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Chicago at Surflight: By: Peter Filichia, Star Ledger, Published: July 6, 2008

"...There's Maggie Anderson as the tough-talking Velma. Her mouth is so deliciously curvy it could pass for a sonic wave, and her walk across the stage is so confident it promises she'll be just as sensational in dance. She is."


'Silver Dollar' has the golden touch: By: Peter Filichia, Star Ledger, Published: October 30, 2007
"Maggie Anderson and Evie Hutton, respectively, bring Augusta and Elizabeth to life. "You stole my husband and left me with nothing but a grudge," says Anderson, snarling. "If you give orders to a man," counters Hutton with false sincerity, "he'll find a way out of them." These two are riveting for 2 1/2 hours, mostly because Phillips won't succumb to the "first wife, good; second wife, bad" platform. She knows that a romantic triangle is more complicated."


Feature on Acoustic Duo: By: Bob Egan, Nouveau Magazine, Published: June 2007

She's so thoroughly 'Millie': By: Peter Filichia, Star Ledger, Published: June 21, 2007
"Then theres the landlady, Mrs. Meers, a former actress who pretends to be Asian and kidnaps women to sell them into slavery. Early in the show, Mrs. Meers says, "Just give me the right wig, and I can play anything" -- and when Maggie Anderson says it, we believe it. What she does with the songs and subsequent dialogue proves it. Anderson even makes the hoariest of conventions-the villain's maniacal laugh-sound brand-new."

At Surflight, voices will make waves: By: Peter Filichia, Star Ledger, Published: June 4, 2007
"Along the way, the Poet meets Lalume, the wife of the Wazir (chief) of police. She's adroitly played by Maggie Anderson, who hits some stratospheric notes in her big opener, "Not Since Nineveh." Lalume is one crafty character, and Anderson, with a Stan Laurel, straight-line hint of a smile, plays her deliciously. "

Following The Mystery : Maggie Anderson of New Hope, Pa., makes her Philadelphia debut in the new musical 'Windy City' at Walnut Street Theatre. By: Sally Friedman, TIMEOFF Bucks County, Published: September 15, 2006

Surflight Theatre: The Boys From Syracuse
New York Times By NEIL GENZLINGER Published: June 2, 2006

North Carolina Theatre: NCT’s Revival South Pacific
Breathes New Life Into This Rodgers and Hammerstein Warhorse

by Robert W. McDowell, Classical Voice of North Carolina, May 2006