Bill, Hillary and Chelsea Clinton had a family night at the theater in New York to catch the production of What The Constitution Means To Me on Sunday.

The production written and starred by Heidi Schreck's, a two-time Obie Award winner, was supposed to close on Sunday but has been extended and will now run from November 27 until December 30, according to the New York Times.

The off Broadway play was written on Shreck's own experiences interpreting the Constitution in light of women's rights from the time she was 15, and goes through how it impacted her life.

Bill and Hillary Clinton pictured with What the Constitution Means to Me playwright Heidi Schreck on Sunday in New York

Chelsea Clinton Mezvinsky and Director Oliver Butler pose backstage at the New York Theatre Workshop production of Heidi Schreck's

The play, directed by Oliver Butler, comes at a particularly poignant time for interpretation of the 1787 document in America today.

President Trump said just last week during rallies leading up to the mid-terms on Tuesday that he questions the constitutionality of birthright citizenship as a guarantee.

And just last month, a war over the confirmation of the president's nominee for the Supreme Court, Brett Kavanaugh, who has been accused of sexual misconduct allegations was waged.

The play examines the Constitution's power over women's bodies specifically.

During his hearings, Kavanaugh would not say if he found Roe V. Wade to be 'important precedent' but his interpretation of when a woman can excersize her right to an abortion is much more narrowly defined than what federal law currently allows.

In a memo Kavanaugh wrote in 2003, which was made public during the hearings, he acknowledged that the Supreme Court 'can always overrule' Roe v. Wade.

'I am not sure that all legal scholars refer to Roe as the settled law of the land at the Supreme Court level since Court can always overrule its precedent,' he wrote, adding that some conservative justices then on the court 'would do so.'