Please listen to Adina and her director, Padraic Lillis, on the Evan Dawson radio show on WXXI in Rochester, having a great conversation about mental health.
REVIEWS of THE ROAD BACK
REVIEWS of THE ROAD BACK

"Adina Taubman courageously tells us about her struggles in a candid and informative one-woman show. She is a talented mimic, so good that it provides some levity. At the performance I attended, the audience seemed riveted all the way."--Bob Criso, Hi! Drama

"Adina Taubman's stigma-breaking 'The Road Back' is a lesson in empathy… a valuable, eye-opening piece of theatre. The reality of Taubman's struggle comes through in her bold, unashamed recounting of it. More amazing than the story itself is her willingness to share it, and in so doing, to relive experiences many of us would prefer to forget. … She even embodies her own depression and anxiety, and in doing so, delicately balances humor and honesty. It's that blend of entertainment and authenticity that, more than anything else, allows this piece to succeed”--Erin Kahn--StageBuddy

"Extraordinary" "A beautifully crafted story."--Dan Hess, MOODS Newsletter
Press for BARKING GIRL:
Adina Taubman delivers a stellar performance as Rae." -- Ed Malin, NYtheatre.com
"This isolated mental world is portrayed to great effect by Carolyn Mraz’s stripped-down but still fantastical set, as well as the writing."
"Played with an acerbic bite by Adina Taubman."
"Rae’s husband Gil, a quintessentially perfect sitcom dad played by Max Arnaud." --Tamas Vilaghy, The New York Times Local East Village.
Adina Taubman provides an excellent portrayal of a woman struggling to hold onto her old identity."
"Susan Bernfield’s beautiful script provides so much for these actors to grasp onto." -- Victoria Teague, New York Theatre Review
"Susan Bernfield’s play Barking Girl is a sweetly lyrical meditation on one woman’s experience of motherhood that takes a philosophical view of the many privations and rewards of procreation in New York." --Will Kenton, Cultural Capitol
Adina Taubman delivers a stellar performance as Rae." -- Ed Malin, NYtheatre.com
"This isolated mental world is portrayed to great effect by Carolyn Mraz’s stripped-down but still fantastical set, as well as the writing."
"Played with an acerbic bite by Adina Taubman."
"Rae’s husband Gil, a quintessentially perfect sitcom dad played by Max Arnaud." --Tamas Vilaghy, The New York Times Local East Village.
Adina Taubman provides an excellent portrayal of a woman struggling to hold onto her old identity."
"Susan Bernfield’s beautiful script provides so much for these actors to grasp onto." -- Victoria Teague, New York Theatre Review
"Susan Bernfield’s play Barking Girl is a sweetly lyrical meditation on one woman’s experience of motherhood that takes a philosophical view of the many privations and rewards of procreation in New York." --Will Kenton, Cultural Capitol