An Act of Love
Tickets and Information
SHOW INFORMATION
CURRENTLY CLOSED
Opened Apr 4, 2008
Closed Apr 27, 2008
Opened Apr 4, 2008
Closed Apr 27, 2008
Visit the An Act of Love website:
http://www.falcontheatre.com/act_of_love.htm
TICKETS TO THIS SHOW
CHECK FOR DISCOUNTS
WHAT IS IT ABOUT?
An Act of Love is the ultra dysfunctional-family comedy about newly-divorced insurance salesman, Peter Sandusky, and the chaotic women who converge on him on the evening of his first date since the break-up of his 3-month marriage. An eccentric blind date who remains hidden from view, a wayward sister in need of a place to crash, and a narcissistic wannabe-actress mother all prove to be the necessary ingredients for Peter to take control and concoct a recipe for life as it should be. An Act of Love - when life calls for a rewrite!
WHAT ARE CRITICS SAYING?
What are other members saying?
No user reviews have been posted yet.
Write a review
NEWSLETTER SIGN UP
MOST POPULAR
SHARED ON FACEBOOK
By providing information about entertainment and cultural events on this site, TheaterMania.com shall not be deemed to endorse,
recommend, approve and/or guarantee such events, or any facts, views, advice and/or information contained therein.
©1999-2012 TheaterMania.com, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Terms of Use & Privacy Policy
recommend, approve and/or guarantee such events, or any facts, views, advice and/or information contained therein.
©1999-2012 TheaterMania.com, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Terms of Use & Privacy Policy
Directions & Map
The world premiere production of David Landsberg's mildly entertaining family comedy, An Act of Love, now at the Falcon Theatre, is most likely to appeal to sitcom lovers rather than theater enthusiasts. As the house lights go down, a brief, slightly jaunty jingle sets up a Pavlovian response for the audience to expect light TV comedy -- and in the momentary darkness one can easily envision the opening montage with shots of mom, son, and daughter as they wreck havoc on each other's lives. And once the show starts, it's clear that the only things missing are the cameras and the light-up "Applause" sign overhead.
As the play begins, the exasperated Peter Sandusky (Timothy Hornor, merely comp[...]