
REVIEW: “A Comedy of Errors” by Gem City Groundlings is Fast and Funny
This is Shakespeare that trusts its audience, trusts its actors, and trusts the joy of live theatre to do the rest.

This is Shakespeare that trusts its audience, trusts its actors, and trusts the joy of live theatre to do the rest.

Mr. Chace’s villainy is perfection: exhibited clearly while still maintaining brilliant restraint, somehow making Iago even more sinister.

The actors are succeeding in exactly what the play demands: exposing the ugliness beneath carefully constructed civility.

From the beginning, the emotions are so palpable that the language almost became secondary.