JEANINE LEVY
Press
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"The show pits Violet Venable (excellently portrayed by Angie Radosh) and her niece, Catherine Holly (another stage powerhouse, Jeanine Gangloff Levy) against one another in a pitched battle to salvage the character of Sebastian....
The action is particularly extreme for actresses Radosh and Gangloff Levy, whose emotions are pushed to the breaking point. With angst, tears and off-the-chart unease, Gangloff Levy rips through the script with fierce fortitude, describing how Sebastian was set upon. The young woman’s cathartic confession about the fatal events in Spain is truly intense, leaving cast members on stage as well as audience members drained.
Plaudits are in order for three-time Carbonell award-winner Radosh and for Gangloff Levy, whose efforts are daunting. "
- Dale King, South Florida Theatre Magazine
" It also helps that they are delivered by two amazing actresses in Radosh and in Levy.....Levy is another prominent figure in South Florida theatre. While I have mostly seen her only in musicals, it was great to see her take on a classic like this and after this performance, I would expect to see a lot more. Her portrayal of Catherine brought the audience to full attention each time she came on the stage. Her deliverance of the poetry written by Williams was delivered smoothly and effortlessly during her enormous monologue when she finally does tell her side of how Sebastian passed away."
- 5 Minutes to Curtain
"To her credit, Levy, as Catharine, does not “act crazy” to fit stereotypes. Instead, Catharine seems frustrated, overwhelmed, and restless. Levy’s Catharine shoots Mrs. Venable bitter, accusing looks. There is hatred in Catharine’s dark, wide eyes. And we hear convincing anguish escaping her voice as she believably bawls."
- Aaron Krause, Theatrical Musings
Suddenly Last Summer
Legally Blonde
" The funniest performances come from Gangloff Levy as the enthusiastic Paulette..."
- Christine Dolen, Sun Sentinel
"Andrews is hardly alone in shining like a box of holiday ornaments. Jeanine Gangloff Levy was the most wonderfully outrageous lead in Slow Burn’s spoofy Disaster! Here she has a field day as the lovelorn blue collar salon owner and dispenser of wisdom Paulette, who has some belt to the back of house numbers – and the most horrible bouffy hairstyle ever seen in a salon."
-Bill Hirschman, Florida Theatre Onstage
"But, it was Jeanine Gangloff Levy as hairdresser Paulette and Clay Cartland as the hunky UPS driver Kyle who nearly upstaged the leads. Levy may have looked and sounded like the “Long Island Medium” Theresa Caputo, but when she belted out her numbers, she commanded the Amaturo Theater stage. "
-JW Arnold, South Florida Gay News
9 to 5 the Musical
" Doralee(Jeanne Gangloff Levy), Violet (Laura Hodds), Judy (Erica Lustig), gave outstanding performances as they played the perfect 1980’s ‘office girls’ transforming their office into a new and groundbreaking operation while chaining their boss to his garage door.... The four women stole the show...the music and lead female roles stole the show. "
- Ellen Eichelbaum, Miami Splash Magazine
"He’s blessed, of course, with a uniformly terrific group of singers...Hodos, Lustig and the hilarious Gangloff Levy exude a verve whether leading group numbers or delivering the empowerment anthems.They also have a solid sense of comic timing..."
-Bill Hirschman, Florida Theatre Onstage
"...and Parton stand in, Jeanine Gangloff Levy (Doralee) are all super talented actors and vocalists who rock the musicals ever present comedic undertones. "
-Mindi Leaf, Around Town Newspaper
Starmaker
"Jeanine Gangloff Levy credibly plays Lana Turner as a strong female character. Surely, it would have been easy to play Turner as the stereotypical “blonde.” But Levy imbues her character with an assertiveness and forthright manner that will surely please #MeTooadvocates and modern audiences. This woman, her cartoonish yellow costume non-withstanding, is no caricature. Rather, she’s a human being with feelings. And she will not let others push her around.”
-Aaron Krause, Theatrical Musings
"Then plants his loyal secretary Phyllis (the striking and versatile Jeanine Gangloff Levy, also appearing as Lana Turner) as an acceptable love interest."
-Mindy Leaf,Around Town
"Levy gets some of the best comic moments as Lana Turner, and also Willson’s secretary Phyllis Gates, who becomes Hudson’s wife until they divorce three years after their married. She’s also the time capsule taking us through each era as Grace Slick in the 1960s, then Donna Summer in the 1970s, then getting physical as Olivia Newton John in the 1980s. The campy, comic relief works..."
-Michelle Solomon, Florida Theatre Onstage
See Rock City
"...the Alamo vignette, but the scene is otherwise among the show’s strongest. Of all the cast, Gangloff has the brightest of futures, her effortless naturalism and sonorous voice elevating her solo number “All There Is to Say.”
-John Thomason, Florida Theatre Onstage, See Rock City
The Glacier Bay sequence, featuring the three actresses’ poignant a cappella harmonies on “Three Fair Queens,” is an exquisite standalone piece with a fully realized story arc.
- John Thomason, Florida Theatre Onstage, See Rock City
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"When sisters Lily (Yasmin Adli), Claire (Jeanine Gangloff) and Judy (Mariah Jimenez) unite on a cruise to say farewell to their deceased dad, a somber moment becomes enjoyable when they sing "Three Fair Queens," a song that they used to perform together for their father as kids. Putting all differences and animosities aside, the trio come together beautifully and evoke a dysfunctional but loving family."
- Cindy Pierre, Talking Broadway, See Rock City