Some of these plays are performed with real actors and some are entirely performed by one person using AI to as a filter to change their voice.
In "A Midsummer Night's Dream", a group enters the woods under the light of the moon and takes mind-altering substances. They engage in romantic mix-ups and encounter creatures from another dimension. Shakespeare explores the boundary between illusion and reality in this play, suggesting that life itself might be a dream. Performed by Robin Schild and Claudia Rosa
Rosalind and her cousin escape into the forest and find Orlando, Rosalind's love. Disguised as a boy shepherd, Rosalind has Orlando woo her under the guise of "curing" him of his love for Rosalind. Rosalind reveals she is a girl and marries Orlando during a group wedding at the end of the play. performed by Robin Schild
The Importance of Being Earnest is a play by Oscar Wilde that mocks the culture and manners of Victorian society. It is a farcical comedy that relies on satire and a comic resolution to make that mockery more palatable to viewers. The play is about friends Jack and Algernon's double-lives interfering with their romantic pursuits. It is considered Wilde’s greatest dramatic achievement and a satire of Victorian social hypocrisy. performed by Robin Schild
The Birthday Party by Harold Pinter revolves around a piano player, Stanley Webber, who stays in a shabby seaside boarding house owned by the Boles. He is wary of strangers and doesn’t tell much about his past. One day, when Stanley is having his birthday party, two strangers arrive to turn everything upside down. Goldberg and McCann cause chaos at the boarding house without disclosing the purpose of their visit. They subject Stanley to intense cross-examination with questions that lack logic. The Birthday Party playwright uses the language of the play to highlight the meaningless existence of the characters and their inability to discover the truth. Featuring Robin Schild
A children's book author finds his psyche and life unraveling as his books get banned, charges loom for an inadvertent crime and his 'fiction' erupts to alarming life. To stave off at least one of these, he's also drafted, against his will, to help solve a string of vicious murders in L.A." Written by Mark Williams, featuring Robin Schild, Robert Sicular, Claudia Rosa ,Jude Haukom and Keith Jeffords.
Sharla is a beautiful, mysterious movie star on a train bound for her old stomping grounds. While on the train, she meets a stranger, who knows more than she wants anyone to know about her. Sharla is one of those women who is a victim of her own beauty and so are all the men she meets. Written by Lee Brady and featuring Robin Schild and Claudia Rosa
A Bartender thinks he’s seen and heard it all until a young Performance Artist comes in and takes a stool at his bar. In this short, punchy scene, we learn about each of them they fiercely disagree about the meaning of the word “cliché. In mime and meme, she seeks to prove it is not just a word to describe the overused phrase, but it also describes us. He defends his more optimistic view, and the ensuing dialogue is fierce, entertaining and educational. Written by Lee Brady and featuring Claudia Rosa and Robin Schild