The Science of Leaving Omaha

Washington University , 2021

Palm Beach Dramaworks , 2023

"The Science of Leaving Omaha depicts a world in which the traditional vision of the American Dream no longer exists as a viable possibility in a huge swath of 20-somethings and their siblings." - Palm Beach Post

With

Geva Theater, 2019

Perseverance Theater, 2021

PlayPenn. Me & Gina Pisasale, 2018

“With” is an incredibly sweet, funny play that uses a morbid starting point as both a hook and a microscope with which to examine the ways relationships shape human lives. - Juneau Empire

Evie’s Waltz

The tensions beneath a casual family barbecue rise by gripping degrees in Carter W. Lewis’ new play, Evie’s Waltz. - San Francisco Chronicle.

Geva Theatre, 2009

Evie’s Waltz is a genuine thriller.

– Columbus Dispatch

The Magic Theatre in San Francisco, 2008

The Repertory Theatre of St. Louis, 2008

The Storytelling Ability of a Boy

Occasionally, a play comes along that combines daring structure with compelling characters, gorgeous language, wit, and a riveting story. The Storytelling Ability of a Boy is such a play. – Palm Beach Daily News

Florida Stage, 2009 

I’m sitting in the black box theater at Center Rep watching the grandchildren, or maybe great-grandchildren, of J.D. Salinger’s Holden Caulfield go through their painful dance. - Mercury News

Repertory Theatre of St. Louis, 2007

Florida Stage, 2008

Ordinary Nation

At a time when morality and ethics seem to be taking a back seat to expediency, it’s refreshing to hear someone ask why. - Riverfront Times

It’s full of heart – enlivened by big rhythms and ideas. There are moments in Ordinary Nation where you can read the entire national plight on a character’s face. – Florida New Times

It’s like “I Love Lucy” meets “The Big Lebowski”. - The Denver Post

Otterbein University, 2007

While We Were Bowling

Carter W. Lewis’ magnificent script takes a curved look at one suburban family in 1957, contrasting the televised ideal to the reality on stage with a poignant and tender gaze. - Williamstown Arts & Culture

Ensemble Theatre of Cincinnati, 2005

Studio Arena Theatre, 2004

Women Who Steal

The real beauty is the unlikely joy in Mr. Lewis’s worldview, which can be summarized as: Life is absolutely the worst, but let’s do our best to have a good time anyway. At two minutes after midnight, when Karen realizes her milestone birthday has arrived, Peggy tells her: “You’re 40 now. There’s absolutely no reason ever to be sober again.” – New York Times

Geva Theater, 2008

Put down those remotes people - you’ve got to go see this! – Austin Chronicle

Florida Stage, 2007

The Cha Cha of a Camel Spider

Florida Stage, 2011

“Wow-manship” neatly describes Carter W. Lewis’ latest play – The Cha-Cha of a Camel Spider  -- currently weaving its spell at its Florida Stage premiere. - ENV Magazine

She calls herself the Iambic Pen-terminator, and her words regularly spill into impromptu, half-completed slam-poetry riffs, which we soon realize is her way of dealing with her father’s death…and the crumbling world around her.  – Palm Beach Times

Ostensibly a darkly comic rant about America’s use of mercenary private armies, it becomes instead, a surreal exercise in the transporting power of verbal poetry. - The Palm Beach Post.

Florida Stage Panel; Israel Horvitz, Chris Demos Brown, (Me), Andrew Rosendorf & Deborah Zoe Laufer.

The Americans Across the Street

Harlequin Theatre, 2012

Derek may have won a Pulitzer for the eloquence of his prose, but he’ll never win a prize for his social skills. His scotch-fueled rants at neighbors are interrupted when his estranged sister arrives with her perplexing daughter in tow. A year later, there are cupcakes, a cannon, a dead woman, and an all-encompassing moon. A smart comedy for those who’d like to be sentimental, but just can’t hack it. - Democrat & Chronicle

Golf with Alan Shepard

Seven Angles Theatre, 2005

Berkshire Theatre, 1994

Falcon Theatre, 2004

LA Theatreworks, 1992

If the two main protagonists from Samuel Beckett’s “Waiting for Godot” were transported to a suburban golf course in Ohio and you added two more characters just like them, they could very well be the quartet of life-challenged curmudgeons that populate Carter W. Lewis’ “Golf With Alan Shepard.” - Variety

Lewis’ four old characters, friends and duffers for years, are such funny curmudgeons their putdowns and retorts makes this boys’ day out quite fun. New-Times

The Hummingbird Wars

With everyone’s foibles out on the table, it is easy to find yourself quickly drawn in to this compelling and relatable story. The pitch-perfect play had audience members laughing, gasping, and holding their breath in anticipation. – The Sonoma Voice.

Sonoma State College, 2015

For more than two decades, playwright Carter W. Lewis has been taking the social temperature of the nation, measuring the zeitgeist, and shaping his observations into entertaining, theatrical statements. - Palm Beach Post

Theater at the Arts Garage, 2014

The world premiere is hysterically funny…It starts with a broken water pipe and ends with the house literally breaking apart from bulldozers, the daughter holed up in a barricade of cardboard boxes mistakenly sent from a dish network company, her lover taking an assault rifle outside to kill the guy who has hacked into every cyber-related aspect of their lives, the wife convinced that she is literally disappearing out of ineffectiveness, and the father flashing back to a nightmarish episode in Afghanistan. - Palm Beach Weekly.

Soft Click of a Switch

Lewis’ lean, sardonic script keeps you off-balance and invested. – Seattle Times

During my tenure as Playwright-in-Residence at Washington University the plays below were generously commissioned and wonderfully produced by The Performing Arts Department.

Unlucky Nick, 2016

American Storm, 2002

Kid Peculiar, 2004

The Wash U Plays

The Science of Leaving Omaha, 2021

Civil Disobedience, 2007

Two strangers teetering on the edge of violence dubbed “The Rosencrantz and Guildenstern of the Streets” at London’s Royal Court Theatre meet and figure out, using a library book, how to build bombs out of air conditioning parts. - Royal Court Theater, London

MAP Theatre, 2013

Soft Click of a Switch is a story ahead of its time, written in the days before the term Domestic Terrorist became common vernacular. Soft Click of a Switch is an exploration of the disaffected and disenfranchised, presenting its characters in three dimensions rather than as societal ogres shaped by media-framed sound bites. - Broadway World

Camden & Lilly, 2013