A Boy Called Noise
 2006 SAN FRANCISCO FRINGE FESTIVAL AUDIENCE REVIEWS
TO REVIEW A PLAY / HOME / FRINGE PLAY DESCRIPTIONS
CLICK HERE FOR RECENT REVIEWS IN CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER

CLICK ON PLAY FOR AUDIENCE REVIEWS FOR THAT PLAY

@six
21/One
Another Ugly Duckling Tale
BabyLove
Before the End
A Boy Called Noise
cruel & unusual
Curriculum Vitae
Eating Skeletons
Exiles
Fall and Rise of the Rising Fallen
Flamenco con Fusion
Fuse
Get It? Got it. Good!
Get Laughs or Die Tryin'
Irma at the Movies & Frozen
Just For Laughs
Kingdom of Not
Neon Man and Me
nEO sURREALIST sYSTEMS
Pomp & Circumstance
Readiness is All
Revolving Madness
sally: MIA / Sheepish
Secret Ruths of Island House
Sisyphus on Vacation
Stone Trilogy, Three Tales
Thanatics - A Rock Opera
This Lily Was (Fontana)
Thrilling Adventures of Elvis in Space
Tilting at Transformations
Visiting Bertha
Waiting for Bordeaux
Where the Sun Don't Shine
Woof, Daddy
Yellow Fever Express
Yorick & Co.
 

Play: A Boy Called Noise
Reviewer: John Rackham
4 Stars
Julia Steele Allen is a delight to watch and listen to as she tells and sings us the story of a boy called Noise, murdered at 15 for no reason but bigotry. She moves effortlessly from character to character. The physical distinction between is characters clear and the language poetic and beautiful.


Play: A Boy Called Noise
Reviewer: Kim
4 Stars
A very enjoyable show and a great deal at only $7!

The performer is a great singer & great at playing all genders, I'm impressed at what they pulled of in an hour. I definitely recommend it.


Play: A Boy Called Noise
Reviewer: Mr. Ho
4 Stars
Amazing work from a dynamic your artist. I love the mixing of genres.


Play: A Boy Called Noise
Reviewer: Sam Quinn
5 Stars
Julia Allen is great. Her story is compelling, the dialog is fresh and resonates with all of us, gay or not who have felt the primal desire to put everything on the line in order to get revenge. I love the the Legend of Billie Jean ending.


Play: A Boy Called Noise
Reviewer: Robert Hayden
2 Stars
Not my cup of tea. To anyone gay, especially those of us who lived through the plague years, this is not a fresh story. A relentless dirt-poor hopelessness settles over everything, and they sing about it. By the end, one paraphrases Dorothy Parker: the characters run the gambit of emotions from A to B.