MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING
Kim Titus had the gravitas to create this character…His path
through this story was a roller-coaster and Titus plays through all
these divergent emotions with sensitivity and believability.
-Charlie Bowles, John Garcia’s The Column
LOVE’S LABOURS LOST
…providing delicious moments of humor and comment on what
other characters are doing. Titus fit this part well, as his Lordly
demeanor made Boyet both playfully challenging to the Ladies
while being put in his place by them.
-Charlie Bowles, John Garcia’s The Column
PERSUASION
Kim Titus was entertaining as Sir Walter Elliot, the vain patriarch
of the Elliot family. Titus was able to inject a bit of childlike charm
into his role, which made his character’s constant obsession
with pretty people an ongoing source of humor, rather than
annoyance.
-Nicole Mulupi, The Column Online
NOISES OFF
“…Kim Titus as actor Selsdon Mowbray…picked up several
comedy gems along the way and became highlights of the
performance.
Actor Selsdon Mowbray is the actor many of us have figuratively
or literally held up onstage in a play. He drinks whenever
possible, comes in too early or misses his cue altogether, and
Kim Titus’ portrayal of Mowbray was hysterically too close
for comfort. Droll-faced, slack-jawed, and slumpy-stanced,
Titus played an actor who was only there for the gig. The only
time Mowbray’s face brightened like a child with a new toy was
when finding a bottle hidden backstage. Titus’ comedy timing
doing something as mundane as throwing a fake brick through a
fake window made the audience howl, a have to see moment
to fully appreciate. For an outsider character, he certainly made
his performance up front and center.”
-Mary L. Clark, John Garcia’s THE COLUMN
FOX ON THE FAIRWAY
“Titus and Thomas, real pros we don’t get to see onstage
often enough, go right up to the line of doing too much but
never cross it.”
-Lawson Taitte, The Dallas Morning News
“All of this silliness is smacked off the tee smartly by an
excellent cast….the cast list is brimming with fine actors.”
-Punch Shaw, Fort Worth Star-Telegram
OUR TOWN
Familiar professional actor Kim Titus, as George’s father,
Dr. Gibbs…especially stand[s] out.
-Punch Shaw, Fort Worth Star-Telegram
Titus and Holman glow with special warmth in a scene
where they recall the joys and fears of their own wedding
day
-Jan Farrington, Theater Jones
Holman and Titus allowed their characters to breathe as they
showed a family’s conservative values and high
expectations for their children, but they also created
sublime, quiet moments together in showing an
understanding love between parents who have been
married many years.
-Charles Bowles, John Garcia’s THE COLUMN