Waiting Room of Truth: Moths, Mortality, and the Masks of Love on Stage

Vulture critic Sara Holdren reviews Wallace Shawn and André Gregory’s What We Did Before Our Moth Days at Greenwich House Theater, a three-hour, four-actor dramatic meditation on marriage, desire, and death. Structurally similar to My Dinner With André, the piece uses monologues and a stark set—windows and moth projections—to peel away surfaces and reveal the characters’ evasions, fears, and cruelties. The cast—Josh Hamilton, Maria Dizzia, Hope Davis, and John Early—delivers a precise, unnerving balance of humor and horror, guided by Gregory’s exacting, long-rehearsed direction. The play examines how love persists and dissolves through performances and lies, presenting death as a guiding presence that finally exposes what’s real. What We Did Before Our Moth Days runs at the Greenwich House Theater through May 10.
- After Love, Sex, and Death: What We Did Before Our Moth Days Vulture
- Wallace Shawn’s ‘What We Did Before Our Moth Days’ Is Purgatory Done Right The New York Times
- ‘What We Did Before Our Moth Days’ Review: Wallace Shawn’s Misbegotten Monologues WSJ
- How Are Reviews for Wallace Shawn's What We Did Before Our Moth Days Off-Broadway? Playbill
- Review: What We Did Before Our Moth Days at the Greenwich House Theater exeuntnyc.com
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