Thus, "June Moon" never quite becomes a fine romance with a razor's edge.
Soft at the core, "June Moon" tries vainly to be hard.
This "June Moon" is played legitimately, without apologies, as if it had been written yesterday.
The previous season she played in the Kaufman-Lardner comedy, June Moon.
I even remember seeing "June Moon" there many years ago.
And you may find your own responses to "June Moon" mirrored in the faces of Fred's onstage audience.
A current of real, complicated life still flows through "June Moon," in ways that wouldn't be obvious from a first reading of the play.
"June Moon" is the most conventional and least consciously stylized of the troupe's offerings to date.
"June Moon" was, by all accounts, not a happy collaboration for its authors.
But the divided soul of "June Moon" is also its particular fascination.