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Unhappy days
MARY CONWAY is stunned by a conversational comedy whose every platitude is a deliberate conduit to deeply human complexities beneath
THOLING IT: Christina Kirk (Sofi), Kristine Nielsen (Ginnie), Brenda Pressley (Elaine) and Mia Katigbak (Yvette) in Infinite Life [Marc Brenner]

Infinite Life
National Theatre - Dorfman

PULITZER Prize-winning playwright Annie Baker is an original voice in American theatre. Unfettered by fashionable obsessions, her genius lies in new philosophical takes on simple stories of American life, and in the particular ear she has for meandering conversation that exemplifies the way people not only talk but think. 

Infinite Life at the Dorfman surprises with every line, every platitude a deliberate conduit to deeply human complexities beneath. It’s a play where the drama takes place in the invisible world of human mentality, the outer physical expressions such as speech and movement signifying only the socialised — and therefore unremarkable — utterances of ordinary people. Behind the superficial and banal, the experience is intense and profound.

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