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"It’s a treat to watch the comical Corwin sail around the stage with her ever-augmenting belly preceding her!"
F. Kathleen Foley, Los Angeles Times
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"Heather Corwin (is) delightfully effective, both individually and in ensemble. (Her) versatility and ability, making the play’s cadre of purposefully overblown characters acceptable as comically quasi-believable is essential."
Joseph Sirota, The Events News
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"Heather Corwin successfully and entertainingly plays various roles. The actors are so convincing and versatile that it’s fun to try to figure out who’s who, and Bright Ideas is farcical enough that we can do that without its distracting us from the story."
Cory Bilicko, Signal Tribune
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"Corwin brings a slightly bug-eyed craziness to Mrs. Heath, perpetually pregnant Lynzie, Mr. Scott’s anal retentive assistant Ms. Labradour, and enunciation specialist Mrs. Menteith, among others. One of the evening’s most hilarious moments comes when enunciation, physical fitness, and drama specialists join forces to provide an outrageously comic tableau of child education gone berserk."
Steven Stanley, StageSceneLA.com
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"Rounding out this International City Theatre ensemble (is) Heather Corwin, who play(s) multiple parts in Coble’s dark but hysterical slice of life. Each (actor) is outstanding. Corwin is hysterical as Lynzie, the pregnant, ready-to-pop mother who already has two children in 'the best nursery school in town.'
Shirlie Gottlieb, Grunion Downtown Gazettes
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"Heather Corwin (does) a phenomenal job of playing the ensemble, filling this world with peripheral characters, in addition to playing (her) principal parts within the show. The lightning fast costume changes and fluid shifts in character roles are impressive. All performances were energetic with beautiful rhythm and timing among the players; across the board every actor was just great. This show is hysterical."
Keisha7, Splash L.A.
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"The treasure here lies in the steely strength and downy beauty of Heather Corwin as Antigone.
If Heaney had only given her the forbidden desires Sophocles intended, she might have even smoldered with tragic abandon."
Tony Brown, Cleveland's The Plain Dealer
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“Luminous and expressive. Versatile vocal style.”
Clara Heironymous, Tennessean
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"Terrific is Heather Corwin as woman-on-a-mission
Myra Arundel. Corwin imagines Myra so completely, it seems that we've known her -
and her tricks- for years. Corwin's Myra knows that she wants - an affair
with David Bliss - and she's willing to encounter anything but honesty on the
way there. Glamorous and calculating, she's ready to negotiate any opposition."
Mark E. Leib, Weekly Planet
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“Heather Corwin is always a breath of comic relief.
She makes you laugh, not so much because she’s clueless, but because she’s a
human being with a normal emotional range and not a bullying extrovert or
doormat introvert. She’s so normal that it doesn’t really occur to her
how deep the pathology of her niece, her brother, or the manipulative
Morris really extends.”
Marty Fugate, The Longboat Observer
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“Heather Corwin, as Robert’s current lover Addie,
is first-rate, radiating vigor and high spirits as she hurries off breathlessly
to her latest archeological assignment.”
Mark E. Leib, The Weekly Planet
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“Heather Corwin makes a sleek vamp as Myra Arundel.”
Jack Eddleman, Bradenton Herald
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“Heather Corwin stays busy playing all of
Argan’s pompous doctors, distinguishing one form the other with comical hats.”
Colette Bancroft, St. Petersburg Times
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“Heather Corwin is wonderfully ebullient, greeting
life’s complexities with a nervous titter that eventually becomes her signature.”
Mark E. Leib, The Weekly Planet
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“Heather Corwin (balances their performance) as
Austin’s recently widowed sister, Lavinia, who, despite her elegant black
mourning gown, is spirited, giggly and full of life. She may look too young
to be twice Catherine’s age, but she pulls it off.”
Jay Handelman, Sarasota Herald Tribune
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Heather Corwin, with an infectious giggle laugh,
portrays the incurable romantic, as a gentle soul, one who is sometimes nearly
as naïve as Catherine, one who cries easily when remembering her late husband
or at other poignant times. She switches easily from one mood to another.”
Kim Cool, Venice Gondolier
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“Among the Blue Room’s fine cast, standouts include…
Heather Corwin, who’s remarkably convincing as the Married Woman, a character
substantially older than herself.”
Colette Bancroft, St. Petersburg Times
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