Wild Child
Juliana F. May’s “Optimistic Voices,” which premiered last week at BAM Fisher, was pitched as an exploration of the “tangled contradictions of family, eroticism, and motherhood.”
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Juliana F. May’s “Optimistic Voices,” which premiered last week at BAM Fisher, was pitched as an exploration of the “tangled contradictions of family, eroticism, and motherhood.” I may be the target audience. I’m certainly the right demographic: May and I are close in age and we both live in Brooklyn with small boys at home. The early 1980s era styling by Mariana Valencia and rec center carpet hit home. Throw in some Robin Byrd references? By all means. Set it all to pleasant folk song harmonies about daily routines and hidden desires? Sign me up! In theory, this show should have spoken to my soul. In reality, I liked the components of “Optimistic Voices” much better than I liked the whole.
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Juliana F. May’s “Optimistic Voices,” which premiered last week at BAM Fisher, was pitched as an exploration of the “tangled contradictions of family, eroticism, and motherhood.”
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