Noël Coward’s delightful, rarely produced 1925 comedy Fallen Angels is the sort of Broadway fare that gives critics ample reason to use descriptors like “fizzy” and “intoxicating” and “dizzying,” all ...
One hour and 30 minutes with no intermission. At the Todd Haimes Theatre, 227 W. 42nd Street. There’s not much more to “Fallen Angels,” Noël Coward’s rice-paper-thin 1925 comedy, than two sex-crazed ...
In the Noel Coward oeuvre of rarities, “Fallen Angels” is no “The Vortex.” The latter play was the playwright’s first major success on stage, opening in 1924. It dealt with such then-controversial ...
It’s the first show after opening night for “Fallen Angels,” and the celebration is still in bloom for Broadway star Kelli O’Hara. “I did walk in here today and all the flowers are still in here — ...
There’s a bit of acting advice that’s often ascribed to Noël Coward: “Speak clearly, and don’t bump into the furniture.” The show follows two upper-crust friends, Julia (O’Hara) and Jane (Byrne), who ...
Notwithstanding their other myriad talents, Broadway stars Kelli O’Hara and Rose Byrne are offering quite the masterclass in faux inebriation in Noel Coward’s “Fallen Angels,” being as their pair of ...
Being pulled across the stage by a phone cord while dressed in a floor-length evening gown wasn’t originally part of the plan for Kelli O’Hara’s character, Julia, in Fallen Angels. But during ...
NEW YORK — Notwithstanding their other myriad talents, the Broadway stars Kelli O’Hara and Rose Byrne are offering quite the masterclass in faux inebriation in Noël Coward’s “Fallen Angels,” being as ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Critic’s Pick Lust is the comic engine driving the action of a riotous revival of one of Noël Coward’s early plays, with Rose Byrne and Kelli O’Hara, ...
Rose Byrne and Kelli O’Hara are comic gems in a pitch-perfect revival that sparkles like champagne Fallen Angels has appeared only twice on Broadway since its stateside premiere in 1927, two years ...
Fallen Angels has fallen back to Broadway! Noël Coward's play, directed by Tony Award-nominee Scott Ellis, stars Golden Globe-winner and Oscar-nominee Rose Byrne as “Jane Banbury” and Tony ...