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ANDREW HUTCHESOn
 
 


MFA Old Globe/USD 2011

BFA University of Texas at Austin 2003

 
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Reviews


“In a small pool of light that picks him out of the darkness, Mr. Hutcheson becomes the still, commanding center of the play. With his sonorous voice and beautiful diction, he gives us Shakespeare’s Richard, a villain sometimes playful, sometimes cruel; a man who delights in his own verbal dexterity. Though physically removed from the often frantic stage action, Mr. Hutcheson manages to steal the show.”

The New York Times

            (Full Review)


“The Audience’s attention is irresistibly drawn to Mr. Hutcheson’s mellifluous voice.”

The New York Sun


            (Full Review)


“Hutcheson is so good, the eye is too often drawn to him.”

BlogCritics.org

            (Full Review)


“I don't envy an actor stepping into such iconic, Brando-sized shoes, but Hutcheson easily puts his own mark on Stanley with a shrewd intensity, more cunning than beastly.”


Austin Chronicle

                (Full Review)


“Andrew Hutcheson brings just that charm to [Stanley], able to fly off the handle with the best of them, while still hitting us with a sly smile or a sarcastic look in his eyes that makes him undeniably likable...Hutcheson, while never seeming too smart in the role, still imbues it with a canniness that helps us root for him. ”

Examiner.com

                (Full Review)


“Hutcheson’s Stanley recedes from the apishness made famous by Brando, relying far more on acidic bitterness and easy charm... Hutcheson  makes Stanley Kowalski likable and identifiable, which is no small feat.”

Austin American-Statesman

                (Full Review)



“The standout performance belongs to Andrew Hutcheson as Ferdinand. Much can be said of Hutcheson's resonating voice and strong stage presence, but what impressed was how animated his face was, particularly his eyes. It could be something as simple as an arched eyebrow or the widening of his eyes to comedic effect, but the range he displayed and the fact that it was visible from several rows up was truly impressive.”

Tyler Morning Telegraph

            (Full Review)


“As Shakespeare's leading man, Andrew Hutcheson has become more confident and cocky, making his character's defiance in the face of the queen much more dramatic.”

Broadway World

            (Full Review)


“His bald pate erupts from hunched black shoulders like a boil from charred skin, and his glowering countenance radiates pure menace -- he's Lex Luthor spouting iambic pentameter...Andrew Hutcheson, in a neat double turn here, makes the good duke a figure as robust and cheery as his brother is curdled and villainous.”

Austin Chronicle

            (Full Review)


“...the richly resonant voice of Hutcheson, who overflowed the small house with Shakespeare the way it was meant to be performed.”

ShakespeareTeacher.com

            (Full Review)

 
As Polixenes in the
Old Globe’s production
of The Winter’s Tale
 
In Ron Daniels’ The Taming of the Shrew on The Old Globe’s Outdoor Stage.
As Orgon in the Texas
Shakespeare Festival’s production of Tartuffe.

Actor. Has a website. This one.

As Stanley Kowalski in A Streetcar Named Desire
(Austin Shakespeare)
of The Winter’s Tale
As Launce in Two Gentlemen of Verona
The Importance
of Being Earnest
(Old Globe)