One of the greatest joys you will find on a Broadway stage today comes from seeing two married women get progressively way, way, way too drunk. One dons a silky green gown and the other a pleated pink ...
There’s a bit of acting advice that’s often ascribed to Noël Coward: “Speak clearly and don’t bump into the furniture.” But if you’re Kelli O’Hara and Rose Byrne, by all means, slide down the ...
movie review Fallen Angels .review-block-star { --review-block-star--empty-color: #585858; --review-block-star--fill-color: #000; } .review-block-star { --review ...
Noël Coward’s delightful, rarely produced 1925 comedy Fallen Angels is the sort of Broadway fare that gives critics ample reason to use descriptors like “fizzy” and “intoxicating” and “dizzying,” all ...
The two actresses make for a smashing comic duo in this production of the Noël Coward play about two women eager to rekindle a romance with the same French lothario.
Dee’s Julia begins the play the very model of composure and social grace, yet her restraint gradually slips as she becomes anxious and flustered at the thought of rekindled passion. Her journey from ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Critic’s Pick Lust is the comic engine driving the action of a riotous revival of one of Noël Coward’s early plays, with Rose Byrne and Kelli O’Hara, ...
Noël Coward’s Fallen Angels hasn’t had a professional production in London for 25 years. And you can understand why. It’s a smart and sophisticated piece about two female best friends who go to pieces ...
One hour and 30 minutes with no intermission. At the Todd Haimes Theatre, 227 W. 42nd Street. There’s not much more to “Fallen Angels,” Noël Coward’s rice-paper-thin 1925 comedy, than two sex-crazed ...