"...sharply scripted lines and all-round decent acting keep things watchable ."
('Three Weeks' Review-3/5- Reserection at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival)
"Intelligent... topical... flawlessly performed... right dose of humour... addictive."
('Three Weeks' Review-5/5- Hope Gap at The Brighton Fringe Festival)
"Last season Peter took 'Hortensio' to places where actors dare not speak in 'The Taming of the Shrew'. It was an outrageous triumph and testament to his great physical skills as an actor."
(Dean Taylor- Dean Taylor Theatre Productions)
"Claudio and Don Pedro (an elegant Peter Sundby) make a presence-ful pairing. Allied in innocent conspiracy, duped by those around them, they maintain their dignity and come together brilliantly in an emotive grave scene that brings the audience down to the depths of dispair just before the denouement. The costumes really help the characters here as well - Claudio's light attire, contrasting with the dignified deeper shades of Don Pedro. Both characters use the silence well; pacing their delivery just enough to enable those watching to ask how it can end like this".
(Burton Manor Cheshire - review)
"Peter Sundby as
Antipholus of Ephesus brought supreme believability and deftness of touch to
the role"
(Phil Morrison 'Chester Theatre Review' Comedy of Errors)
"The strongest moment belongs to Messrs Sundby and Watkins as a long term couple struggling with fidelity. The tension in their dialogue goes beyond mere sexuality, and encompasses many intense moments at once. It's a lovely little moment.”
(BroadwayWorld.com Jena Tesse Fox - Seduction, New York)
“Sexy and immoral…..powerful performances”
(What's on Stage ***** “Seduction”)
“Alistair Green's production is pacey and involving. It's also nastily funny.
(The Times **** “Brimstone and Treacle”)
“Peter Sundby and Lorna Doyle as the married couple who let Beezlebub into their living room do well to capture the tedium of their lives.”
(What's on in London , “Brimstone and Treacle”)
“Peter Sundby is clearly in his element among the cast of only four and a talent un-fazed by his more experienced colleagues”
( Eastbourne Herald, “Brimstone and Treacle”)
"…and Peter Sundby an expansive autocratic shop-owner Shalford. I particularly liked his amusing “Capitalistic shuffle walk”. "
(Croydon Observer, “Half a Sixpence”)