“As Julia Zoe Crawford captured her characters’ anguish that she is unloved. Hers is a strong performance and she makes the most of being in some of the play’s most dramatic scenes.”
“Julia tells herself stories too. Zoë Crawford brings just enough of the mother’s nastiness into her performance as she gives Julia a spoilt and cosseted air when allowing herself to touched and moved by Agnes. Julia’s inability to cope with change, especially when it has the potential to side-line her, is nicely explored and the build to tantrum is subtly effected. There’s even a hint of a stamp and a whine.”
Reviews by Judith (and Friends)
“Crawford’s Julia and Bell’s Tobias play each other’s opposites, one wilful and demanding, the other wet and reasonable.”
“Julia (Zoe Crawford) is poignant in her role as a young woman forever searching for affection and warmth.”