"Margaret Copeland was exquisite as Edwin's wife and Desdemona. She moved with consummate grace and lent poignancy and dignity to a character who might otherwise have sunk into self-pitying."
– Broadway After Dark
"Copeland delivers a sympathetic performance that sparks beautifully!"
– TheaterMania.com
"Margaret Copeland gives a delicate yet firm personality to Mary Devlin Booth!"
– Associated Press
"Margaret Copeland is convincing as Mary, who appears onstage as a projection of her husband's deluded brain!"
– John Simon, Bloomberg News
"Margaret Copeland's acting is exemplary!"
– TheFasterTimes.com
"Copeland makes a radiant and charming Mary, bravely accepting the role of target of her husband's love as well as his unwarranted anger!"
– UPI
"It's wonderful. Very funny! Not only because she is funny, but because she has so much wisdom. My Fake IDs is about growing up."
– WOR Radio
"Copeland's physical presence - a slight figure, wavy blonde hair, sparkling eyes, and a terribly ingratiating smile - might have something to do with her ability to charm as she tells of first crushes, squabbling siblings and such. More than her presence, though, it's the performer's willingness to depict herself with irony that makes IDs feel so compellingly intimate." – American Theatre Web
– Broadway After Dark
"Copeland delivers a sympathetic performance that sparks beautifully!"
– TheaterMania.com
"Margaret Copeland gives a delicate yet firm personality to Mary Devlin Booth!"
– Associated Press
"Margaret Copeland is convincing as Mary, who appears onstage as a projection of her husband's deluded brain!"
– John Simon, Bloomberg News
"Margaret Copeland's acting is exemplary!"
– TheFasterTimes.com
"Copeland makes a radiant and charming Mary, bravely accepting the role of target of her husband's love as well as his unwarranted anger!"
– UPI
"It's wonderful. Very funny! Not only because she is funny, but because she has so much wisdom. My Fake IDs is about growing up."
– WOR Radio
"Copeland's physical presence - a slight figure, wavy blonde hair, sparkling eyes, and a terribly ingratiating smile - might have something to do with her ability to charm as she tells of first crushes, squabbling siblings and such. More than her presence, though, it's the performer's willingness to depict herself with irony that makes IDs feel so compellingly intimate." – American Theatre Web

