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Associated Press
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April 29, 2010

Scott and "Everyday Rapture," her deliciously entertaining mini-musical, have arrived on Broadway, an emergency, end-of-season replacement for the Roundabout Theatre Company’s revival of "Lips Together, Teeth Apart" which imploded during rehearsals.

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Backstage
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April 29, 2010

Do we really need another revealing performance memoir with the subject treating the stage as a couch and the audience as a psychiatrist? They usually follow the basic pattern of the performer whining "My childhood was so screwed up, and I never got the attention or love I really needed; that’s why I started acting" or singing or writing or designing dresses—or whatever. Well, we can use one more theatrical autobiography if it’s as funny, quirky, and offbeat as Sherie Rene Scott’s "Everyday Rapture," now in a Broadway transfer after a hit run at Second Stage last year.

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Newsday
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April 29, 2010

‘Everyday Rapture" is an easygoing end to a frantic Broadway season. This is Sherie Rene Scott’s likable 90-minute, semiautobiographical musical – an Off-Broadway hit last summer at Second Stage and now the Roundabout Theatre’s last-minute savior after the revival of "Lips Together, Teeth Apart" crumbled with the abrupt departure of Megan Mullally.

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HOLLYWOOD REPORTER BigThumbs_DOWN

April 29, 2010

Bottom Line: Sherie Rene Scott’s slight autobiographical musical doesn’t fully deliver on the promise of its title.

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NEW YORK TIMES BigThumbs_UP

April 29, 2010

Just as the Broadway theater season is drawing to its close, a smashing little show has arrived to remind us of why so many of us keep going back to Broadway, even though it’s broken our heart so many times.

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April 30, 2010

She’s starred in big, popular Broadway shows like "Aida," "Dirty Rotten Scoundrels" and "The Little Mermaid." She’s been nominated for Tony and Drama Desk awards. She’s a blue-eyed blonde with great comic timing, and her singing could melt the polar ice cap.

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April 30, 2010

In the opening scene of the charmingly frenetic philosophical/autobiographical rumination-with-songs, "Everyday Rapture," Sherie Rene Scott classifies herself as "one of Broadway’s biggest, brightest semi-stars." Not anymore, lady. Here is Scott, also transferred from Second Stage. She is not merely carrying this enchanting carnival — coauthored by herself — on her more than capable shoulders; she is the show.

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Usa Today
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Elysa
Gardner

April 30, 2010

Many of us have fond memories of watching Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood as preschoolers. But did you know that, for some viewers, Fred Rogers’ neighborly lessons held messages of social and sexual empowerment — that he was, in fact, "the father of free love"?

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