Press for Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?
Amanda Campbell, The Way I see It - Formidable Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf One of Neptune’s Best
https://www.twisitheatreblog.com/?p=6308
“I, at 24 years old, wrote that I thought it was “one of the greatest plays ever written.” Now having seen and read considerably more plays my opinion remains unchanged. This is one of the greatest plays ever written, and the production playing at Neptune Theatre just until March 15th directed by Ann-Marie Kerr is an absolutely delicious example of all the elements coming together just right to create a truly formidable evening at the theatre. “
“Patrick Jeffrey’s portrayal of Nick, [is'] a very buttoned-up biologist looking on the surface to make a professional first impression on the elite of this college, but as the party unravels it becomes clear that his ambition is as morally ambiguous as Martha’s… Jeffrey does an excellent job of using different types of restraint- whether that be Nick’s very WASPY regard for decorum and proper etiquette, or whether it’s the way he performs his masculinity as an unmistakable superiority that requires no effort of proof.”
NS Reviews - Don’t Be Afraid! Go to this stratospheric production of Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?https://nsreviews.blog/2026/03/10/dont-be-afraid-go-to-this-stratospheric-production-of-whos-afraid-of-virginia-woolf/
“Edward Albee’s 1962 hit, Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, glitters in all of its comedy and savagery in a riveting production at Neptune Theatre just to March 15… It shocked people in the 1960s. It is still shocking, as well as relevant and theatrically exhilarating, with Albee’s playful, searing language, his themes of love and the American dream, and his demands on his actors.”
“Patrick Jeffrey is totally present as the well-built, ambitious Nick”
Amanda Campbell , The Way I See It - Raquel Duffy & Anthony Black on Bringing Albee’s Martha & George to Life in Halifax
https://www.twisitheatreblog.com/?p=6289