Feature on Elizabeth in Chinese Daily News (photo, in Mandarin)
Blog on Elizabeth in entertainment site Actress Obsession

"..Sayuri (an exuberant Elizabeth Pan) by contrast, is a blonde-wig-wearing, web-chatting wild child who longs for nothing more than to be American."
-Mercury News for "Calligraphy"
"Elizabeth Pan is excellent ..."
-Talking Broadway

"As Emily the mother, Elizabeth Pan embodies the complex pain of being in two lives (and two marriages) at once, and carrying two children inside herself."
-Theater Ghost for @thespeedofjake
"Pan gives Emily a pitch-perfect blend of fire and ice..."
-StageSceneLA
"Pan makes Emily’s desperation richly apparent, and it’s no surprise that it’s the realization that her pain and grief is as strong as his that finally penetrates Clark’s defenses"
-StageRaw
"Ryun Yu and Elizabeth Pan spark as Clark and Emily, the couple struggling with their past, present and future"
-Broadway World
-Theater Ghost for @thespeedofjake
"Pan gives Emily a pitch-perfect blend of fire and ice..."
-StageSceneLA
"Pan makes Emily’s desperation richly apparent, and it’s no surprise that it’s the realization that her pain and grief is as strong as his that finally penetrates Clark’s defenses"
-StageRaw
"Ryun Yu and Elizabeth Pan spark as Clark and Emily, the couple struggling with their past, present and future"
-Broadway World

The acting is superb - [Elizabeth] Pan hints poignantly at
the vulnerability beneath her protectively innocent exterior.”
-Hollywood Reporter for “Dogeaters”
(Center Theater Group production)

“Elizabeth Pan leaves the biggest impression as the frustrated Wu. I cannot remember anything in the theater as heartbreaking as her defeated gaze when she learns at play’s end that not only is she to be abandoned once more by her mother, but also by her servant-lover. In those fading moments Pan’s eyes are pieces of glistening obsidian and her wounded silence becomes unbearable.”
—LA Weekly for “A Winter People”

“Elizabeth Pan aces the role of Rio – an expatriate returning
for her grandmother’s funeral- who sees the beauty
and cruelty of her beloved Manila”
-Backstage for “Dogeaters” (SIPA production)

“Singaporean playwright Damon Chua's work reveals an imaginative voice, with deft turns by stars Elizabeth Pan and Sean Dougherty…
Pan and Dougherty make intelligent foils, she underplaying the internal conflicts, he suggesting Fred MacMurray with more depth.”
-Los Angeles Times for “Film Chinois”