A moving mosaic of what it means to be endowed with "Great Expectations", That Poor Dream is set on a train traveling from New York City to Fairfield, CT, uniting worlds divided by geography, privilege, and time.
Inspired by Charles Dickens’s classic novel about coming of age in a profoundly class-conscious society, the work draws on the company’s own complex relationship to class identity and economic disparity in American society, The Assembly's newest creation explores how class defines and divides us, and how our shared humanity might bring us closer together.
Written and devised collectively by The Assembly and the cast
Directed by Jess Chayes
PERFORMANCE SCHEDULE:
FRIDAY @ 4 & 7 PM
SATURDAY @ 7 & 10 PM
SUNDAY @ 3 & 9 PM
Show Finder
That Poor Dream
First Preview: Dec 12, 2014
Opening Date: Jan 9, 2015
Closing Date: Jan 11, 2015
Running Time: 01:40
Playing @
The Tank
312 W 36th St., New York, NY 10018
Show Notes: No Intermission
Age Guidance: 16
TDF Tickets Offers:
TDF Member tickets:
Not currently available for this show
Listed at 
Never
Full-price tickets:
$15.00 - $15.00
Reviews
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"Expressive....How people make a living, roughly or smoothly, and what they make of themselves are the questions animating this nicely modern adaptation. Created by the ensemble and directed by Jess Chayes, the piece plays out in a single train car. It uses Dickens’s story to explore the freedoms and burdens that money bestows, particularly in a time of profound economic disparity."
------ The New York Times -
"This bold and brave piece sets the spark for an introspective revolution....Let me tell you folks: Shit. Got. Real. There have only been a handful of times when I’ve sat in an audience and felt as though I have been shaken to the core. At the end of That Poor Dream I felt as though I was witnessing a revolution and the evolution of theatre all at once."
---- Theater is Easy -
"That Poor Dream is one of the most daring and innovative pieces to grace the indie stage recently."
----- Theater in the Now -
"Expressive....How people make a living, roughly or smoothly, and what they make of themselves are the questions animating this nicely modern adaptation. Created by the ensemble and directed by Jess Chayes, the piece plays out in a single train car. It uses Dickens’s story to explore the freedoms and burdens that money bestows, particularly in a time of profound economic disparity."
------ The New York Times









