The Talk of the Town
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The songs were terrific and the actors gave wonderful performances, especially Caroline McMahon as Dorothy Parker and Rob Seitelman as Woollcott.
Stephen Holden, New York Times
I name them with awe: Kristin Maloney (Parker), Chris Weikel (Benchley), Rob Seitelman (Woollcott), Adam MacDonald (Sherwood), Donna Coney Island (Ferber), Stephen Wilde (Connelly) and Jeffrey Biering (Kaufman), who also did the snazzy arrangements and orchestrations.
John Simon, Bloomberg.com
Rob Seitelman is delicious as Alexander Woollcott, the ringmaster of the group.
David Pumo, nytheatre.com
Rob Seitelman looks surprisingly like Alexander Woollcott, too, speaking in broad, somewhat pompous tones, with very much of the sound and style of Monte Wooley (playing a character based on Woolcott) in The Man Who Came to Dinner. His portrayal works.
Chip Deffaa, Cabaret Scenes
Rob Seitelman is an acidic Woollcott...
Peter Filichia, theatermania.com
Rob Seitelman makes the best of an unappealling character – Woollcott was essentially a professional pill – and delivers an amusing, yet incisive cri de coeur in "The Critic."
Sandy McDonald, EDGE Entertainment
The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (abridged)
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The Gallery Players' production has excellent direction by Neal Freeman and outstanding performances by the ensemble of three actors - Alex Domeyko, Rob Seitelman and Patrick Toon, all of whose wonderful timing is only matched by their antic energy. It is these actors' tour de force performance and Freeman's unerring judgment in moving them around the stage that turns the script (if one may call the loosely connected skits a script) into something more than what might be the brainchild of clever college sophomores thumbing their noses at the establishment.
Paulanne Simmons, The Brooklyn Papers
Composed of Alex Domeyko, Rob Seitelman and Patrick Toon, this cast is an absolute power trio.
Richard Hinojosa, nytheatre.com
A Midsummer Night's Dream
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The comical play-within-the-play is particularly effective, with Rob Seitelman excellently placed as the loudly overenthusiastic, amiably innocent Nick Bottom – supreme object of the play's humor and its trusty anchor. (Avila)
San Francisco Bay Guardian
General Comments
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Favorite actors I'm sure we'll be seeing again in Los Angeles (if not in New York first) were Rob Seitelman, D.J. Lapité, Crystal Noelle (her excerpt from Danitra Vance's Live and in Color! was howlingly funny. I wanted MORE!), David Valdez, Davis Duffield, Jud Williford, and Marilee Talkington. Really strong among a VERY good class. All were very talented; these folks stood out.
Bonnie Gillespie, Cricket Feet Casting
