Ken Ludwig’s
Dear Jack, Dear Louise
by Ken Ludwig
director’s notes by Robin Gordon
In a world where communication is instantaneous and we expect answers to questions and replies from friends within seconds, can you imagine the patience and faith that it would take to write out your deepest thoughts, put them in an onion skin envelope, send them off into the world, and know that you wouldn’t have a response for at least three weeks, if at all?
I was amazed that this play is a true story; that these characters, based on the playwright’s parents, wrote to each other for THREE YEARS before they even met, and that they developed a bond that was unshakeable, even as they and the world changed so drastically.
Over 550,000 American Jewish men and women served in WWII. Some of them liberated incarcerated Jews from the concentration camps. It was horrific, frightening, unimaginable, and very personal.
This play honors the extreme resilience and belief Jack and Louise have, not only in each other, but in and with the American soldiers and their mission. Jack is in awe of the bravery and commitment of the very young soldiers that are his patients, and as a result, we are, too. Jack and Louise persevere, both in their difficult careers, but also in their undying faith in each other, and in everyone fighting so hard to bring an end to the war.
It is quite an American love story.
– Robin Gordon, July 2026