Fremont Ave. Reviews
Stage and Cinema- Recommended
"...There is a moment near the end of the first act of Fremont Ave. when George Plique, a music therapist who cannot stop composing, sits alone at a piano in a room that is too quiet and plays a chord he has never played before. He does not know yet that the chord belongs to the woman who just walked out. He only knows that his fingers found it and that it is hers. Reggie D. White's play, now on the Segerstrom Stage at South Coast Repertory, is about what happens over the next sixty years: who gets built inside that house, who gets broken in it, and what the people who stay are supposed to do with the pieces."
Broadway World- Highly Recommended
"...Beautifully acted, engagingly riveting, and populated with impactful characters, White's thoughtfully sprawling and emotionally layered new play-directed by Lili-Anne Brown-delivers an ambitious, deeply affecting examination of generational legacy, Black identity, masculinity, and the elusive pursuit of emotional healing."