Theater Archives - TheWrap https://www.thewrap.com/category/theater-2/ Your trusted source for breaking entertainment news, film reviews, TV updates and Hollywood insights. Stay informed with the latest entertainment headlines and analysis from TheWrap. Mon, 13 Jan 2025 17:08:49 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://i0.wp.com/www.thewrap.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/the_wrap_symbol_black_bkg.png?fit=32%2C32&quality=80&ssl=1 Theater Archives - TheWrap https://www.thewrap.com/category/theater-2/ 32 32 Atlantic Theater Company Postpones 2 Off Broadway Productions as IATSE Stagehands Go on Strike https://www.thewrap.com/atlantic-theater-off-broadway-postponed-iatse-stagehands-strike/ Mon, 13 Jan 2025 17:08:37 +0000 https://www.thewrap.com/?p=7681286 Eliya Smith’s "Grief Camp" and Mona Pirnot’s "I’m Assuming You Know David Greenspan" have been postponed indefinitely

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The Atlantic Theater Company has indefinitely postponed two of its Off Broadway productions — Eliya Smith’s “Grief Camp” and Mona Pirnot’s “I’m Assuming You Know David Greenspan” — as crew members represented by the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees are on strike.

Talks between IATSE and the non-profit theater broke down on Sunday, prompting crew members to go on strike ahead of the 2 p.m. ET matinee performance. The strike followed several months of negotiations after the Atlantic crew unanimously voted to unionize with IATSE in February 2024.

The union, which represents 170,000 technicians, artisans and craftspersons in the entertainment industry, including live events, motion picture and television production, broadcast and trade shows, said it filed an unfair labor practice charge against Atlantic as the theater’s management has “consistently stalled progress and made unilateral demands on working conditions.”

“Atlantic Theater’s refusal to bargain fairly has left the crew no choice but to strike,” IATSE international president Matthew D. Loeb said in a statement. “These workers deserve the same dignity, respect and protections as everyone else in New York’s entertainment community — whether they work in front of or behind the curtain, on or Off Broadway. Shame on them for not providing healthcare coverage to all their employees. We are prepared to resume negotiations as soon as Atlantic Theater is ready to bargain in good faith.”

In a statement, the Atlantic said it offered IATSE a nearly 20% increase in wages and other benefits as well as two interim agreements over the past two months that included 13% increases in wages and health, effective immediately, in return for a no strike agreement, but that those offers were ignored.

“We believe equity on our stage is crucial and our offer aligns with our contract with Actors’ Equity Association,” the statement noted. “IATSE believes this is unacceptable and wants more. In addition, the union is attempting to expand its work jurisdiction beyond the theatrical productions.”

The Actors’ Equity Association, which represents over 51,000 professional actors, stage managers and others working in live entertainment, issued a statement of solidarity.

“We have full faith that IATSE is negotiating terms that are fair and appropriate for their members, and we look forward to the shows resuming when an agreement has been reached,” AEA assistant executive director Calandra Hackney said.

The negotiations came as the theater industry continues to struggle to recover to pre-COVID-19 pandemic levels.

“The world of Off Broadway theater is quickly changing: many not-for-profits are doing shorter seasons and choosing plays with smaller casts, press coverage that can boost tickets sales is never guaranteed, advertising costs continue to rise and production costs have nearly doubled since the pandemic. Most of Off Broadway is facing a precarious financial situation, running significant deficits since returning from COVID,” the Atlantic added. “If IATSE is successful in getting their proposed financials with Atlantic, it would set a precedent for other Off Broadway companies and we may see the demise of some of our greatest institutions, including Atlantic.”

“Atlantic is pro-union and works collaboratively with several other unions, but we have to make this agreement financially sustainable for everyone or we will not be around to offer any work to anyone,” its statement concluded. “Our hope is that IATSE will reconsider the stance it is taking and work with us to reach a fair contract for our production crew quickly.”

IATSE noted that Atlantic received over $4.3 million from the Shuttered Venue Operators Grant (SVOG) under the 2021 Save Our Stages law, as well as $205,000 in grants from the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) over the past decade.

“These funds were intended to support arts institutions and their workers during the COVID-19 pandemic and beyond. Yet, Atlantic Theater has used these resources without extending the same respect and support to the workers who keep their venues running,” IATSE said. “Atlantic Theater’s board of directors has a moral responsibility to negotiate in good faith and agree to a fair contract that allows productions to continue without disruption. The union remains ready and willing to return to the table at any time to reach an agreement that respects the rights and contributions of the crew. Despite management’s refusal to bargain fairly, the Atlantic crew has remained united in its demand for a contract that recognizes its contributions and provides the basic protections of union representation.”

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10 Best New York Theater Productions of 2024 https://www.thewrap.com/best-theater-2024-new-york-broadway/ Thu, 26 Dec 2024 21:43:40 +0000 https://www.thewrap.com/?p=7669492 Itamar Moses writes the best play and musical in a year that features great performances from Adam Driver and Audra McDonald

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From an unlikely Broadway musical featuring music from the Avett Brothers to a campy farce about Mary Todd Lincoln and the assassination of her husband to Audra McDonald scaling the mountain of an American classic, TheWrap critic Robert Hofler ranks the 10 best New York theater production of 2024.

The Company of SWEPT AWAY. Photo by Emilio Madrid
Credit: Emilio Madrid

10. “Swept Away” on Broadway

Using Avett Brothers songs, Jordan Logan’s book tells a true and riveting tale of cannibalism on the high seas. And man eating man isn’t even the shocking part. John Gallagher Jr. delivers the year’s best performance by an actor in a musical. Michael Mayer directs.

Kate Walsh and Naomi Lorrain in "Jordans" (Credit: Joan Marcus)
Credit: Joan Marcus

9. “Jordans” at the Public Theater

In a dazzling stage debut, Ife Olujobi delivers a play that’s funny, bizarre and an homage to “Get Out.” In that Jordan Peele thriller, there’s one Black character named Jordan. In “Jordans,” there are two (Naomi Lorrain and Toby Onwumere) who find themselves in the uncomfortable situation of working in an alien world. Whitney White directs.

Conrad Ricamora and Cole Escola in "Oh, Mary!"
Credit: Emilio Madrid

8. “Oh, Mary!” on Broadway

Charles Ludlam’s the Ridiculous Theatrical Company lives on in playwright Cole Escola, who also plays Mary Todd Lincoln, a chronic drunk who wants to be a cabaret singer. That’s where Escola’s wild ride of a comedy begins, and their take on Abe Lincoln (Conrad Ricamora) and John Wilkes Booth (James Scully) is even more wonderfully insane. Sam Pinkleton directs.

0982 - Thomas Middleditch, Amber Gray, Bill Irwin, Chelsea Yakura-Kurtz, and Jessica Hecht in Manhattan Theatre Club’s Broadway premiere of Eureka Day by Jonathan Spector, directed by Anna D. Shapiro. ©Jeremy Daniel
Credit: Jeremy Daniel

7. “Eureka Day” on Broadway

Jonathan Spector’s send-up of political correctness at a private school in Berkeley, California has the actors walking on radioactive egg shells. Anna D. Shapiro’s direction turns a series of text messages into one of the year’s funniest scenes in the theater. Jessica Hecht, in a heartbreaking monologue, delivers the best performance by an actress in a play.

Joy Woods & Audra McDonald - Photo by Julieta Cervantes
Credit: Julieta Cervantes

6. “Gypsy” on Broadway

Director George C. Wolfe has a wild new take on the classic: Mama Rose’s worst sin is no longer turning her daughter (Joy Woods) into a stripper. Audra McDonald gives the best performance by an actress in a musical.

the-hills-of-california
Credit: Joan Marcus

5. “The Hills of California” on Broadway

Another very determined stage mother has not two but four daughters she wants to make stars to escape her own suffocating existence in Blackpool, England. In Jez Butterworth’s new play, Laura Donnelly plays both the mother and the one daughter who makes it all the way to California. Sam Mendes directs.

Josh Radnor in the world premiere production of "The Ally"
Credit: Joan Marcus

4. “The Ally” at the Public Theater

A Jewish professor (Josh Radnor) sponsors a controversial speaker on the campus, and all hell breaks out when words like “apartheid” and “genocide” are applied to the state of Israel. The debates never stop in Itamar Moses’ new play, the best of 2024. Lila Neugebauer’s direction resembles a brilliant chess match at which no one wins.

Helen J Shen, Darren Criss in "Maybe Happy Ending" (Matthew Murphy and Evan Zimmerman)
Credit: Matthew Murphy, Evan Zimmerman

3. “Maybe Happy Ending” on Broadway

Two obsolete robots (Darren Kriss and Helen J Shen) meet a la Mimi and Rodolfo in “La Boheme,” and then go on a quest to find his owner somewhere on an island in South Korea. Hue Park and Will Aronson make spectacular Broadway debuts as both book writers and songwriters.  Michael Arden scores as the year’s best stage director.

Hold on to Me Darling Off Broadway Adam Driver
Credit: Julieta Cervantes

2. “Hold on to Me Darling” at the Lucille Lortel

Kenneth Lonergan’s funny, pathetic, brilliant 2016 play returns to the New York stage with Adam Driver playing the country-western star who wants to return to his roots even though he never left them behind. Driver gives the year’s best performance by an actor in a play. Neil Pepe directs.

Two men stand on either side of a man in an upright coffin. The main in the coffin holds a long gun.
Credit: Matthew Murphy

1. “Dead Outlaw” at the Minetta Lane

Playwright Itamar Moses takes a true story and delivers the stage equivalent of what Alfred Hitchcock did in “Psycho” when Janet Leigh gets killed 40 minutes into the movie. Even though the year’s best musical is about a mummy, it really sings with foot-tapping songs by David Yazbek and Erik Della Penna. David Cromer directs.  

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    ‘Gypsy’ Broadway Review: Audra McDonald Wrestles With Rose and Wins https://www.thewrap.com/gypsy-broadway-review-audra-mcdonald-george-c-wolfe/ Fri, 20 Dec 2024 08:01:00 +0000 https://www.thewrap.com/?p=7670975 The George C. Wolfe-directed revival is audaciously different

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    Back in 2003, when the third revival of “Gypsy” opened on Broadway, the big behind-the-scenes news was a spat that broke out in previews between the show’s director, Sam Mendes, and Arthur Laurents’ longtime partner, Tom Hatcher. Laurents wrote the book for the 1959 classic, and went on to direct the first Broadway revival starring Angela Lansbury in 1974, and the second one, starring Tyne Daly in 1989. In other words, the show’s book writer-turned-director harbored proprietary feelings, and Hatcher was there to defend his boyfriend’s prized possession.

    There had been doubts about the 2003 revival’s Mama Rose – shouldn’t Bernadette Peters be playing Baby June instead? – but Hatcher voiced much bigger concerns. He told Mendes, “Well, you’ve done something no one’s ever done before. You’ve ruined ‘Gypsy.’” Laurents’ agent from William Morris had to break up the fight, but agreed: The show under Mendes’ direction was too Brechtian, too dark. To prove this point, Laurents went on to direct the fourth revival, starring Patti LuPone in 2008. It’s what many consider the definitive “Gypsy.”

    The fifth Broadway revival of “Gypsy” opened Thursday at the Majestic Theatre, and it is the first production there that its book writer and its lyricist, Stephen Sondheim, won’t be able to see. Unfortunately. It’s an audacious production and it is also very, very dark. George C. Wolfe takes over for Laurents and Mendes, and he adds another layer of meaning to a show that is arguably the most layered musical ever written for the Broadway stage. Despite all its revivals, “Gypsy” has never been a mega hit with audiences, even when Ethel Merman first sang the great tunes by Jule Styne.

    Rose remains the worst stage mother in theater history, and ironically or not, her spirit lives on next door to the Majestic at the Broadhurst Theatre where the Sam Mendes-directed production of Jez Butterworth’s “The Hills of California” gives us one of the character’s direct descendants, a British mother who attempts to turn her four daughters into the next Andrews Sisters.

    Laura Donnelly delivers a big, fierce stage mother in “Hills.” In the new “Gypsy,” Audra McDonald is even bigger and fiercer. Most important, she is physical. Musically, the score lies uncomfortably on McDonald’s register break, especially in “Everything’s Coming Up Roses.” In some ways, it is just another struggle for this Rose to meet and conquer, which she does magnificently in “Rose’s Turn.” Whether this ruthless mom is lying to landlords or ordering around waitresses or directing her adult children (Joy Woods as Louise, Jordan Tyson as June) or flirting with her long-suffering boyfriend Herbie (Danny Burstein, the epitome of generosity), McDonald wins by being tougher and stronger than anyone else on stage and, by extension, the world.

    As Wolfe and McDonald see her, Rose has even more reason to fight, and turning her daughter into a stripper is only half of it. Having seen “Gypsy” so often, I was genuinely surprised when the audience at the preview I attended gasped out loud when Rose makes that career choice for Louise. In the new revival, the moment is almost anti-climactic, at least for me. Equally brutal is Rose putting Louise in the cow costume and, before that, replacing all the Black kids in the Newsboys chorus (“Extra! Extra!”) with white teenagers. This cast change from children to adults is one of the show’s most famous moments, and, in the past, has been handled quickly with strobe lights. The scene always gets big applause.

    Under Wolfe’s direction, there are no strobe lights and there’s also not much applause, if any. Rather than dazzling us, the moment shocks. Here, Rose singlehandedly replaces each performer, and getting rid of all the Black children in the chorus, she also does away with Louise. June, on the other hand, can pass as white in her curly light brown (almost blond) wig, whether she is being played by the amazing child actor Marley Lianne Gomes or later by Jordan Tyson. As sung by Tyson and Woods, “If Momma Was Married” emerges as an anthem of survival for the two daughters, and is this production’s vocal standout.

    Rose now conjures up a much more complicated masterplan, and the scheme begins as soon as she meets Herbie, a former agent turned candy salesman, who, because he’s white, can open doors for her with all the impresarios. Historically, this is very dubious. Theatrically, it is Wolfe’s masterstroke and extends right up to his final take on Gypsy Rose Lee as Josephine Baker.

    This is not the definitive “Gypsy.” It is a very different “Gypsy.” And the newsboys are right on the money when they tell us, “Extra! Extra! Historical news is being made.”

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    ‘Eureka Day’ Broadway Review: How Concerned Parents Text Their Way to Hell https://www.thewrap.com/eureka-day-broadway-review-jonathan-spector/ Tue, 17 Dec 2024 01:00:00 +0000 https://www.thewrap.com/?p=7669483 Jonathan Spector’s wild new comedy delivers a few more choice words on diversity, equity and inclusion

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    One of the funniest scenes on Broadway right now is not spoken, sung or danced. It is written. You have to read it on the back stage wall, and it is absolutely hilarious as well as scary. The scene appears in Jonathan Spector’s “Eureka Day,” which opened Monday at MTC’s Samuel J. Friedman Theatre after a run in London. One can only imagine how the British laughed at these politically correct American vegan characters who try with all due sincerity to negotiate their way semantically around raising, teaching and taking care of kids in the world’s most liberal bastion: Berkeley, California.

    The writing on the backstage wall comes when an executive committee of concerned parents tries to address an outbreak of mumps at a private school. Anna D. Shapiro’s direction can best be described as littering the stage with egg shells and daring her five actors not to crack any of them. The school library where the committee meets has all the revered icons on display, and from the looks of Todd Rosenthal’s scenic design, Ruth Bader Ginsberg and Toni Morrison will descend from the shelves at any minute to swat away all illiberal comments.

    The extremely mild-mannered Don leads the group, and as played in several shades of gray by Bill Irwin, he can’t get through a sentence without changing his mind at least twice. Suzanne is another veteran of the group, and Jessica Hecht’s delivery is to pour lukewarm oatmeal over every slightly controversial opinion being expressed by fellow members Eli (Thomas Middleditch) and Meiko (Chelsea Yakura-Kurtz). Carina is the group’s new member, and Amber Gray plays this initiate by being slightly bemused at all the attempts to keep things diversified, equitable and inclusive. Eventually, Carina and Suzanne find room not only to disagree but verbally pummel the hell out of each other over vaccine efficacy.

    Long before that showdown explodes, Don has called the committee together for an emergency meeting about the mumps outbreak. The declaration from public health officials is absolutely clear on what to do. The five committee members are anything but, and so Don sets up a Zoom call to address the parents directly.

    Downstage center, Don faces the audience to stare and talk into a laptop. This Broadway season, the only less theatrical set up is Julianna Margulies and Peter Gallagher’s characters falling in love via email in “Left on Tenth.” In “Eureka Day,” Shapiro’s actors and Spector’s written words turn the situation into one of the must-see scenes of 2024. The fun starts as soon as the parents at the Eureka Day School begin to respond to what Don is trying to tell them. On the back wall of the library, David Bengali’s projection design gives us the parents’ texts messages, complete with head shots of people, pets and cartoon characters.

    Thirty seconds into these text messages I stopped listening to what was being said on stage. Indeed, Spector gives the actors lines, they never stop talking, sometimes all at once, but it is the written and silent text messages that completely dominate. What becomes clear very soon is that the text comments are filled with crap no parent would utter face to face to his or her worst enemy. The brazenness and, ultimately, the cruelty are shockingly funny — shocking because those texts are so typical and commonplace nowadays.

    It’s a great scene, and Spector matches it with a monologue that comes late in the play. Here, the playwright has the enormous help of Hecht, who delivers one of this year’s most riveting performances. It takes place when Suzanne and Carina have their showdown. Whatever your views on childhood vaccines may be, Hecht forces you to reconsider those ideas right or wrong.

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    ‘Cult of Love’ Broadway Review: Zachary Quinto Gets Buried in Holiday Sturm und Cheer https://www.thewrap.com/cult-of-love-broadway-review-zachary-quinto-shailene-woodley/ Fri, 13 Dec 2024 04:10:30 +0000 https://www.thewrap.com/?p=7667764 Christmas is anything but the most wonderful time of year in Leslye Headland's new play, also starring Shailene Woodley and Mare Winningham

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    In Leslye Headland’s new play “Cult of Love,” which had its New York City premiere Thursday at Second Stage’s Helen Hayes Theater, Christmas Eve is the big excuse for the Dahl family to sing whenever a nasty remark or look threatens the holiday spirit.

    But even the von Trapp family never sang this much. And the Dahls don’t just sing. Each plays a musical instrument too. There’s Mom (Mare Winningham), who plays the guitar, and there’s Dad (David Rasche), who plays the piano. Other instruments include a harmonica, a mouth organ, maracas and a triangle. We can give thanks to the baby Jesus that there are no bongo drums.

    No surprise, the Episcopal priest husband James (Christopher Lowell) of the daughter Diana Dahl Bennett (Shailene Woodley) fits right into this Hallmark card picture. Even the drug-addict son Johnny (Christopher Sears) has a lot of singing to get off his chest when he finally arrives, very late for dinner, at the family farmhouse in Connecticut.

    Only two members of this brood appear less than charmed by all the vocalizing, and tellingly, they’re both in-laws. They include the Jewish wife Rachel (Molly Bernard) of the son Mark Dahl (Zachary Quinto) and the wife Pippa (Roberta Colindrez) of the daughter Evie Dahl (Rebecca Henderson). And Johnny brings a female companion, Loren (Barbie Ferreira), who remains bemused because, unlike the two female in-laws, she hasn’t had to sit through this song-fest ritual in years past.

    Clearly the title of Headland’s 100-minute one-act play is ironic.

    The priest and his wife are a bit baffling at first, because this Episcopalian couple reacts more like white Christian nationalists when it comes to the pink lesbian couple in the room. Headland resolves James and Diana’s strange brand of religion late in the play. Until she does, the conflict between the straights and the gays creates lots of arguments and recriminations. And when Evie and Pippa finally tell off the two bigots, the audience at the Helen Hayes Theater flaps their hands right on cue like Pavlovian chickens. Broadway playwrights know how to play to the chorus.

    All the singing is supposed to signal a happy childhood that went very wrong somewhere on the path to adulthood. The problem is, almost all of the characters are types, if not downright clichés: the parents (cuddly, with blinders on), the Christians (blessed, but bigoted), the drug addicts (irresponsible, but lively), the lesbians (angry and pissed off) and the Jew (also angry and pissed off).  That leaves Zachary Quinto to play the one character that’s supposed to be the play’s moral center but nearly topples over from all the angst Headland gives him. Mark Dahl studied to be a priest but switched to law, and in the process turned into an atheist who gets to deliver a perfectly dreadful speech about the existence of God in the play’s penultimate scene.

    There is one big plus though: Having seen John Lee Beatty’s living room set with its humongous Christmas tree and attendant lights, you can skip visiting Rockefeller Center this season.

    Trip Cullman directs.

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    Laura Benanti Admits She ‘Never Liked’ Former Co-Star Zachary Levi After He Politicized Gavin Creel’s Death: ‘F—k You Forever’ | Video https://www.thewrap.com/laura-benanti-never-liked-zachary-levi-gavin-creel-cancer/ Fri, 06 Dec 2024 22:10:51 +0000 https://www.thewrap.com/?p=7664697 "It makes me nauseous," the Tony-winning actress says of the "Chuck" actor after he implied vaccines caused their late castmate's cancer

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    Laura Benanti starred alongside both Zachary Levi and the late, great Gavin Creel in “She Loves Me” on Broadway in 2016 — except she had vastly different experiences with the actors.

    The Tony-winning actress got extra candid during her Wednesday appearance on “That’s a Gay Ass Podcast,” bluntly revealing she “never liked” the “Chuck” star, especially now that his political beliefs have become a topic of conversation.

    “Yeah, I never liked him. Everyone was like, ‘He’s so great,’ and I was like, ‘No, he’s not. He’s sucking up all the f–king energy in this room and he wants to mansplain everybody’s parts to them,'” Benanti recalled. “He really sucked everybody in with his dance party energy, like, ‘We’re doing a dance party at half-hour.’ I was like, ‘Good luck, have fun.’”

    However, it wasn’t just a personality clash that led to Benanti publicly eviscerating Levi eight years later. As podcast host Eric Williams noted, the “Harold and the Purple Crayon” actor paid tribute to fellow former co-star Creel following his death from cancer at age 48 in September … by implying COVID-19 vaccines may have actually caused “turbo cancer” in him.

    “I know that this is going to offend some people and make some people mad, and I wish it didn’t,” Levi said in an October Instagram Live video. “A few weeks ago, my friend Gavin Creel died. He was 48 years old, and he was one of the healthiest people I knew.”

    “You better believe that, with everything in me, I believe that if these COVID vaccinations were not forced on the American public…” he then trailed off.

    Benanti did not mince her words when reacting to Levi’s stance on Wednesday: “For him to use Gavin’s memory — a person he was not friends with — to use his memory for his political agenda and to watch him try to make himself cry until he had one single tear, which he did not wipe away, I was like, ‘F—k you forever.’”

    She further acknowledged how the “Tangled” voice actor embracing his more conservative side will actually help his career, as opposed to what others may think.

    “And everyone’s like, ‘It’s career suicide.’ But it’s not career suicide, because Christian, faith-based TV and film is huge. He’s going to be a huge f—king star in that realm. He’s going to make more money than he ever has,” Benanti said. “It makes me nauseous, but also a little bit, like, ‘I told you, motherf—kers.’”

    Notably, Benanti and Levi ended up working together again shortly after their musical closed in “Tangled: Before Ever After” in 2017, as well as on two episodes of the spinoff series, “Rapunzel’s Tangled Adventure.”

    TheWrap has reached out to Levi’s team for comment.

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    Marcia Gay Harden Says Philip Seymour Hoffman Had Mike Nichols Apologize for Being Too Hard on Her https://www.thewrap.com/marcia-gay-harden-philip-seymour-hoffman-story-mike-nichols-apology/ Thu, 05 Dec 2024 00:45:19 +0000 https://www.thewrap.com/?p=7663511 The actress remembers "The Graduate" director blaming her for everything that went wrong with a 2001 production of "The Seagull"

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    Marcia Gay Harden said that, years after starring in a New York production of “The Seagull” for Mike Nichols, the “Graduate” director apologized for being so hard on her because Philip Seymour Hoffman told him to.

    Speaking with “Modern Family” star Jesse Tyler Ferguson in this week’s episode of his “Dinner’s On Me” podcast, Harden said that Nichols blamed her for everything that went wrong with the 2001 New York production.

    Harden had just won a Best Supporting Actress Oscar for “Pollock,” which meant she didn’t have to audition to join the cast, which included Christopher Walken, Meryl Streep, Kevin Kline, Natalie Portman, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Stephen Spinella, Larry Pine, Deborah Monk and John Goodman. 

    The cast was “bonkers,” so Harden said she didn’t hesitate to say yes. “I had in my mind, my vain little mind, that Mike would see me and realize I was the new Meryl Streep. I just had in mind that he would love me and that he would find someone similar in spirit [and feel the same] passion that he had for Meryl.”

    Unfortunately, Nichols decided that she was the show’s “guinea pig.” She explained to Ferguson, “It means that there’s one person who gets picked on, and when the show isn’t going to be successful, it’s going to be that person’s fault. And there’s nothing, no, no way that person can ever be successful.”

    While Nichols treated Streep as “the reigning queen of that particular play,” Harden said that “it very quickly became clear that no matter what I did as Masha, it was the wrong thing to do.”

    The actress remembered crying in the dressing room that she shared with Streep. “At one point I sobbed, ‘I don’t think Mike likes me.'”

    Streep suggested that maybe Nichols disliked the character. “I don’t think he likes Masha. And it’s your job to stay loyal to your character,” she recalled Streep telling her.

    Eight years later, Nichols came to see Harden in “God of Carnage” on Broadway and apologized for the way he’d treated her during “The Seagull.”

    “He bursts into tears and I hug him and he says, ‘I was really hard on you during, ‘The Seagull, wasn’t I?’ And I said, ‘Yes.’ And he said, ‘Even Philip Seymour told me I was really hard on you!'”

    She told him, “Well, you were.”

    That’s when Nichols gushed, “You’re one of the greatest actresses in America.”

    “That’s why the end of the story is a little embarrassing to say, but he said it. And I think that the takeaway for me is that it was a two-way street,” she told Ferguson. “Mike was disappointed in what I didn’t know. And he was also playing favorites, as he does. He can be very hard on people, but he was disappointed that I didn’t instinctively come at it with what he knew. And so he punished me a little bit for it.”

    Listen to Harden’s full interview with Ferguson here.

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    Fleetwood Mac Producer, ‘Stereophonic’ Playwright Reach Copyright Lawsuit Resolution https://www.thewrap.com/stereophonic-play-fleetwood-mac-book-copyright-resolution/ Tue, 03 Dec 2024 20:14:36 +0000 https://www.thewrap.com/?p=7662425 Ken Caillat and Steven Stiefel previously accused the Tony-winning Broadway play of copying "the heart and soul” of their book, “Making Rumours”

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    The lawsuit between Fleetwood Mac producer Ken Caillat and “Stereophonic” playwright David Adjmi has reached a resolution.

    Two months after accusing the Tony-winning Broadway show of copying “the heart and soul” of their book “Making Rumours” about the iconic band, Caillat and co-author Steven Stiefel have filed to adjourn the initial conference ahead of Thursday’s scheduled date.

    “The parties have resolved the dispute in principle as to all claims and defendants, and are working to commit their agreement to writing,” the pair wrote in Tuesday’s filing, which was obtained by TheWrap. They also noted they plan to ultimately finalize their resolution ahead of their proposed rescheduled conference date of Dec. 23 as they are all in mutual consent.

    The initial lawsuit accused Adjmi of “uncannily” duplicating events from their 2012 book about the 1977 album “Rumours” for his play, including famed fights and break-ups. “Stereophonic” does indeed feature two couples and five members, both British and American.

    “Mr. Adjmi implicitly acknowledges having read ‘Making Rumours,’ calling it an ‘excellent book,’ but incredulously proclaims that ‘[a]ny similarities to Ken Caillat’s excellent book are unintentional,'” Caillat’s suit claimed.

    “Stereophonic” won five Tonys in June: Best Play, Best Direction of a Play, Best Featured Actor in a Play for Will Brill, Best Sound Design of a Play and Best Scenic Design of a Play.

    It is currently playing at the John Golden Theatre in New York City.

    Pamela Chelin contributed to this reporting.

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    Canadian Stage Actor Dies During ‘A Christmas Carol’ Performance in Edmonton https://www.thewrap.com/actor-dies-during-a-christmas-carol-performance-edmonton-canada/ Fri, 29 Nov 2024 16:50:15 +0000 https://www.thewrap.com/?p=7660411 Julien Arnold, "beloved actor and dear friend of the Citadel Theatre," was 59

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    Julien Arnold, a veteran stage actor from the Citadel Theatre company in Edmonton, Canada, died onstage after suffering a medical emergency during a weekend production of “A Christmas Carol.” He was 59.

    Arnold died Sunday, according to the Edmonton Journal. No cause was given. He was playing the role of Fezziwig, the high-spirited apprentice of Ebenezer Scrooge, when he was stricken onstage.

    Paramedics rushed to the theater and attempted to resuscitate Arnold, but he died at the scene.

    “It is with heavy hearts we share the news of the sudden passing of Julien Arnold, a beloved actor and dear friend of the Citadel Theatre,” the company posted on Instagram. “A cherished member of the Edmonton theatre community, Julien was a gifted performer whose charisma and talent graced our stage in countless productions, including ‘A Christmas Carol.'”

    The company said Arnold “brought joy, heart and depth to every role, and his artistic contributions – and big hugs – will be deeply missed.”

    Citadel said it was dedicating the remaining run of “A Christmas Carol” to his memory.

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    Blue Man Group to End Its Runs in New York, Chicago https://www.thewrap.com/blue-man-group-to-end-its-runs-in-new-york-chicago/ Sat, 23 Nov 2024 19:50:04 +0000 https://www.thewrap.com/?p=7657427 The bald and blue performers did more than 17,000 shows in NYC over three decades

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    Blue Man Group, whose comedic theatrical performances started on the streets and expanded into a multi-city empire, will end its longest-running shows in New York on Feb. 2 and in Chicago on Jan. 5.

    The bald and blue silent performers did more than 17,000 performances over three decades in New York. No reason was given for the closings. The troupe is a subsidiary of Cirque du Soleil.

    Despite the big city closings, companies will continue performing Blue Man Group shows in Berlin, Boston and Las Vegas. There is also a plan for an Orlando show, which closed during the pandemic and now will reopen in the spring. There have also been touring productions.

    Jack Kenn, the company’s managing director, announced the New York closing as Off-Broadway has struggled since the pandemic, with fewer shows and smaller casts.

    The Blue Man Group performance artists first formed in 1987. Combining music and art, the Blue Men performers are mute and always appear in threes. They rose from disruptive street performance to clubs, then began performing at New York’s Astor Place in 1991. The troupe has toured internationally, appeared on TV programs, released multiple studio albums and contributed to film scores and performed with live orchestras.

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