UNSTUCK by Olivia Levine

(dir. Molly Rose Heller)

“I loved this show, and I love Olivia. The candid way she approached her OCD, her sexuality, her difficulty with relationships, and the challenging path to self-acceptance is incredible, and her ability to do so with such levity and hilarity is exceptional…Honestly, I can’t push this show enough, please go and see it.”

-Voice Mag UK

“Levine is a mesmerising performer: charming, sharp-witted and perfectly pitched to find the tricky balance between dark humour and gravitas.”

-Fest Magazine

“It’s absolutely unflinching, and told with real expertise. More elegant than simple stand up, Olivia’s show is well thought through and artistic.”

-Entertainment Now

“Olivia’s storytelling is sharp and unflinchingly honest, offering a candid look at the realities of OCD beyond the clichés. Her ability to balance humour with the serious challenges of her disorder makes Unstuck more than just a comedy and really shows off Olivia’s skills.”

-Diva Magazine

LET LIV by Olivia Levine (

dir. Erica Rose)

“Levine steps outside of her writer persona to make her presence known in another creative way– acting –and does so with a magnitude of fiery, impassioned energy that exudes steadfast, borderline cantankerous, opinionated vigor but then shifts to fully believable, achingly heartbreaking vulnerability.”

-One Film Fan Review

“Levine does a good job of remaining expressive and likable while being cynical and unfiltered.”

-Take 2 Indie Review

“The script is written with an acute awareness of the complex emotions at play, including the spikiness of a central character who is just beginning to feel the real pain of being away from the bottle for longer than she’s used to.”

-Eye for Film

 

The Daughters by Patricia Cotter (dir. Jessica Holt)

“Levine excels as the chiffon-swishing ingenue Evelyn in the 1955 act, breathless at her first chance to be in a roomful of “girls like me,” imbuing each utterance with the bloom of discovery, clarifying how each new phrase is one more step in Evelyn’s effort to figure something out for herself”

-SF Chronicle

Evelyn, played with palpable curiosity and a mischievous spirit by Olivia Levine, is attending the first-ever gathering of The Daughters of Bilitis [...] She's tickled pink to be here, and audiences will be, too.

-Bay Area Reporter