press & Media coverage

X - Flat Earth Theatre

Nick and an actor facing each other, his hand to her heart and her hand on his shoulder in an intense moment of physical contact.

X - Flat Earth Theatre

“Meyer and Perron in particular bring welcome depth to their roles: their characters change from ‘crew member’ cutouts to fully rendered human beings who experience fear, pain, love, and even gentle laughter before the end.”

Top Ten in Boston Stage Notes' Best Plays of 2019

Women beware women

Top Ten in Boston Stage Notes' Best Plays of 2019

Nomad Americana - Fresh Ink Theatre

Nick Perron and Ivy Ryan onstage in "Nomad Americana." Ivy is reading from a piece of paper and looking up and forward, Nick is looking intently at her.
Photo of the acting company of "Nomad Americana" - Fresh Ink Theatre. Five actors grouped together and smiling.

Nomad Americana - Fresh Ink Theatre

“[The actors] do a great job embracing the gentle humor of the play and working to charm the audience into liking them. They succeed. It’s a very likeable group of people to spend an evening with.”​

“The burgeoning relationship between them
is one of the highlights of the play, and both Ryan and Perron authentically convey their deepening connection.”

“Perron’s Danny shows great understanding and sensitivity, turning him into the best first boyfriend a girl could ever hope to find.”

“Ivy Ryan and Nick Perron create a believable portrait of two young people figuring out whether they might be in love.”

Women beware women

Women Beware Women - THE VILLIAN'S THEATRE

Photo of Nick Perron and an actor dressed in religious gard in a tense moment of physical contact

Women Beware Women - THE VILLIAN'S THEATRE

“Women Beware Women, was especially bold, a brutal bloodbath of a play filled with ill-fated affairs, power plays and entanglements.”

Move Your Face - Boston Theater Company

"Move Your Face" Poster - Boston Theater Company

Move Your Face - Boston Theater Company

“The entire company does impressive work in respect to their faceless, wordless physicality”

 

Christopher Ehlers | digboston