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		 Edited and Published by Robert W. McDowell 
		
		October 9, 2025 Issue  | 
		
		 A FREE Weekly E-mail Newsletter Covering Theater, Dance, Music, and Film in the Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill/Carrboro Area of North Carolina Since April 2001.  | 
	
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		 PART 9A: TRIANGLE THEATER REVIEW BY MELISSA ROONEY  | 
	
The Wolves at PlayMakers Rep Is
Fierce, Funny, and Utterly Human
Photo by HuthPhotoInside UNC-Chapel Hill's Paul Green Theatre, the audience walks not into a theater, but onto a field. A bright green expanse of AstroTurf stretches across the stage, as if the audience has stumbled into a Saturday morning scrimmage. The bleachers rise from the edge of this miniature arena, wrapping the spectators directly into the space of the players. Before a word is spoken, director Aubrey Snowden's staging of Sarah DeLappe's The Wolves announces its athletics-driven intent.
DeLappe's Pulitzer Prize-nominated script is an exhilarating cacophony of conversation. Set across several winter Saturdays in suburban America, The Wolves follows nine teenage girls -- known by their jersey numbers -- as they stretch, jog, and gossip before their indoor soccer matches. Through their chatter -- sometimes political, sometimes profane, always authentic -- emerges a portrait of a generation learning to balance selfhood with solidarity.
PlayMakers Rep will stage The Wolves by Sarah DeLappe on Oct. 8-26 in UNC-Chapel Hill's Paul Green Theatre (photo by HuthPhoto)The cast, trained in teamwork and footwork by former UNC soccer player Brianna Pinto, move with the kinetic coordination of a true team. They stretch in sync, pass balls, and finish each other's sentences. At times, when all nine talk at once, the result is nearly symphonic -- a swirl of sound in which meaning flashes in shards. It's musical, lyrical even; and Snowden choreographs it so cleanly that the moments of silence land like heartbeats. I found myself wanting to see the play again just to catch the conversations that I missed the first time.
The ensemble -- composed of graduate students in UNC's Professional Actor Training Program (PATP), undergraduates, and alumni -- is uniformly excellent. Katie Stevens stands out as #13, the team's resident clown, whose irreverence barely conceals the longing for connection beneath. Her comedic timing is spot on, and her warmth makes her the emotional glue of the team.
Celeste Pelletier (center) stars as #46 in PlayMakers Rep's Oct. 8-26 production of The Wolves by Sarah DeLappe (photo by HuthPhoto)Celeste Pelletier garners respect as the understated and underappreciated #46, the newcomer whose awkward sincerity and quiet resilience gradually win both her teammates and the audience's hearts.
Elizabeth Dye, as the fierce and defiant #7, captures the brittle bravado of teenage rebellion without ever tipping into caricature; her scenes crackle with energy.
Elizabeth Dye (center) stars as #7 in PlayMakers Rep's Oct. 8-26 production of The Wolves by Sarah DeLappe (photo by HuthPhoto)The rest of the team -- Swetha Anand (#2), Delaney Jackson (#11), Caroline Marques (#14), Jadah Johnson (#8), Lily Kays (#25), and Mengwe Wapimewah (#00) -- brings equally rich texture to the field. And when Dana Marks finally enters as Soccer Mom, her brief scene is devastatingly awkward, believable, and sad.
The sense of ensemble in The Wolves is palpable. In the play, as on a successful soccer team, no one upstages another, even when chaos reigns. Playwright Sarah DeLappe has said that she conceived The Wolves as an "orchestration," in which the characters' voices function like instruments in a score. Director Aubrey Snowden's production fully realizes that musicality.
PlayMakers Rep will stage The Wolves by Sarah DeLappe on Oct. 8-26 in UNC-Chapel Hill's Paul Green Theatre (photo by HuthPhoto)Scenic designer Yi-Hsuan (Ant) Ma transforms the Paul Green Theatre into an indoor soccer field so convincing that one half-expects a ball to ricochet into the audience. Pamela A. Bond's costumes -- matching jerseys, shin guards, and messy ponytails -- capture the visual realism of teenage athletes, while Abigail Hoke-Brady's lighting subtly marks the passage of weeks, moods, and emotional weather. Daniel Baker's sound design is flawless. The technical team deserves credit -- especially since design in this kind of realism is most impressive when it's unnoticed.
PlayMakers Rep's production of The Wolves also reflects the best of the Department of Dramatic Art's Professional Actor Training Program. The production bridges the professional and the educational, offering its MFA and undergraduate actors the rare opportunity to work together under professional conditions. The result is not an academic exercise, but a fully realized, emotionally resonant piece of theater. As Snowden herself was once captain of her all-girls prep-school soccer team, she has experienced both the athletic discipline and vulnerability that she conjures in the privileged adolescent female players on The Wolves.
PlayMakers Repertory Company's Oct. 8-26 production of The Wolves by Sarah DeLappe stars Dana Marks (right)
as Soccer Mom and Mengwe Wapimewah (left) as #00 and Elizabeth Dye as #7 (photo by HuthPhoto)Beneath its humor and physicality, The Wolves is a meditation on belonging -- on what it means to be part of a collective. After overhearing New Yorkers casually discuss war-torn regions in the Middle East, The Wolves became DeLappe's way of examining American exceptionalism through the microcosm of a girls' soccer team. The result is a funny and fierce look at the stressors of being a privileged American adolescent, and the resiliency that comes from being part of a collective.
Sarah DeLappe's THE WOLVES (In Person at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday-Friday, 2 and 7:30 p.m. Saturday, and 3 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 15-19 and 22-26), directed by Aubrey Snowden and starring (in alphabetical order) Swetha Anand as #2, Elizabeth Dye as #7, Delaney Jackson as #11, Jadah Johnson as #8, Lily Kays as #25, Dana Marks as Soccer Mom, Caroline Marques as #14, Celeste Pelletier as #46, Katie Stevens as #13, and Mengwe Wapimewah as #00 (PlayMakersRepertoryCompany in the Paul Green Theatre in UNC-Chapel Hill's Joan H. Gillings Center for Dramatic Art). TRAILER: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=86Wb7Re4vow. PLAYBILL (Desktop Version): https://online.fliphtml5.com/gtelh/qfqn/. PLAYBILL (Mobile Version): https://playmakersrep.org/playbill-for-the-wolves/. PRESENTER: https://playmakersrep.org/, https://www.facebook.com/playmakersrep, https://www.instagram.com/playmakersrep/, https://www.tiktok.com/@playmakersrep, https://x.com/playmakersrep https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PlayMakers_Repertory_Company, and https://www.youtube.com/@PlayMakersRepertory. 2025-26 SEASON: https://playmakersrep.org/season/2025-2026/. PRC BLOG: https://playmakersrep.org/about-us/our-blog/. VENUE: https://playmakersrep.org/about-us/paul-green-theatre and https://unchistory.web.unc.edu/building-narratives/paul-green-theatre/. DIRECTIONS/PARKING: https://playmakersrep.org/visitor-info/directions-and-parking/. THE WOLVES (2016 Off-Broadway dark comedy/political drama and finalist for the 2017 Pulitzer Prize in Drama): https://www.concordtheatricals.com/p/62099/the-wolves, https://newplayexchange.org/script/1992639/the-wolves, https://stageagent.com/shows/play/11330/the-wolves, and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wolves_(play). THE SCRIPT: https://books.google.com. STUDY GUIDE (Lincoln Center Theater): https://media.lct.org/filer_public/5a/ea/5aea35bb-2492-4865-b701-b007ff34cb78/thewolvesstudyguide.pdf. SARAH DeLAPPE (Reno, NV-born playwright and screenwriter): https://www.concordtheatricals.com/a/117788/sarah-delappe, https://www.playwrightsrealm.org/all-playwrights/sarah-delappe, https://newplayexchange.org/users/2893/sarah-delappe, https://www.imdb.com/name/nm11972817/, and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarah_DeLappe. CONTENT ADVISORY: PlayMakers Rep cautions, "The Wolves contains strong language and mature themes." For details, click here and scroll down to the CONTENT TRANSPARENCY section. RUN TIME: "Approximately 1 hour and 30 minutes. No intermission," according to PlayMakers Rep. RELATED EVENTS: For details, click here and scroll down to the Special Performances section. NOTE: Arts Access, Inc. of Raleigh will audio-describe and sign-language interpret the show's 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 22nd, performance. TICKETS: $20 and up, plus taxes and fees. Click here to buy tickets. INFORMATION: 919-962-7529 or prcboxoffice@unc.edu. PLEASE DONATE TO: PlayMakers Repertory Company.
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	 EDITOR'S NOTE: A Durham, NC resident for 20 years, Melissa Rooney is a scientific editor, freelance writer, and author of several science-based children's picture books. She has published children's stories and verse in Highlights Children's Magazine and Bay Leaves. Rooney earned undergraduate degrees in English and Chemistry from the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, VA; and she earned a Ph.D. in Chemistry in 1998 from the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill. Her stories Eddie the Electron and The Fate of the Frog form the basis of two workshops offered through the Durham Arts Council's Culture and Arts in the Public Schools (CAPS) program, through which Rooney teaches elementary- and middle-school students about electrons and atoms or sustainability and rhyme, respectively. When she isn't writing, editing, reading, teaching, or experiencing theater, Rooney volunteers as a Soil and Water Conservationist for the nonprofit Urban Sustainability Solutions. Click here to read Melissa Rooney's reviews for Triangle Review.  | 
	
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