“Almost steals the entire show.”
-David Gordon
“Eryn LeCroy almost steals the entire show”
“Mesmerizing”
-Mark Kennedy
“Everywhere are scene-stealers — Eryn LeCroy with a mesmerizing “He Plays the Violin.”
“One of its many musical high points.”
-Greg Evans
“Eryn LeCroy sings “Violin” beautifully, giving the production one of its many musical high points.”
“Tender and beautifully sung turn as Martha Jefferson…”
-Charles Isherwood
“Among the other notable performances are Eryn LeCroy’s tender and beautifully sung turn as Martha Jefferson…”
“Bone-chillingly beautiful soprano…”
-James Frankie Thomas
“As Martha Jefferson, Eryn LeCroy sings his praises in a bone-chillingly beautiful soprano, wearing a floaty lemon meringue of a gown.”
"Diversity of styles... expressive sprezzatura"
-Richard Stanislaw
“Broadway singer and New Jersey native Eryn LeCroy returned to Ocean City Saturday night to front the Ocean City Pops Orchestra in the final concert of a highly successful season.
An obvious favorite with the audience, the instrumentalists and Maestro Vince Lee, she enthusiastically navigated a variety of show tunes. It’s not easy to sustain a full concert of solos, but between the diversity of styles and LeCroy’s magnetic stage presence, the evening never lagged.”
“Hilariously portrayed… tackles with fervor”
-J. Peter Bergman
“Her rival, Eileen Evergreen is hilariously portrayed by Eryn LeCroy whose Eliza Doolittle here so delighted me. This is a very different sort of role and to my surprise and delight she tackles Eileen with equal fervor and produces a performance that makes me forget her previous appearance only two weeks ago. Brava!”
“Lyrical voice… makes the show literally flame"
-J. Peter Bergman
“Eryn LeCroy’s lyrical voice gives a new, or perhaps renewed, beauty to Eliza’s music. She is far and away the finest performer I’ve seen in this role in well over a decade and if there isn’t a major career waiting for this woman I will be very surprised.
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While the entire cast in this production is marvelous the show, like the play on which it is based, relies on the chemistry of the male and female lead. I saw Alec McCowan and Diana Rigg in London in the non-musical and their chemistry was so magical I saw the play twice in the same day. At the Mac the chemistry between Hardy and LeCroy is palpable. They spark one another. Their double-level attraction/disdain makes the show literally flame. They are so good together that it is tempting to imagine them as Petruccio and Kate or even as Adam and Eve in “The Apple Tree”. Everything he does affects her in more than one way and every word she utters grabs him in the nether region and shakes him just a bit. With the two of them on stage the plays nearly three hour length seemed much too short a time.”
“Fantastic performance… icy, legit soprano"
-Greg Kerestan
“Fresh from the Barrow Street immersive Sweeney Todd, LeCroy’s Fiona is a fantastic performance as an irony-free ingénue, pure of heart and righteous of conviction, with the kind of icy, legit soprano that cuts through the lush orchestrations like a mountain stream.”