The phrases “low hanging fruit,” “hit or miss” and “luck of the draw” come to mind as one not very funny moment after another counts down to the end of the 90-minute Celebrity Autobiography, the much-staged oddity finally making its Broad...
Critics' Reviews
‘Celebrity Autobiography’ Broadway Review: Stars Do Stars But Few Get Laughs
At the Shubert Theatre on Broadway, a bit less so. The conceit of the comedy revue, developed and directed by Eugene Pack and Dayle Rayfel, is simple: celebs read bits of other celebs' memoirs that weren't meant to be funny but are, whether for being...
The evening’s “coup de grace” was a brilliant treatment regarding Hollywood’s most notorious quadrangle: Debbie Reynolds, Eddie Fisher, Richard Burton, and Elizabeth Taylor. I suspect reading these actors’ books in the privacy of your home ...
BroadwayDrama Celebrity Autobiography
As is the case with any comedy revue that’s got such a gleeful grab bag of content, not all the material works equally well, but because the various set-ups whiz by, the audience is never stuck on any one section of mockery for too long. The varie...
Celebrity Autobiography: Terrif Cast Sends Up Celeb Self-Satisfaction
Question: What current Broadway production has the most genuine laughs? Answer: Easy—the just-opening Celebrity Autobiography, which includes the repeated phrase, “We couldn’t make this stuff up.”
Review: Celebrity Autobiography on Broadway
The grand finale recounts the love quadrangle of Debbie Reynolds (Reyfel), Eddie Fisher (Pack), Elizabeth Taylor (Wilson), and Richard Burton (Adsit) using three different memoirs as source material. It’s fascinating to clock the contradictions, wh...
Fame is fleeting in Broadway’s ‘Celebrity Autobiography’
Unfortunately, fame is fleeting. Are Joe Namath and Neil Sedaka—successes, sure—really in today’s cultural zeitgeist? But with the right talent, it doesn’t really matter. Emmy winner Jeff Hiller took a bite out of Sandy: The Autobiography of ...
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