Indecent, Playhouse on Park, West Hartford, CT Won three awards from the Connecticut Critics Circle 2022-2023 season: Best Ensemble (follow link to meet the cast), Best Director (Kelly O'Donnell), and Best Lighting (Joe Beumer); was also nominated for Outstanding Play and Sound Design (Jeffrey Salerno). "Noa Graham is both funny and heartbreaking as the mother and many others." —Brooks Appelbaum, Broadway World "Bart Shatto (a show biz veteran who’s not just sung on Broadway but with the Trans-Siberian Orchestra) plays a range of stately yet spry older gentlemen, including Yiddish theater star Joseph Schildkraut, matched by the show’s other designated 'Elder,' Noa Graham as women of wisdom and vulnerability." —Christopher Arnott, Hartford Courant
100 Years, Troy Foundry Theatre, Troy, NY "Kevin McGuire and Noa Graham, both outstanding..." ––Albany Times Union
Casse Noisette, Bridge Street Theatre, Catskill, NY "Nancy O. Graham brings compassion and sadness to the English teacher and great humor to an extravagant ballerina." ––Albany Times Union
"Nancy is played by Nancy O. Graham. She displays a fine grasp of acerbic wit in most of her early scenes and a compassion that is hard to resist in the middle of the plays. However, it is her demeanor at the dinner scene in her home and in the morning after sequence that Graham gets to shine, take the stage over and deliver the hard knocks that perpetuate the drama in Joe's life. Graham is wonderful playing all the sides of her principal character and she comes into her comic own as Antonietta Dell'Era, a diva readying herself for the Sugar Plum Fairy, a plum role in anyone's career. Her adoration of the composer is hysterically funny and at the same time rather touching, especially in light of what follows for Nancy and Joe. Here the parallel intensities make for a marvelous contrast in tone." ––Berkshire Bright Focus
"Nancy O. Graham offers a wonderfully comic portrayal of Antonietta Dell'Era, a principal dancer with the Imperial Ballet. We next see her as a fellow teacher in Joe's school, cautiously trying to break through the wall Joe has built between himself and the world, resulting in a heartbreaking confrontation." ––Berkshire On Stage The Clean House, Threshold Stage Company, Kittery, ME
"Nancy Oarneire Graham as Virginia, the neurotic sister, is so lovable, and charmingly quirky, you just want to be her best friend. It's a beautifully nuanced portrayal, never overplayed, that embraces the character's humor and deeper inner life. Even among this play's pantheon her character shines." ––Seacoastonline.com