Maxon Davis
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"cuts a dashing figure...spirited."
- New York Times

"Delivers on every level."
- San Francisco Bay Times

"Intense... strong."
- San Francisco Chronicle

"Very good....virile"
- Talkin' Broadway

"Handsome, stunning."
- Beyond Chron

"an equally straight-dealing and robustly good-looking Petruchio"
- Minor Critics
                                           Photo: Cindy Cieluch

"a force to reckon with....with a rippingly-good, thick, Scottish accent."
- NJ Arts Maven

" incredibly magnetic"
 - Yes, I'm Opinionated (Rene Devlin-Weiss)

"brilliantly acted and hilarious...Amy Hutchins and Maxon Davis were fantastic in the lead roles of Kate and Petruchio."
- AXS

"Just saw Henry IV....and loved it!  ...totally solid, swashbuckling, energetic and surprisingly fun production, and Derek Wilson, Jon Ahlin, and John Barker were riveting. Also – and I mean this in the most complimentary way – Maxon Davis turned the second act into the highest-class and best episode of Highlander ever.
-Alexandra Kilduff (Berman Rosenbach)

"Devilishly handsome....acted with sincerity and passion."
- San Francisco Bay Times

"Outstanding....[takes] the hunk-a-hunk look right to the edge.  So natural...seems possessed by the story."
- Beyond Chron

"Davis' burning sense of conflict between his duties in the witch hunt and the empathy he feels for the Proctors is exceedingly well fleshed out."
- Daily Californian

"Davis plays Longaville as an anal note-taker, binder in hand scribbling down decrees, comments, and information; when he realizes Boyet never gives him a straight answer about the identity of Maria, Longeville furiously crosses out the answers as his choler rises. But it is Maria who sends him over the edge; for the triple-reveal scene, the disheveled Longeville not only has several sheets of sonnets in hand but also stuck into his belt, and the words love, goddess, and heaven are inked onto his left arm, and duty, oath, and perjury on his right."
- Shakespeareances.com
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