"It's not the done thing," characters advise one another correctively at key points in "Walk Two Moons," a new stage adaptation of Sharon Creech's children's book. Production kicks off the touring company Theatreworks/NYC's first New York sit-down season with down-home flair and just the faintest whiff of it's-good-for-you obligation.
“It’s not the done thing,” characters advise one another correctively at key points in “Walk Two Moons,” a spunky, mostly sparkling new stage adaptation of Sharon Creech’s Newbery-winning children’s book. Production kicks off the touring company Theatreworks/NYC’s first New York sit-down season with down-home flair and just the faintest whiff of it’s-good-for-you obligation.
Related Stories

‘Hacks’ Post-Emmys Boost Highlights Max’s HBO Problem

'The Golden Bachelorette' Premieres Tonight: Here's How to Watch the First Episode Live Online
For independent-minded 13-year-old Salamanca (Sarah Lord), of course, the “done thing” is the last thing she wants to be lectured about — not by her well-meaning father (Lucas Papaelias), who uproots her from their old Kentucky home to an Ohio exurb after her mom disappears; not by her loosey-goosey grandparents (Charles H. Hyman, Peggy Scott), who take her on a rambling road trip of dubious purpose and possibly reckless driving; and certainly not by her high-strung new best friend, Phoebe (Susan Louise O’Connor), a pint-sized drama queen prone to paranoid snap judgments.
Popular on Variety
It’s Phoebe who sets the play’s central story-within-a-story in motion, with her crisscrossing suspicions about an ostensibly creepy neighbor (Heather Dilly) and a phantomlike, guitar-wielding “potential lunatic” (Papaelias), who leaves cryptic notes that reduce Phoebe’s otherwise impassive 1950s-housewife mom (Dilly) to tears. In one of the play’s odder twists, Phoebe simultaneously idealizes and diminishes her mother’s “tiny life” of chores, cholesterol-free cooking and perfect clothes — and her daughter’s disdain in fact seems to be a catalyst for Mom’s liberation.
But things aren’t always what they seem here, and in her bemusedly earnest probing of modern life’s complications, Creech captures a pre-teen’s awakening consciousness that all is not right with the world and that grown-ups don’t have all the answers. As Salamanca puts it with inarguable succinctness, “Moms are weird.”
There are matter-of-fact hints at parents’ extra- or post-marital peccadilloes, subtle swipes at constraining gender roles, a stages-of-grief undercurrent — elements that, in a few years’ time, would constitute grounds for full-blown teenage angst, but here, stirred with remnant traces of childlike wonder, create a sort of junior-high magical realism.
Director Melissa Kievman’s production has its store of unfussy theatrical wonders, from Papaelias’ fragrant live-guitar underscoring to lighting designer Paul Hackenmueller’s evocative vistas. Louisa Thompson’s expansive, elemental set, centering a picture frame within the larger proscenium frame, rhymes nicely with the piece’s stories-within-stories structure.
Playwright Julia Jordan has translated this to the stage with a deft and sure hand, and Kievman’s versatile cast generally nails the right blend of goof and gravitas. The dark-eyed Lord suggests a cross between Harper Lee’s tomboy Scout and querulous Dorothy Gale, while O’Connor gives full range to Phoebe, from cartoonish to crumpled. Dilly is offhandedly masterful in her various roles, while the shaggy-haired Papaelias is blankly engaging.
The roles of the road-tripping oldsters — to whom Salamanca unspools her yarns, and who in turn try to loosen her up with their gosh-darn spontaneity and glee — would be thanklessly cutesy in anyone’s hands. But Hyman and Scott waltz smilingly right into the familiar faux-folksy traps.
The show’s final revelations and life lessons won’t rock anyone’s world, probably least of all the pop-saturated youngsters who are the show’s target audience. But “Walk Two Moons” embodies the axiom that life is about the journey, not the destination — it’s in the doing, not the done thing.
Jump to CommentsWalk Two Moons
Lucille Lortel; 299 seats; $35 top
More from Variety
MLB Playoffs 2024: How to Watch Division Series Online
Cloud Adoption Key to Media Business Exploiting AI
American Music Awards: How to Watch the 50th Anniversary Special Live Online
UFC 306: O’Malley vs. Dvalishvili — How to Watch the MMA Fight Live Online
New Live Music Data Suggests Cautious Optimism
How to Watch ‘The Penguin’ Online
Most Popular
Inside the 'Joker: Folie à Deux' Debacle: Todd Phillips ‘Wanted Nothing to Do’ With DC on the $200 Million Misfire
‘Kaos’ Canceled After One Season at Netflix
‘Menendez Brothers’ Netflix Doc Reveals Erik’s Drawings of His Abuse and Lyle Saying ‘I Would Much Rather Lose the Murder Trial Than Talk About Our…
Kathy Bates Won an Oscar and Her Mom Told Her: ‘You Didn't Discover the Cure for Cancer,’ So ‘I Don't Know What All the Excitement Is About…
Saoirse Ronan Says Losing Luna Lovegood Role in ‘Harry Potter’ Has ‘Stayed With Me Over the Years’: ‘I Was Too Young’ and ‘Knew I Wasn't Going to Get…
‘Joker 2’ Director Says Arthur Fleck Was Never Joker: ‘He's an Unwitting Icon’ and Joker Is ‘This Idea That Gotham People Put on Him…
‘Joker 2’ Axed Scene of Lady Gaga’s Lee Kissing a Woman at the Courthouse Because ‘It Had Dialogue in It’ and ‘Got in the Way’ of a Music…
Andrew Garfield Says Sex Scene With Florence Pugh in ‘We Live in Time’ Went a ‘Little Bit Further’ Than Intended: ‘We Never Heard Cut…
‘Skyfall’ Director Sam Mendes Says James Bond Studio Prefers Filmmakers ‘Who Are More Controllable’: ‘I Would Doubt’ I’d…
Sydney Sweeney and Amanda Seyfried to Star in ‘The Housemaid’ Adaptation From Director Paul Feig, Lionsgate
Must Read
- Film
COVER | Sebastian Stan Tells All: Becoming Donald Trump and Starring in 2024’s Most Controversial Movie
By Andrew Wallenstein 3 weeks
- TV
Menendez Family Slams Netflix’s ‘Monsters’ as ‘Grotesque’ and ‘Riddled With Mistruths’: ‘The Character Assassination of Erik and Lyke Is Repulsive…
- TV
‘Yellowstone’ Season 5 Part 2 to Air on CBS After Paramount Network Debut
- TV
50 Cent Sets Diddy Abuse Allegations Docuseries at Netflix: ‘It’s a Complex Narrative Spanning Decades’ (EXCLUSIVE)
- Shopping
‘Deadpool & Wolverine’ Sets Digital and Blu-ray/DVD Release Dates
Sign Up for Variety Newsletters
By providing your information, you agree to our Terms of Use and our Privacy Policy.We use vendors that may also process your information to help provide our services. // This site is protected by reCAPTCHA Enterprise and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.Variety Confidential
ncG1vNJzZmiukae2psDYZ5qopV9nfXGBjqWcoKGkZL%2Bmwsierqxnp5a5rHnTsKZmpZ%2Bku7R5kGtnaW1iaYJxf44%3D