READ THE REVIEWS:

February 8, 2015

To break the fourth wall at The Listeners, Matthew Freeman’s new play at the Brick, you’ll need a battering ram. The set is an enclosed, roofless room in the middle of the Brick’s black-box space. Audience members can peer at the play through letterbox slits sliced into the walls. If you come early enough to grab a chair in front of one of the two panels of one-way glass, you’ll enjoy the rare luxury of seeing two or even three characters at once. Though inventive, the design would seem to owe something to Marsha Ginsberg’s work on David Levine’s Habit, a 2012 performance piece that built a small house in a room at the Essex Street Market. There you could walk all around the exterior, peering into windows. At The Listeners, you’re stuck in your seat, although the staging, under Michael Gardner’s direction, invites enough shifting and twisting for a better angle to qualify as a substantial core workout.

READ THE REVIEW