MAY  ADRALES
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VIETGONE 2: POOR YELLA REDNECKS
"the talented May Adrales is directing and once again dollops of vintage and contemporary pop culture are crucial ingredients in a playwriting brew that has the characters rap their feelings when words seem inadequate to the task."
LATimes

"This hilariously audacious sequel, just like its first installment, is once again under the confident direction of May Adrales, who helms this exceedingly more purposely amped-up production with a game openness to showcase any of the fantastical scenarios cooked up by Nguyen's imaginative genre-bending script, which whizzes back and forth from soapy melodrama and angsty, explosively-delivered hip-hop rhymes, to wacky sitcom-style vignettes, comic book-flavored sequences, and even, yes, AVENUE Q-style puppetry!"
Broadwayworld.com
​
VIETGONE
LA Times Critics Pick! "directed with controlled spunk by May Adrales"
LA Times

"Under the dynamic direction of May Adrales."
LA Times

"The whole Manhattan Theatre Club production, from its outstanding ensemble to its resourceful director,
May Adrales, is in perfect synch with Nguyen’s deranged yet heartfelt vision."

Vietgone New Yorker 


“Vietgone” has many pleasures — including jazzy comic performances from an excellent cast,
several in multiple roles, under May Adrales’s direction.

NYTimes Vietgone

 Top Ten of 2016! "May Adrales’s high-octane staging moves so swiftly and surely, you may not initially appreciate the buckets of ​stagecraft she & Nguyen throw at us scene after scene. In design and pacing, the production ransacks the aesthetics of comix and grind house, applying their flashy framing & penchant for sex, drugs and violence to a dead-serious story of war, displacement & assimilation." 
Time Out

"There's also a wonderfully staged montage, accompanied by Marvin Gaye's "Let's Get It On."  In the terrific ensemble, Lee and Ikeda display sizzling chemistry and formidable comic chops, while Jon Hoche, Tolson and Quan excel in a wide variety of supporting roles. Tim Mackabee's set design, which includes a forced-perspective depiction of a desert highway dominated by billboard signs displaying Jared Mezzocchi's colorful projections, dazzles."
Hollywood Reporter Vietgone

"surprising and unconventional and poignant.  It provides a perspective on the Vietnam War that is underrepresented in American culture, and it is done in inimitable style. "
Orange Curtain Review

"May Adrales maintains a rapid pace – yet things never feel rushed, and we get the heady sense of watching something smart, funny and unusual unfolding before us."
OC Register

 "An electrifyingly innovative and ultimately quite powerful World Premiere at South Coast Repertory....Director May Adrales clearly understands playwright Nguyen’s style and sensibility, eliciting sensational performances from her entire cast."
Stage Scene LA

LITTLE BLACK SHADOWS
"The tableaux created by these bedtime scenes are gorgeously rendered in May Adrales' visually arresting production.
...inspired talented director
" - Charles McNulty, LATimes

www.latimes.com/entertainment/arts/la-et-cm-little-black-shadows-review-20180418-story.html

Under the sensitive direction of May Adrales, the SCR production is most revealing concerning the attitudes of both blacks and whites in that prewar period. The production is beautifully staged.
www.latimes.com/socal/daily-pilot/entertainment/tn-wknd-et-titus-20180419-story.html

"Director May Adrales and her design team create visual and aural layers that enhance and magnify Powers’ themes."

https://www.ocregister.com/2018/04/17/little-black-shadows-reflects-the-everyday-savagery-of-american-slavery/

"The haunting yet beautifully-dramatized world premiere play LITTLE BLACK SHADOWS, Kemp Powers' captivating new drama
under the astute direction of 
May Adrales"

A Must See! Broadway World
​
ANIMAL FARM
"Searing... powerful... Adrales enacts such scenes through evocatively physical theater.  It’s both beautiful and disturbing, inspiring and dispiriting."
www.jsonline.com/story/entertainment/arts/2018/01/13/milwaukee-reps-searing-animal-farm-dissects-way-we-live-now/1027607001/

"Innovative direction...  Powerful and provocative, this production of Animal Farm
 reminds us all of the amazing things theater can do – and should do. 
showbizchicago.com/2018/01/15/milwaukee-rep-stages-a-powerful-provocative-animal-farm/

"Stark, pointed and brutal. But it is also beautifully conceived and performed by a tight ensemble of eight actors, who use music, stylized movement, puppets and masks to show how revolutions go wrong and how those in power will sadistically abuse it."​

onmilwaukee.com/ent/articles/animal-farm-review.html

TOKYO FISH STORY
"Immersive—rich in atmosphere and plenty entertaining!"
San Diego Tribune

"Vivid Performances! Such a pleasure to watch—the acting is so uniformly fine!"
Talkin Broadway


"Beautifully executed! Charming and uplifting!"
ArtRocks


"Director May Adrales and her crack team create an environment we can totally believe in, even when it's a dreamscape. Kimber Lee has an excellcent ear for language and its musicality. The characters and their relationships are intriguing and wonderfully portrayed."
KSDS Jazz 88


THE DANCE AND THE RAILROAD

"May Adrales's elegant, spare, beautifully visualized production gives Hwang's cunningly economical play a poetic feel, without scanting its underlying anguish. Both actors do well; their silences do a lot of the talking. Wu's intense impassivity as he rehearses his stylized motions is particularly riveting."  
Village Voice

“A graceful, extended climax (sensitively directed by May Adrales), in which the men collaborate on an “opera” of Ma’s terrible journey to the West, deepens the piece immeasurably."  
Time Out NY

"May Adrales intelligently directs, emphasizing the themes of ethnic isolation and the struggling emergence of Asian-American identity. If the first production of Dance and the Railroad brought attention to Hwang as an original voice in American theater, this revival points up how much he has increased our consciousness of Asian Americans and their not-so-easy assimilation into American culture." 
CurtainUp

"Director May Adrales’ staging fully mines the play’s emotional richness. Performing on Mimi Lien’s abstract set featuring large sculptural formations gorgeously lit by Jiyoun Chang, the actors deliver stirring turns, while Huang Ruo’s Eastern-inflected score strikes all the right notes." 
NY Post
Backstage
theatermania.com
Entertainment Weekly

ArtsFuse

THE ELECTRIC BABY

"The imperceptible magic that pervades human existence and the power of myth to assuage sorrow are invoked by the playwright Stefanie Zadravec as she entwines the lives of strangers in “The Electric Baby,” a gently touching new drama at the Two River Theater Company in Red Bank.  A mix of expressionism and magical realism... The Electric Baby, is capably directed here with a confident hand by May Adrales."
 NY Times

Stefanie Zadravec’s new play deftly wove together stories of relationships and family in a way that defied laws of coincidence, but made for an entrancing story. The play explored grief and empathy, including welcome doses of humor and folklore, with a unique, heartfelt voice. May Adrales directed a moving production with a strong cast.
Best of 2013

"May Adrales directs a heartfelt, entrancing production."
Star Ledger

"Director May Adrales creates a fluid and cohesive production, eliciting wonderful performances from her cast and bringing out both the humor and the drama with equal skill. The tone is equal parts magical and realistic, and Adrales’ blend works nicely."
Stage Magazine

"Director May Adrales has added size to what has heretofore been regarded as an intimate, delicate play ... 
Given the size and scope of Zadravec's subject, Adrales' staging is a perfect fit for it. The strong impact of her 
production in a small capacity theatre is exhilarating."

Talkin' Broadway

Exeunt Magazine
 
LUCE
"A thoughtful, well-acted new play by J C Lee... As it unfolds in a series of fluidly written scenes, “Luce,” directed by May Adrales  hugs tightly the ambiguity of Luce’s behavior. "
New York Times

"The playwright couldn’t have dreamed up a better showcase, with this fine cast and concise staging 
by May Adrales that never lets any question linger too long."

Bloomberg News

"Complexities and uncertainties pile on top of one another until it's no longer possible to tell what the truth about anything is, and both Lee and director May Adrales exploit that to its full dramatic effect"
Talkin' Broadway

Entertainment Weekly

AFTER ALL THE TERRIBLE THINGS I DO

"brilliantly staged by Adrales, who underscores throughout this play how hard 
it is for these characters to truly face each other"

Rep’s world premiere ‘after all the terrible things I do’ smart, sensitive(Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, October 4, 2014)

"Junek and Skiles are two actors at the top of their game, under the direction of May Adrales 
and in a stunning bookstore designed by Daniel Zimmerman."

Searing “after all the terrible things I do” gets world premiere treatment(OnMilwaukee, October 4, 2014)

CHINGLISH
"The show, directed by May Adrales, is as smooth as its revolving scene changes, capturing a brittle and deftly timed presentational comic edge in its performances and navigating the tricky shoals of its bilingual text (about a quarter of the dialogue is in Mandarin, with English supertitles) without an apparent hitch."
Oregon Arts Watch

"It’s a very neat play about a very tangled subject, and director May Adrales’ production at Portland Center Stage, with its whirling scenery, crisp performances and brisk pace, is solid." 
Willamette Weekly

"Director May Adrales keeps the production moving, and brings out the humor and cleverness in Hwang's script." 
Broadway World

"Kudos should be given to May Adrales for directing a stellar production."
Northwest Reverb

"Every aspect of the show is refined and specific: the acting is snappy, with no emotion or movement wasted, the lighting and scenic elements create elegant stage pictures, modern and understated."
NY Theatre Guide 

EVERYTHING YOU TOUCH
“Directed by May Adrales, “Everything You Touch” begins with a breathtaking sequence in which a New York trash heap morphs into a runway of models.  And that scene isn’t the only eye-catching touch"
Washington Post

"The visual appeal and staging is phenomenal"
Broadway World
 
BREATH AND IMAGINATION

“…simply breathtaking….enough to make this critic stand, clap her hands and say, ‘Amen.’” 
Cleveland On Stage

"...takes your breath away and makes your imagination soar."
Examiner

"Actors Rock, Gaines and Frey breathe life into this play and 
director May Adrales, along with her designers, provide a wealth of imagination."

Cleveland Jewish News

DEATHTRAP
"Director May Adrales has triumphed in creating a tightly wound ticking clock of a 
production that engages and satisfies."

Broadway World
 
"Director May Adrales keeps the action clipping along at a fast and furious pace."
Salt Lake Tribune

"Director May Adrales makes terrific use of Daniel Zimmerman’s grand single-room set design—the walls filled with enough weapons just waiting to be used that Chekhov must be nodding happily in his grave—creating a purely pleasurable contraption of twists and reversals."
City Weekly

"With director May Adrales at the helm, PTC has smartly engineered this “Deathtrap” 
to deliver a theater thrill ride."

Deseret News

EDITH CAN SHOOT THINGS AND HIT THEM
“Edith’ is a beautifully rendered portrait… This is my 10th Humana Festival (since 1998), and I can’t recall another play that sparked an instantaneous standing O, nor a play that more deserved one.”
The ExaminerBackstage
The Courier- Journal 
LEO Weekly

Dramatics Magazine
Cincinnati City Beat
Indiana Business Journal
Evansville Courier & Press
The Arts Louisville
Arts-Louisville.com
LouisvilleKY.com

Stage Left


TROUBLE COMETH
Thanks to May Adrales’ stage direction and Nina Ball’s killer set, this thing cooks.
Stark Insider

The story is a cleverly constructed, deceptively simple-seeming labyrinth, skillfully directed by May Adrales so that each twist lands with subtly disorienting or maximum comic, game-changing effect. 
San Francisco Chronicle
 
IN THIS HOUSE
"Director May Adrales has made excellent use of this set-up by creating a seemingly effortless flow and movement which plays unobtrusively to each of the three seating sections. Adrales has elicited excellent performances from her entire cast, and sustained proper moods throughout." 
Talkin' Broadway
NYTimes Feature


 THE WIFE 
"The director, May Adrales, gets excellent performances from her cast."
NYTimes

"The production transforms with swift fluidity thanks to May Adrales's dynamic direction."
L Magazine

“Unnerving and intense … what we are watching is a world coughing up on the lines of separation that we have created throughout the years.”
Brooklyn Rail

THE BEREAVED
"In this gleefully unpredictable portrait of New York yuppies the director May Adrales employs a lighter comic touch, establishing a slick normalcy that masks rather than draws attention to the outlandish world of the writer. Backed by a spunky pop soundtrack, scenes start with a jolt, gain momentum and finish with a twist."
NYTimes
Time Out Top Ten of 2009


THE MOUNTAINTOP
"Adrales, who is young and an Artistic Associate at the Rep, has a sensibility about things that goes far beyond her years. She has plotted a path for her actors and created a navigable forest through which they can steam."
On Milwaukee

"You could just feel the audience hold its collective breath at tense moments, hear it laughing hysterically 
at others and see it shed tears as the end of the play"

Third Coast Digest

YELLOWMAN
"A brilliant piece of staging by director May Adrales"
Journal Sentinel
 ThirdCoast Digest


ANIMALS OUT OF PAPER
"Deftly directed by May Adrales,  Animals Out of Paper is exciting summer theater. 
It doesn’t get much better than this."

Berkshire Bright Focus
Paper Arts Fuse

CHING CHONG CHINAMAN
"A smart, fast-paced comedy that wrings laughs from the topics of cultural identity and assimilation. Neither predictable nor politically correct, it's a satirical cartoon that has heart and even occasional poignancy.... Director May Adrales has paced the production wisely so it neither lags nor feels artificially hurried."
NYTimes
Theater Mania


FAITH, HOPE and CHARITY
 Charleston City Paper

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