Windows
1922
The war has ended, but its shadows linger in the March household. Geoffrey, a cynical freelance writer, and his pragmatic wife Joan navigate their marriage while their children, Johnny and Mary, grapple with disillusionment, young people who believed in something and watched it crumble. Into this fractured domestic world steps Faith Bly, a young woman carrying the weight of her past. When her father arrives with damning revelations about her history, the family's carefully constructed ideals face a brutal test: can they practice the mercy they preach, or will society's judgments prove stronger than compassion? Galsworthy builds his drama with quiet intensity, letting conversations at the breakfast table reveal the fault lines beneath respectable surfaces. The title whispers of voyeurism, of windows that both reveal and conceal, of watching lives unfold from the safety of the other side of the glass. This is a play about what we owe each other when the full story emerges.










































