NEWS:
Most recently on screen I appeared in the miniseries, WeCrashed, starring Jared Leto. The incisive series, about the rise and fall of WeWork buildings, is streaming on AppleTV+. Prior to that, I took a turn as Linda Schacter on HBO Max’s reboot of Gossip Girl. The new season is currently out on HBOMax.
REVIEWS:On Bright Star
“Erin Lindsey Krom is a supernova, exploding with intensity. She wows the audience with the opening number, and never lets them go.” -’Burgh Vivant
“…while this story is being told, the show bounces to the present of the 1940’s where Alice, now decades older, is an editor for the Asheville Southern Journal. In addition to Ms. Krom’s vocal capacity and southern accent, her ability to shift characters from a young, carefree teenager to a rigid, serious bookworm is uncanny… her acting shift is transformative to the point where I almost questioned whether past Alice and present Alice were being played by the same actress. They were, and it’s Ms. Krom!” -Dylan Shaffer, Broadwayworld.com
On The Last Five Years
"Krom shines like a diamond. She is most dazzling in a late number that has Cathy auditioning for a show in hilariously trite poses while maintaining a funny-sad stream-of-consciousness monologue." - Triblive.com
On Side Show
"Krom's subtle and affecting portrayal of Daisy is lovely. She is completely in step with Van Cassele's Violet, and as Violet kisses Buddy, her betrothed, Krom blinks her eyes ever so slightly, as if she feels the kiss too… Krom's performance shines. It's hard to take your eyes off her." - Backstage.com
On Cabaret
"Krom's simply marvelous Sally possesses the determination, desperation and soiled charisma necessary to make the character charming, compelling and ultimately doomed." - Hartford Courant
On Danny and the Deep Blue Sea
"Krom very ably captures the way that Roberta manages the information she chooses to reveal while at the same time cajoling Danny into talking more about his life and background. Krom demonstrates how Roberta's insistence and secretiveness hide a vulnerability as well as a lack of self-esteem that have taken on the proportions of a protective sheen. Dandy performance." - the Examiner