This production examines the public health crisis of isolation and is part of the Global Theatre Performance Series, designed to create a dialogue and initiate change.
The Regina A. Quick Center for the Arts will present the premiere of The Loneliness Cure on Tuesday, April 9 at 7 p.m. This production is the latest installment of the Global Theatre Performance Series: Theatre That Changes Our World.
Co-created by program founder Cheryl Wiesenfeld and writer/director/producer Melanie Hoopes, The Loneliness Cure examines our country's public health crisis of loneliness, isolation, and lack of social connection.
The performance is free to the public and reservations are required. A donation of $40 per person is suggested; all proceeds will benefit the Quick Center’s Arts for All program, designed to provide high-caliber, hands-on learning experiences for K-12 grade students in under-resourced schools.
Wiesenfeld and Hoopes engaged in extensive research and interviews to create The Loneliness Cure. The performance shares stories from real people – students, parents, and elders in our community – who have learned how to connect to others and themselves to forge a path toward more meaningful lives. Blessed Stephen ’26, a Fairfield University student who serves as the Quick Center Art & Social Change Fellow, helped to research and gather stories that offer the student perspective.
Spiritual leaders, teachers, law enforcement personnel, guidance counselors, psychological advisors, and social science professors — along with those who have found their footing in the new, uncertain, chaotic landscape of our times — will share their stories.
The overall message of The Loneliness Cure is one of hope — that we, as individuals and as a society, can find our way toward connection, community, and healing.