Press
- The Boston Globe
Creating a learning environment with the new play ‘Greater Good’
“The play is really a microcosm of how oftentimes those of us in the progressive corner of the world may think we’re always doing the right thing,” [Playwright Kirsten] Greenidge says, “but we tend to live our lives without a lot of deep introspection about how we can make choices geared towards the greater good of those around us.” Issues of race, class, and gender play out in sometimes surprising ways in the play. “The people who have money and influence and power are perhaps not the people you expect.”
“The play is really a microcosm of how oftentimes those of us in the progressive corner of the world may think we’re always doing the right thing,” [Playwright Kirsten] Greenidge says, “but we tend to live our lives without a lot of deep introspection about how we can make choices geared towards the greater good of those around us.” Issues of race, class, and gender play out in sometimes surprising ways in the play. “The people who have money and influence and power are perhaps not the people you expect.”