cookie

Cookie is a one-person, five-act tragicomic play that blends vaudeville’s theatricality with the raw intimacy of backstage confessions. It follows Cookie Jackson, a magnetic performer who captivates audiences with humor, wit, and dazzling showmanship. Yet, beyond the footlights, they wrestle with trauma, identity, and the struggle to reclaim their own story.

Set in a symbolic cabaret space—divided into a performance stage, a pianist’s station, and a private dressing room—the play constantly shifts between Cookie’s onstage persona and their most vulnerable moments behind the curtain. In the spotlight, they are a masterful entertainer, commanding laughter and applause. Offstage, however, they confront painful memories, self-doubt, and haunting specters of the past, including an abusive father and the enigmatic Diva of Divination. This mysterious figure forces Cookie into surreal and chilling confrontations with their past, blurring the lines between reality and performance.

Inspired by the Theater of the Absurd, Cookie employs cyclical storytelling, dark humor, and existential reflection. Cookie’s monologues weave through humorous yet cutting anecdotes about family and survival, exposing the complexities of living with unresolved trauma. Their dressing room becomes both a sanctuary and a battleground, where they navigate the tension between the roles imposed upon them and their true self.

As the play unfolds, Cookie grapples with the cost of survival, the meaning of authenticity, and the possibility of breaking free from patterns of pain and revenge. The final moments leave the audience with a striking image—Cookie, stripped of pretense, uttering their defining refrain: “This cookie doesn’t crumble.” Yet, in its cyclical structure, the play poses an unsettling question—can one ever truly escape the past, or are we all, like Cookie, forever performing?

A poignant exploration of resilience, identity, and the human condition, Cookie is both heartbreakingly intimate and darkly hilarious, offering a theatrical experience that lingers long after the curtain falls.

Run time: 60 minutes

Age recommendation: 16+

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Molly Brenner: INHIBITED | April 24 - 26