<p>&nbsp; &nbsp;&ldquo;Exceedingly funny&hellip;poignant and closely observed&hellip; These Saint Louis&ndash;based flight attendants are very much products of the new airline realities&hellip; They are 50-ish veterans hoping to stay healthy and stave off the latest round of layoffs with their early retirement packages that get crummier with every offering. They stay in a lousy motel the kind of place where the cable could not be more basic you don&rsquo;t want to touch the remote control with your bare hands and you have to go down to the desk to get your pillows. And they don&rsquo;t find travel even remotely glamorous not when there&rsquo;s a kid at home alone and an overly solicitous T S A officer at every airport. These are women dealing with the daily grind through the hubs of life; there are themes in this play to which every road warrior of the nonexecutive platinum sort will relate. Which is not to say they don&rsquo;t have a little fun&hellip; If you want to get all meta (and why not?) you might say that Wegrzyn is taking the idea of the stewardess on a layover long a staple of the bedroom farce and throwing her into a totally different kind of hotel with a totally different and barely legal potential lover and fellow adventurer. That theme gives this happily unpredictable 90-minute play a real patina of sadness a sense of how a once-glamorous profession has been reduced to the quotidian by changing mores and corporate budget-cutters&hellip;there&rsquo;s no funnier show in Chicago.&rdquo;<br />Chris Jones The Chicago Tribune</p><p>&nbsp; &nbsp;&ldquo;There was a time when air travel was considered glamorous but then there was a time when baseball fans wore suits and hats to Wrigley Field (the past truly is a foreign country). The three veteran flight attendants at the center of Marisa Wegrzyn&rsquo;s MUD BLUE SKY&hellip;bear little resemblance to the Pan Am stewardesses of the old days with their fashionable uniforms and youthful air of freedom and adventure. Wegrzyn&rsquo;s characters are lower-middle-class grunts at the mercy of cash-strapped airlines and rude passengers who leave unspeakable messes in the lavatory. Whereas the job may have once provided fresh opportunities for women&mdash;as long as they fit a certain mold&mdash;this play&rsquo;s trio seem convinced they&rsquo;re headed nowhere&hellip; Wegrzyn deftly blends comedy and despair as the characters attempt to cut loose&mdash;pot porn and cognac are involved&mdash;and forget that each of them is staring down a future that&rsquo;s either uncertain uninspiring or both&hellip; The play is a funny and forgiving argument in favor of making human connections however brief or tenuous.&rdquo;<br />&nbsp;Zac Thompson Chicago Reader</p>
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