Reviews for The Roaring Girl (a Jacobean comedy) with Everyday Inferno Theatre Company:
"His energy is complimented when he teams up with Gull (Quinn Warren) as a disguised soldier. The spunk and moxie that Warren brings to feisty Gull can be summed up when she says, “I am call’d by those that have seen my valour, Tearcat.” "
--Nathan Harding, Off Off Online
"Other particular standout performers include...Quinn Warren as the over-the-top, comical servant Gull."
--Natalie Sacks, CHARGED.fm
Reviews for Progeny with Extant Arts:
"Warren was eloquent, full of conviction, and by the end of the night, she had transformed herself from a strident, flawed, crusader into a crushed and vulnerable woman. As I watched her on stage—lost, broken, convictions shattered—I found myself engaged in an exercise that was apropos in the context of a combative political season. Anne hadn’t changed my mind. But she had stirred my sympathy."
--Damaris Colhoun, Studio202.org
"Quinn Warren in a powerful performance"
"the confrontation scenes between uncle and niece (Quinn Warren) are impressively crafted and handled"
"Ms. Warren's magnetic performance is the center of Progeny"
--Jon Sobel, blogcritics.org
Reviews for Metamorphoses at Playhouse on Park:
"The casting is spot-on with each actor playing several roles. It is truly difficult to single out individual performances because doing so amounts to pulling a thread from a tightly-knit fabric...Suffice to say, they are all worthy of praise with many standout moments."
"...the sequence between Myrrha (Quinn Warren) and her father manages to be passionate and disturbing."
--Jacques Lamarre, Broadway World
"But of course, everyone will first talk about the wading pool on stage...But it’s the talented young cast that weaves a liquid spell that is sure to have the gods smiling."
--Frank Rizzo, The Hartford Courant
Review for A Christmas Carol at Tri-State Actors Theater:
"Quinn Warren is the best of the bunch in differentiating her characters. First, she’s a caring Fan, Scrooge’s older sister. (In this version, she has better news for him than many other “Christmas Carols” offer.) Then Warren is a happy party girl as Mrs. Fezziwig, which she must alternate with Belle, the lass that Scrooge loves and loses."
--Peter Filichia, The Star Ledger
Review for Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead at the Midtown International Theatre Festival:
"If you are going to see one show this summer at the Midtown International Theatre Festival, make the time to see Panicked Productions performance of Tom Stoppard’s Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead"
"much praise must be given to the extraordinary actors"
"Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead at the Midtown International Theatre Festival is one of the best and most poignant performances I have had the pleasure of experiencing in indie theater. Panicked Productions brings to life an old story and a modern classic with as much heart as tragedy and reminds us all that there is always another dimension to the story"
--Mary Beth Smith, nytheatre.com
Reviews for Trapezium at Playhouse on Park:
"Quinn Warren, as Isolde's serving girl, Bridget, embraces the part with full commedia dell'arte abandon, sassy, provocative, and deliciously manipulative."
-- Andrew Beck, Hartford Arts Examiner
"The cast is completed by Iseult’s maid Bridget, played by the fresh-faced Quinn Warren, who is not nearly as innocent as her looks imply. "
-- Karen Bovard, Hartford Advocate
"Russell Treyz, a Drama Desk Award-winning director, and his cast — Jay Lusteck, Kaytie Morris, Craig Hanson, Brendan Norton and Quinn Warren — have a "flambustrous" and "spentacular" time enjoying the wordplay, arch ripostes and hilarious havoc."
-- Susan Hood, Hartford Courant
Reviews for You May Go Now at Centenary Stage Company:
"Quinn Warren excels in making Betty an unbridled innocent with a maniacal smile"
--Peter Filichia, The Star Ledger
"Warren’s Betty is a mass of energy and quirks” --William Westhoven, Daily Record
“Quinn Warren brings an engaging, bubbly personality to her Betty” --Bob Rendell,Talkinbroadway.com
Review for Mrs. Packard at the McCarter Theatre:
“A special hand goes out to Karen Christie-Ward, Beth Dzuricky and Quinn Warren, who portray the radically disturbed inmates without ever overdoing lunacy -- an extremely rare achievement in works of this sort”
-- David Finkle, Theatre Mania
Review for Coitus Hate-Us:
"Of the remaining plays, two stand out, both by Hillary Rollins. In Coitus Hate-Us, marvelous Frank Genniro, as an avowed woman hater, is goaded into spouting gobbets of venom but that is just the beginning. Matching him with vent for vent, Quinn Warren spews her hatred for men. They spar, one hate after another until we realize that, since all this hilarious hatred takes place in a bar, we've been conned into getting involved in a pick-up routine. Funnier than SNL, so there."
--Eugene Paul, Theaterscene.net
Review for Boys' Life:
"Quinn Warren, as the damaged Karen, owns the stage in her one scene with Phil. Phil whines about his desperate but ultimately doomed relationship with her for most of the rest of the show, and Warren's portrayal will pop into your mind."
-- Bill Zapcic, Home News Tribune
Review for The Love Doll:
"Indeed, Jennifer, whose youth is overshadowed by wisdom and understanding well beyond her years, serves as a major catalyst. Quinn Warren is captivating in the role."
-- Goldie Green, Putnam County News & Recorder