didn’t it?” melodrama about contemporary college students, an obstreperous kegger, and rape, from MCC Theater. Colaizzo certainly has an ear for glib, profane dialogue, but it reveals precious little about his stereotypical characters, who need to stay that way so he can make them do what he wants. With a different cast and director, the show was apparently a big hit for the Arlington, Va.–based Signature Theatre. Well, so was “Glory Days.”

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The Miami Herald
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Jennifer
Farrar

February 20, 2013

Let’s just hope that all the members of so-called Generation Me are not as selfish, opportunistic and venal as some of the characters in Paul Downs Colaizzo’s deeply cynical play, "Really Really."

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