REVIEWS
Ray-Ka-Pay
"Stehr and Embeck work off each other like the pros they clearly are." Los Angeles Times
"The crafty seduction scene between Stehr and Osborn concluding Act One is a gem of innuendo and subtlety, and it is exquisitely played.Billi is played with lynx-like self possession by tawny Welsh actress Jacqueline Stehr." Back Stage West/Drama-Logue
"My favorite scene for clever entendre was between Stehr and Osborn." Valley Life
"Jacqueline Stehr is a natural, who meets her match in Tony Embeck." Beverly Press
"Stehr holds her own alongside playwright/actor Embeck's shaded performance." LA Village View
California Suite
"In The Visitors from London Stehr understands that British comic timing varies slightly from the American variety.Stehr is sharp and lovably vulnerable." San Fernando Chronicle
Curtains
"The uniformly deft cast includes a sensitive performance from Jacqueline Stehr as the daughter who nobly risks all to spare her mother pain." Los Angeles Times
"The cast is superb. In Jacqueline Stehr's portrayal, her mousy Katherine emerges as a reluctant heroine with steel in her spine." Back Stage West/Drama-Logue
"Stehr's seminal scene and its aftermath are hypnotic." Gazette
"Jacqueline Stehr is particularly moving as daughter Katherine, torn by love and duty." The Reader
"Stehr gives a strong and sympathetic portrayal of Katherine, who seems genuinely torn between affection and empathy for her mother's distress." Daily Breeze
I'll Get My Man
"Romantic lyricism is added by Jacqueline Stehr's portrayal of Josephine De Brissac." The Reporter
"Stehr has the beauty and floating grace to make a rather small role memorable." The Daily News
"Jacqueline Stehr as Josephine is a vivid vision and extremely funny as the husband-hunting wacko."
Back Stage West/Drama-Logue
The Lover and A Last Belch for the Great Auk
"Polished performances make these two British one-acts a rewarding evening. In Pinters's The Lover Stehr & Embeck are so properly British it can hurt to watch them. In The Auk Stehr brings sympathy to a role that could seem flat and irritating." L.A. Weekly
"As good as these one-act plays are, this evening primarily is an opportunity to observe two actors who are masters of high comedy. Embeck and Stehr make an intriguing theatrical team."
Back Stage West/Drama-Logue