“Playwright Arlene Hutton has done a risky and, as it turns out, wonderful thing in writing SEE ROCK CITY. Without missing a step, she has created a sequel that is every bit as accomplished as its progenitor,
Last Train to Nibroc. It’s not simply that Hutton has returned to two characters who served her so well the first time out that is so daring. In this age of post-9/11 anxiety and complexity she’s given us two characters who are decent people, worth caring about, and setting them in motion in a story that involves no melodramatics, no manipulative turns, no aberrant behavior. SEE ROCK CITY offers a reality that is as complex as the realities of day-to-day life outside the theater. [The play] picks up one year after the end of Nibroc—and if you haven’t seen Nibroc have no fear; among Hutton’s numerous skills is her deft weaving of critical information from that play into this one.” —Berkshire Eagle.
“Don’t be surprised if this sequel has as long an after life as its predecessor
Last Train to Nibroc. It’s a lovely chamber work with all the characters richly developed and enough nuances to invest the flavorful dialogue and setting with more depth than the old-fashioned, well-made play simplicity implies.” —CurtainUp.
“…an unconventional perspective on the wartime South and difficulties faced by civilians—espe-cially women—when the soldiers returned home. Hutton concludes SEE ROCK CITY with a moving open-ended image that leaves us hoping she revisits the couple one final time…” —Creative Loafing.