"Kea Trevett delivers a spectacular performance as Elaine, exasperated by her mother but motivated by the devotion and love a daughter carries for the mother who raised her. Ranging from humorous to heartbreaking, Trevett brings the complexity and depth necessary for this role, harboring both a melancholic connection to the past and a mix of hope and dread for the future while managing the guilt associated with her complicated feelings towards her mother." - Cape Cod Chronicle
"The acting is wonderful. Trevett’s Elaine is by turns exasperated and fed up, guilty and loving—a set of emotions that will ring true with any caregiver." - ptownie
"Kea Trevett (Elaine), Christine Farrell (Ruth), and Blair Baker (Gabby) all give poignant, lived-in performances that they’re able to make sympathetic even when you’re worrying about their decision-making. Trevett makes you feel the desperation behind Elaine’s attempts to remain upbeat about needing to devote her life to her mother’s care, and the fear of how long she’ll have to go on like this.” - Cape Cod Times
"The relationship between Elaine and Gabby is beautifully rendered by Trevett and Baker." - Provincetown Independent
"The play is well-acted, with a cast of all female characters, all very different, but each one struggling with loneliness of modern life and the fear it engenders. " - Provincetown Magazine
"Between Trevett's sweet and gentle rendition (singing along to Joan Baez's cover) and the circumstances that have Eliane up in the middle of the night self-soothing with a song, it is a-poignant moment." - Off Off Online
"Kea Trevett brings considerable magnetism to Elaine, whose hyper competence, challenged by the deteriorating situation at home, is revealed to have a steely, resentful undertone." - Lighting & Sound America
"When Elaine starts singing while doing the dishes, Trevett's voice is so beautiful that it's both a little disconcerting and completely wonderful.” - Talkin’ Broadway
"The cast is wonderful, presenting beautifully honest performances." - The Front Row Center
"The performances, including Jenny, are excellent, displaying the range of reactions the play’s scenario creates—frustration, flirtation, anger, humor, sarcasm, indecision, grief, guilt, happiness, sadness, loss, acceptance." - Theater Pizzazz
"The filmmaking also does justice to lead actor Kea Trevett's rich, vulnerable performance, which is able to communicate the tricky double act of trying to hide the truth from one's self, even as that truth is coming to the surface." - Omeleto
"Smith and Kea Trevett are well matched as the King and Princess, each fluid and graceful, wisely demurring to their close friends in this fanciful battle of gender and wit." - KDHX
"Kea Trevett’s turn as Queen Elizabeth hits emotional notes both comedic and deeply tragic." — bwog.com
Winner of an encore series performance & the Frigid Festival award for BEST COMEDY
"...Kea Trevett’s portrayal of Marsha is particularly captivating and her embarrassment palpable as she finds herself (due to a chance meeting) enmeshed in a conversation with Sam the teenager about love while simultaneously wanting to acquire some pot from him. Her physicality and her Kristen Wiig-esque comedic chops are on full display..." -- My Entertainment World
" And then there's Kea Trevett, the ace of this squad. Mark my words, we will see Trevett as an SNL regular in a few years." -- Theater Is Easy, *Best Bet*
"…Trevett is fierce." - Theater Is Easy, *Best Bet*
"…while hapless Helena, played with comic acuity by Kea Trevett…" - Newsday
"The biggest laugh of the night was owned by Kea Trevett, who as the distraught Helena spends the play chasing Demetrius through and around the grove." - East Hampton Star
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