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Tag: Broadway

  • Coach K Says ‘The Bear’ Shows How Sports and Restaurants Make Every Second Count

    Coach K Says ‘The Bear’ Shows How Sports and Restaurants Make Every Second Count

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    Mike Krzyzewski still has memories of Chicago’s Polish Broadway, the stretch of Milwaukee Avenue near Wicker Park that was once a hub for Polish restaurants and businesses. The Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame coach grew up in the area and despite his long career at Duke University, the memories of Chicago cling to him.

    “You know, every once in a while, some friends or my family will send me a care package of Polish sausage, one of the sandwich meats — I don’t know if they still make a Krakowska — and I just put it on white bread and eat it,” the 77-year-old hoops legend says. “My family would say, ‘You’ve got to put something on it, tomatoes, lettuce?’ I said, ‘No, no, no — it’s a good sandwich with good meat and good bread.’ Chicago food’s terrific.”

    Krzyzewski will be in town later this month for a charity event through the V Foundation, raising money for cancer research. The event, called Chicago Epicurean, leverages the city’s prominence as one of the best places to eat in the country. The foundation is named after one of Krzyzewski’s friends and rivals, Jim Valvano, the former head men’s basketball coach at North Carolina State University. Valvano died in 1993 from metastatic adenocarcinoma. Krzyzewski says Valvano recruited him to be part of the foundation more than three decades ago and that’s why he sits on the V Foundation’s board.

    Chicago Epicurean kicks off on Thursday, September 19, at the Aviary with an invite-only event hosted by chef Grant Achatz of three-Michelin-starred Alinea. Krzyzewski says he looks forward to meeting Achatz, as he’s been reading more about the chef’s recovery from Stage 4 cancer, a disease that forced surgeons to remove a part of the chef’s tongue. Achatz says it’s important to increase early cancer detection and to raise awareness among patients, clinicians, and pharmaceutical companies while empowering people to be their best advocates in a comfortable and confident environment.

    “As a survivor of a lesser prevalent cancer type that is on the rise — especially in people under 30 — I feel it is my responsibility to raise awareness,” Achatz texts, adding: “I am happy to support the V Foundation in its efforts to combat this disease and bring a better quality of life to millions of people each year.”

    The public-facing events include a cooking demonstration and lunch with Top Chef alum Fabio Viviani and the auction and gala on Friday, September 20, hosted by Coach K at City Hall in Fulton Market.

    For the last 26 years, the foundation has held a similar event in Napa Valley, California. They’ve raised $165 million for cancer research. In the Chicago area, the foundation has raised more than $13 million for the University of Chicago Comprehensive Cancer Center, Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center of Northwestern University, Northwestern’s Feinberg School of Medicine, and the University of Illinois Cancer Center.

    There are parallels between the intensity of restaurants and sports, the sometimes fiery Krzyzewski says. That was also noticed in The Bear, a TV series filmed in Chicago that cast Coach K unknowingly into a role the past two seasons. Coincidentally his middle daughter, Lindy, is nicknamed “Bear.” While Krzyzewski didn’t appear in the show, his book, Leading with the Heart: Coach K’s Successful Strategies for Basketball, Business, and Life becomes a source of inspiration and support for Ayo Edebiri’s Sydney Adamu. Krzyzewski and Edebiri share the same talent agency, CAA, and the coach has sent an autographed book to the actress.

    “The passion and the intensity that’s shown up in that show is remarkable and that’s why they’ve won so many awards,” Krzyzewski says. “They’re seeking excellence, and they know in order to seek excellence you need everybody on the team seeking it and working as one. There’s a lot of pressure in those kitchens.”

    He adds that the culinary world is “very innovative too. You’re not just making a hamburger or hot dog — they’re producing a hell of a lot more than that,” Krzyzewski says. “Although the Chicago hot dogs and hamburgers are pretty good, too.” (Krzyzewski confesses he loves pizza, but isn’t enamored with Chicago deep-dish.)

    Krzyzewski says they didn’t dine out much at restaurants growing up, but enjoyed homemade pierogi and sauerkraut. The family was fond of the White Eagle, the event venue that’s famous among the city’s Polish community on the Northwest Side in Niles. Though Krzyzewski’s father, William, was an elevator operator, he would eventually dive into the world of hospitality. He ran a spot that mostly served quick breakfasts and lunches to factory workers near California and Cermak in Little Village: “He wasn’t doing through anything innovative,” Krzyzewski says. “It was really a hard business.”

    His father would go on to run a tavern called Cross’ Tap near Damen and 21st Place on the Lower West Side. William Krzyzewski went by the name of “Cross” — his son says during the time of World War II, his family was impacted by ethnic discrimination.

    A graduate of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, Krzyzewski says he learned to enjoy different types of foods while depending on Army rations for sustenance. That comes in handy being away from Chicago in the realm of the Atlantic Coast Conference.

    “My experience of being an Army officer and then traveling all over the United States and coaching is that you get spoiled by different foods from different cultures,” Krzyzewski says. “I’m also a big Las Vegas guy, and they have some of the amazing restaurants in the world, so I’ve adapted really well.”

    While Krzyzewski says he isn’t interested in owning a restaurant, he says he does enjoy seeing friends, family, and former players post photos of their meals on social media.

    “I like when people do that, and it also shows that you’re having a good time with friends, and so you would want friends to have a good time with family and friends, so they’re sharing that experience with them,” Krzyzewski says.

    Chicago Epicurean on Thursday, September 19, and Friday, September 14. Tickets are available online.

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    Ashok Selvam

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  • Tony-winning hair and wig designer brings ‘Jaja’s African Hair Braiding’ from Broadway to Arena Stage – WTOP News

    Tony-winning hair and wig designer brings ‘Jaja’s African Hair Braiding’ from Broadway to Arena Stage – WTOP News

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    “Jaja’s African Hair Braiding” recently competed for Best Play at the Tony Awards in June. This Friday, the acclaimed Broadway comedy hits Arena Stage in D.C. now through Oct. 13.

    WTOP’s Jason Fraley previews ‘Jaja’s African Hair Braiding’ at Arena Stage (Part 1)

    “Jaja’s African Hair Braiding” recently competed for Best Play at the Tony Awards in June.

    Victoire Charles (Jaja)
    and Jordan Rice (Marie) appear in “Jaja’s African Hair Braiding” at Arena Stage. (Tony Powell)

    This Friday, the acclaimed Broadway comedy hits Arena Stage in D.C. now through Oct. 13.

    WTOP caught up with the Nikiya Mathis, who won a Special Tony for her hair and wig design.

    “I was blessed this year to win a historic Tony because there actually is no category for hair and wig makers, so I am actually the first person ever to win a Tony for my wig design,” Mathis told WTOP. “They actually announced it before the awards so I was fortunate enough to know that I was going to the Tony Award and I could tell my mom, ‘I’m winning.’ … That was freaking amazing, but I was still nervous to hear what other categories we might win.”

    In addition to Mathis’ special award, the show earned five other Tony Award nominations, including the top prize of Best Play (Jocelyn Bioh), Best Direction (Whitney White), Best Scenic Design (David Zinn), Best Sound Design (Stefania Bulbarella and Justin Ellington) and a victory for Best Costume Design (Dede Ayite).

    “I feel like all of those people should have won,” Mathis said. “We could have totally swept across the board because there are some amazing collaborators on this project. Jocelyn wrote such an amazing show, Whitney really created an atmosphere that we all thrived in. … I feel like we all worked really closely in tandem.”

    Written by Bioh, the show is set in Harlem following the escapades of Marie, Bea, Miriam, Aminata, Ndidi, Jaja and others as they navigate life, laughter, cultural identity and the American dream in Jaja’s bustling hair salon.

    “You really see a day in the life of these hair braiders, which is exciting because no play like this has ever been written,” Mathis said. “The life of a hair braider, especially for Black women or any woman who has gone to a hair salon, knows what it is to have so many different personalities. … One hair braider or stylist, you might go to one, but then you see that you like the work of another. … We’ll have a little drama amongst the hair braiders.”

    The salon is the perfect setting for hilarious banter as a gathering place for the community.

    “When you rub one personality that is completely opposite of another personality against each other, that is just space for comedy, especially when people don’t hold back their opinions when they should,” Mathis said. “We also have character work being done and there are people playing various characters, so that’s always fun trying to navigate accents and character transformations. There’s just a lot of jokes and a lot of laughter in the play.”

    When you’re not busy laughing, you’ll be marveling at the stage magic of constant hairstyle changes.

    “You’ll see the magic of Black women going from their natural hair to, let’s say, micro braids, corn rows — how the heck does that happen?” Mathis said. “That’s really the magic of the show. It’s the magic of the character work and comedy, but also the magic of how do we transform hair to completely different styles without leaving the stage?”

    Find more information here.

    WTOP’s Jason Fraley previews ‘Jaja’s African Hair Braiding’ at Arena Stage (Part 2)

    Listen to our full conversation on the podcast below:

     

    Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.

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    Jason Fraley

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  • Becca Stevens Interview: Being In Service To The Greater Thing

    Becca Stevens Interview: Being In Service To The Greater Thing

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    When we talk, Becca Stevens is in Hong Kong, playing a string of shows. Before that, she was in Japan. Before that, she was on Broadway on the cast of the Tony Award-winning musical, Illinoise. All while juggling the demands of motherhood and working on her new album, Maple to Paper.


    “It’s all very surreal and exciting,” she says. But as someone whose artistry has developed over
    years, she’s used to being in service to the art — wherever that takes her. Maple to Paper is proof of her commitment to following her inspirations, no matter how painfully personal. An album about motherhood, artistry, and selfhood, it explores Stevens’ grief over losing her mother while becoming a mother herself. Known for her ability to infuse her personal reflections with universality, Maple to Paper shows Stevens at her most vulnerable.

    As her first acoustic folk album, most of it was recorded in single takes, produced alongside Nic Hard to create a stripped-down sound that keeps the listener grounded as the lyrics explore philosophical realities and existential meditations. But this doesn’t feel like a departure — rather an extension of herself. With each album, she says, she embraces a different muse.
    Maple to Paper involved searching through the most tender parts of herself by stepping into a character and a new sound and transmogrifying them for an audience.

    “This record is very different from
    Wonderbloom,” she says. “I’m sure that there will be people who are not into it, and they’ll think, I guess this is how she is now. But by the time that happens, I will already be working on the next thing, so I’m not even what they think I am. Once it gets to that point, I’ll already be somebody else.”

    Becca spoke to us about all things
    Maple to Paper and Illinoise — talking transformation, transmuting painful emotions to an audience, and her inspirations (including Sufjan Stevens).

    (Photo credit: Shervin Lainez)

    POPDUST: How has it been to play the new songs?

    Becca Stevens: So much of this process has been a solo venture — writing them at home alone, recording them at home alone — so getting to play them in front of human beings who are reacting to things is awesome.

    One thing that has been really cool and refreshing is to hear people laugh at my jokes. Because my sense of humor in a couple of the songs is a little dark and dry. And to hear people get it and laugh at it is startling to me because I’ve just been singing them alone, and then I hear people get my dumb little jokes, and it startles me in a really nice way.

    POPDUST: You’ve talked about the anxiety of sharing such a personal album. Can you speak to that a little bit?

    Becca Stevens: In the darkest moments of this album – processing my grief and also birthing the album artistically – I would get in my head about feeling like it was too much to share, too personal to put out into the world. And these intense moments of imposter syndrome being like, Why? What makes me important enough to share this kind of grief with a bunch of potential strangers? Why would I do that?

    And it’s actually funny that I ended up doing
    Illinoise because I was feeling that way one night, and one of the things that brought me out of it was listening to Sufjan Stevens’s Carrie & Lowell. The deep sense of catharsis that album gives me made me think, I need to be writing this stuff anyway. The only difference is that I’m recording it and sharing it with people. And if, by sharing that, I could have that kind of effect on one person, then it’s worth it to me.

    POPDUST: How do the songs change when you go from that initial cathartic expression to something for an audience?

    Becca Stevens: There are stages. The writing process was like ugly therapy sessions. Just processing and going through all the stages of grief randomly, like a grief roller coaster. Then, the recording process was one step removed from that. I was more focused on trying to rise above the technicality and go back into the emotional — but in a more controlled, spectator-type way, dipping back into the role of how I felt when I wrote the songs, but without losing control. And I say that because in the recording process, I had takes when I was able to fully commit to this character that was experiencing the grief, but if I had gone fully into it, then I wouldn’t have been able to execute the song.

    So it’s a balancing act there. And that was almost an athletic venture. It took me the better part of a year to get to the point where I believed all of the takes. The recording was done live. Everything. I was singing and playing at the same time, and I was really hoping for as close to complete takes as possible. The third stage that I’m in now, performing this stuff, is totally different. It’s a totally different experience to be able to witness the exchange of energy and have it be received by an audience.

    POPDUST: In some of your lyrics, you talk about this juxtaposition of privacy and performance because you’re talking about such private moments. But you’re very aware of the Artist as a performer and the Artist’s role in translating a feeling to an audience. Can you talk about where the idea of character fits in?

    Becca Stevens: This record came at the perfect time in my artistry. Separate from the process of traversing this grief of losing my mom and while becoming a mother, I have been, with each record, more and more inspired by the task of stripping away the veil, like the artistic veil, and really cutting to the core of honesty. I think it’s easier to do that when there’s something that you have to be really honest about. On the hard days, I’m like, This is too much to share. And then on the good days, I could be like, Okay, this is the ultimate challenge — to really buckle down and embrace the truly authentic voice that’s coming out of an experience that literally everyone goes through at some point in their life: loss.

    If we’re lucky, our parents die before we do, and so it’s a very shared human experience. So, committing to the expression of honesty and authenticity was a refreshing challenge and something that I’m interested in anyway. Early in my songwriting career, it was my tendency to avail myself of things that I was really feeling or ashamed of feeling. And I’m always going to be a person that’s drawn to doing the thing that’s harder for me. And so this record was like, Okay, this is already hard, so I might as well go full throttle into that thing that’s been interesting to me.

    POPDUST: Do you feel differently about any of this album – or can you see growth or evolution in your perspective with distance? Or even answers to some of the questions that you pose in the songs?

    Becca Stevens: When I was in Hong Kong, I was playing old songs and these new songs on the same set. Also, in Japan, I sprinkled in a couple of old songs and played them after the new songs. And they feel so different to me. It’s not it’s not like I dislike my old songs. It just feels like such a different version of myself, a different part of my brain, and a completely different energy on stage. Songs from Regina make me feel empowered, and I feel like I’m stirring up energy and raising the energy in the room. Then, songs from Maple to Paper feel heavier, like I’m bringing people into this really heavy, dark, but womb-like state.

    As far as my reaction to the songs, after some time, it’s much easier for me to get through them without crying. Now, I can enjoy the process of playing them, and I can enjoy them. I can step outside of them and enjoy the music and the process of sharing them with people.

    POPDUST: For this album, you reference confessional folk influences. Who was inspiring you, and what was drawing you to those influences?

    Becca Stevens: Nick Drake and Elliot Smith both come to mind — not only as songwriters but as guitar players. Some of their records are just guitar and voice, but — at least for me personally, as I’m listening to them — it doesn’t occur to me. Then I’m like, what’s happening here, and it’s very simple. It’s just guitar and voice, or guitar and voice doubled. But because of how it’s recorded and played, particularly the guitar playing, it feels so full, and you don’t miss the fancy overdubs, production, orchestrations, and stuff like that. So, that was something that I referenced with Nic Hard when we were mixing it. We sent a lot of stuff back and forth — we talked about Nick Drake and Elliot Smith, and then there’s some Kurt Cobain and Radiohead in there. There’s Robert Johnson, Piedmont blues guitar, and right-hand stuff in there. And also people like Bob Dylan and Joni Mitchell. And almost the sound of folk, without it being specifically attributed to any one person,

    POPDUST: Some of the people that you mentioned make me think of that opening line of that opening track, “Now Feels Bigger Than The Past.” You say: “What is it about an artist dying that makes art feel more palatable?” What was on your mind when you wrote that?

    Becca Stevens: Do you remember what year Prince died? Like 2016. I wrote the first line on a little piece of paper and stuck it to my wall shortly after he died because I’m a huge Prince fan. And I remember being annoyed by seeing people who I knew weren’t really fans sharing bite-sized versions of Prince on social media – whatever the most popular song, and acting so emotional about losing him.

    On one hand, I was like, great. He deserves that. But also, as an artist who’s struggling in the streaming world and still very much feeling the burden of artistry on my body after the 20 years that I’ve put into this artistry, the world doesn’t take care of me. And then you look at somebody who’s had such fame as Prince, and in a lot of ways, the world still wasn’t taking care of him either. People at his level, you’ve seen time and time again somebody dies because they overdose on a drug that can help them sleep at night or get through the next day because the work is so taxing.

    And they’re not making the money that they need to be making from their art because people aren’t paying for it anymore. Then, we tag a Spotify clip on a social media post. And I was just frustrated by the fact that these people weren’t actually supporting the art. But I jotted that on a piece of paper, stuck it to my wall, and forgot about it for a while. Then, a year or so later, when my mom was re-diagnosed with breast cancer, and she was dying, I pulled the paper off and wrote this song that created a thread between the two.

    POPDUST: Mortality is a theme on this album. So is impermanence. Can you talk about creating that thread?

    Becca Stevens: So I was thinking about this idea of impermanence and how that affects our perception of the thing. Like someone dies, and then suddenly, you want to dive into their work and appreciate them more. What if you take that same concept into someone who’s betrayed you? And then they die, and you’re able to forgive because they’re gone. Then, the third verse is the same thing applied to the process of losing one’s parent or mother and how that affects them as well. When my mom was sick and dying, and after she died, I thought about my own mortality a lot, especially when I was writing “If I Die Before You.”

    POPDUST: You talk a lot about the maker feeling the way that they’ll be seen. Thinking about audience, does the idea that the work will be seen and heard by an audience affect you when you write?

    Becca Stevens: As a songwriter, there’s this constant dance, almost like the angel and the devil on your shoulder, between the Muse feeding you this beauty and this effortless artistry and this internal critic that is like embodying voices from your past, or voices from social media, or what you fear other people might think. Our job is to oscillate between the two. Sometimes, those voices of the internal critic are feeding you things that might be useful. And sometimes, it’s total Malarkey, and it needs to be ignored at all costs.

    POPDUST: To talk about Illinoise, what was it like to be part of that production?

    Becca Stevens: As I mentioned before, I’m a huge Sufjan Stevens fan. I got the call from Timo Andrus, who did the orchestration for the show, and we’ve been friends for 20 years. And Shara Nova, who sang on the original album on Illinois from way back in the day, she could only do the first half of the run and my friend Timo was like, oh, Becca would be really cool for this. Let’s see if she’s available. And he called me — I think it was three weeks after I had a baby — and he was like, I know you just had a baby, but I feel like you’d be really cool for this. And I was so committed to taking this time to recover and be quiet, but he started talking about it, and I was like, Oh, I think I have to audition for this because it just sounds too good to be true. So I auditioned, kind of half thinking that I wouldn’t even get it. And then I was offered the part.

    Being in the show was so amazing to be a part of something bigger than me that had really very little to do with me. It gave me so much space on the stage to have a sense of coming back into working, working hard, but to come back into feeling like an artist and like a professional publicly after a couple of years of feeling more like a mom. I felt like I was doing exactly what I was meant to do, rather than being alone in a room trying to figure out what I was
    supposed to do.

    POPDUST: Another theme of the album is impermanence, and a live production only exists each night while an album is recorded permanently. How do both experiences and living in both worlds lend to the art itself?

    Becca Stevens: Some nights, I’d be on the train with people who were at the show who didn’t even know who I was. I struggled sometimes, like an ego struggle where I was like, Is this even happening? But it was both challenging and also deeply cathartic and refreshing that I didn’t matter. I’m a part of this bigger thing. It’s not being recorded, and I’m not seeing it back. My daily mantra became: “Have fun, be in service to the bigger thing, and don’t take yourself too seriously.” And I was just telling myself that over and over and over again.

    And now that I’m coming back to this world where I’m playing my own music, I think I’m noticing a difference. It’s easier for me to handle my own nerves and use some of those same tools. Because even though these shows that I’m playing now are all me and by myself, the same stuff still applies. People come to shows, and if you’re lucky, you have 70% of their attention. We’re really not all that important. So, I’m able to have more space for that feeling of being a conduit and serving the greater thing,

    Listen to Maple to Paper here:

    Watch the video for “Now Feels Bigger Than The Past” here:

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    LKC

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  • Mia Farrow and Patti LuPone: Pals, and now co-stars on Broadway

    Mia Farrow and Patti LuPone: Pals, and now co-stars on Broadway

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    Mia Farrow and Patti LuPone have been friends for 30 years. “We are different,” said LuPone. “I’m sort of, I guess you’d say I’m pepper, she’s sugar. Or agave or honey, and I’m paprika. Do you know what I mean?”

    “I wouldn’t have thought of the food element, probably, or the spice element,” Farrow laughed. “But that’s not wrong! I don’t know. I see, below the pepper or honey or agave, if you will, is a human soul that is immense, and that I am drawn to. I really value Patti as a friend.”

    As close as these two showbiz veterans are, they have never worked together, until now, in “The Roommate,” the two-person play opening on Broadway this month.

    patti-lupone-and-mia-farrow-in-the-roommate.jpg
    Patti LuPone and Mia Farrow in the Broadway comedy “The Roommate.”

    CBS News


    At 75, Patti LuPone made her Broadway debut more than 50 years ago. She’s won three Tony Awards, for roles in “Evita,” “Company” and “Gypsy.” 

    Mia Farrow, who is 79, got her start even earlier, in the TV show “Peyton Place” in the mid-1960s. She’s the first American woman to join the Royal Shakespeare Company, and she achieved cinematic immortality in the horror classic, “Rosemary’s Baby.” “To this day, [it’s] the best part I’ve ever been offered,” Farrow said.

    Getting these two legends together took a little convincing, and coordinating, with the director asking each of them if they would do it.

    “We did call each other a lot,” LuPone said. “Because I thought it would be so exciting to work with Mia, whom I adore. Just to listen to Mia talk about anything is such an event that I would rather do that than rehearse. I would rather do that than eat lunch. We all feel that way. It’s an amazing experience just to listen to her.”

    Farrow said she decided on doing the play first, but it was dependent upon LuPone doing it as well. “But they went to Mia first,” said LuPone. “And I’m actually a second choice. I don’t even know what I’m talking about, ‘I’m a second.’ I could be a third choice! I don’t know.” 

    “I’m really glad it’s Patti,” said Farrow.  

    And who was ahead of Patti? “Annette Bening,” said LuPone.

    What is that like as an actor? “Well, I’ll tell you! It’s not comfortable,” said LuPone. “You accept the part because you need to!”

    “The Roommate” is a comedy about a New Yorker (portrayed by LuPone) who moves into the Iowa home of Farrow’s character. Secrets and surprises abound. It’s one set, one act, and 90 minutes of lines to remember, between the two of them.

    Playwright Jen Silverman (who calls her show’s stars “icons and legends,” as well as “consummate artists”) says “The Roommate” gives audiences the chance to see the richness and depth of “women of a certain age,” who Silverman says are often rendered invisible.

    LuPone said, “It is harder for roles for women our age. And it’s a pity because we come with a certain amount of wisdom [and] experience that is still sexy. Still very sexy.”

    “Why do you see it as sexy?” asked Doane.

    “Because it is!” LuPone laughed. “Because we come with a power.”

    mia-farrow-patti-lupone-intv-wide.jpg
    Mia Farrow and Patti LuPone, stars of the new Broadway comedy “The Roommate.” 

    CBS News


    In the past LuPone has used her stature to admonish audience members who peek at their phones during a performance. “I think we all abhor it; I’m just vocal about it,” she said. “It’s distracting to the actor, but it’s worse for the audience, you see, because we’re trying to create a story, weave a spell.”

    Mia Farrow’s own life story has always fascinated the public. At 21 she married Frank Sinatra. “Like Patti, he was Sicilian,” she said. “But unlike Patti, he had a temper. But the essential person was so compassionate, and shy, and readily available, more than anyone I’ve ever known. It ended up being a friendship that lasted until he died.”

    Of course, she’s also known for her relationship with Woody Allen. They made 13 films together. Mia and their adopted daughter, Dylan Farrow, accused Allen of molesting Dylan when she was seven. Allen vehemently denies the charge.

    Doane asked, “Are you able to separate the experience as an actor in those films from the personal trials and tribulations that would follow?”

    “Oh yeah, yeah,” Farrow replied. “And I completely understand if an actor decides to work with him. I’m not one who’d say, ‘Oh, they shouldn’t.’”

    Farrow tells us she’s at peace today, and pretty content out of the spotlight.

    “Not many people have had Mia’s life,” said LuPone.

    “I’m old, you know?” Farrow laughed.

    “Well, there are a lot of older people who haven’t had quite the same set of experiences,” said Doane. “How does that factor into a decision to do something like this?”

    “It was perhaps a feeling of maybe, ‘Is this it? Or might there be one last adventure?’” she replied. “Meaning never do anything else for the reminder of my days?”

    “Had you thought that?”

    “Yeah. I’m very good at doing nothing,” Farrow laughed. “It’s a gift. I’m endlessly entertaining to myself. I have good friends. I have no complaints.”

    LuPone said, “I don’t have Mia’s mindset; I wish I did. I’m not good not working. I don’t know what to do in spare time. I get extremely depressed because I feel useless.”

    Asked to define the measure of success, LuPone said, “I think it’s longevity, I really do. I think if you’re still working, If you’re still vital, if they still want you to work at this time, that’s success.”

    “I agree,” said Farrow. “The fact that we’re even working now, that, to me, is success!”

            
    For more info:

         
    Story produced by Gabriel Falcon. Editor: Steven Tyler. 

           
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  • Hugh Jackman Passion Project ‘The Greatest Showman’ Will be Transformed into a Live Theater Event

    Hugh Jackman Passion Project ‘The Greatest Showman’ Will be Transformed into a Live Theater Event

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    Hugh Jackman-led movie musical The Greatest Showman demonstrated an unexpected level of persistence following its 2017 debut, bucking lukewarm reviews to become ubiquitous through 2018, spurring plans for a sequel that were only boosted by Jackman’s Showman-song-heavy arena tour. It’s unclear if the sequel—which, like the original, would likely star the Deadpool & Wolverine frontman as an extremely soft-pedaled P.T. Barnum—is still in play, but now there’s another Showman plan afoot. The movie will be adapted into a live theater spectacle, Disney announced Friday, a staged musical that is likely Broadway-bound.

    The news came at D23, a three-day event for fans of everything Disney (which includes the universes of Pixar, Marvel, Star Wars, and more). At a Friday panel on the entertainment monolith’s musical theater plans, after announcements of new Frozen stage show dates and a West End adaptation of the company’s animated Hercules film, “the iconic howl from the 2017 movie musical sounded across the arena,” Variety reports.

    That howl, “Ladies and gents, this is the moment you’ve waited for,” kicked off a surprise rendition of “The Greatest Show,” performed by singers led by Ryan Vasquez in the Hugh Jackman role. Under a sign that reads “The Greatest Showman: The New Musical,” the cast of five teased the upcoming show, a video posted to social media reveals.

    The staged adaption of the film will be produced by the Disney Theatrical division, the Hollywood Reporter notes. Typically, stage shows produced by that division end up on Broadway: past productions include the currently running Aladdin and The Lion King adaptations, as well as 2018’s Frozen show.

    Dates or a destination for the Showman show were not revealed on Friday, but Page Six appears to have a clue, reporting Saturday that the production will land first in the southwest England town of Bristol “in early 2026” and then will “play the Theatre Royal Drury Lane in London.”

    The show’s director will reportedly be director-choreographer Casey Nicholaw, who helmed the stage version of Aladdin, the musical film The Prom, and many others. Jackman, who has abundant Broadway cred of his own, does not appear to be involved with the production thus far—but then again, we never expected him to come back as Wolverine, either.

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  • Shaina Taub On Her Tony Winning ‘Suffs’ Providing Possibilities in Hard Times

    Shaina Taub On Her Tony Winning ‘Suffs’ Providing Possibilities in Hard Times

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    Shaina Taub as Alice Paul in Suffs. Joan Marcus

    Hours after Kamala Harris emerged as a presidential contender, Shaina Taub realized that Suffs—her new Tony-winning musical about pioneering suffragists in the early 1900s—was suddenly playing to a different crowd. 

    “The energy and joy in the audience that got released—it was like a balloon,” Taub tells Observer. “People are so ready to feel some sense of hope, and we celebrate that. There’s a lot of work to do, a lot of organizing and campaigning, but I think there’s a new light under everyone to get it done.”

    One of the people to thank for Suffs is the last female Democratic nominee to run for President of the United States, Hilary Rodham Clinton, who, impressed with Taub and the show, came aboard late as a lead producer. You can’t make this stuff up. Taub’s word for this message-laden connection is “surreal.”

    The company of Suffs. Joan Marcus

    The idea of doing a musical based on the suffragists—from their 1913 march on Washington the day before Woodrow Wilson’s inauguration to the passage of the 19th amendment in 1920 giving women the right to vote—did not originate with Taub. Producer Rachel Sussman had dreamed about it since she was 12 and suggested it to Taub over dinner in 2010. She also gave her a copy of Doris Stephens’s 1920 book, Jailed for Freedom, a firsthand account of the movement. Taub read it in one night and signed up immediately, shocked that it was all news to her. To say she was inspired would be an understatement: she wrote the book, lyrics and music for Suffs. The plan was to do a show celebrating the centennial of the 19th amendment, but Covid-19 took care of that.

    Suffs tried to world-premiere Off-Broadway on April 6, 2020, and closed quickly for two weeks because of the number of Covid cases among the cast. “I got Covid on what would have been our opening night,” Taub remembers. “We never got to have an opening night at The Public. It was a really low moment of having that ritual taken away from us by the circumstances of the world.”

    The show weaved through its initial engagement under the cloud of Covid, nursing some critical body-blows which Taub translated into learning experiences. “The work never stopped,” she noted. “There was no reset. Some people say, ‘Oh, did you go back to the drawing board after The Public?’—but I felt that we never left the drawing board. We—my wonderful collaborator, director Leigh Silverman, and I—knew we weren’t done. We were just excited to keep going.”

    Mostly, Taub followed the advice of Lin-Manuel Miranda. “There’s so much you can learn about a musical once it gets in front of an audience. You can do workshops and readings for years, but the audience will tell you real fast. I was so energized to use the intellect from the audience.” 

    Hannah Cruz as Inez Milholland and the company of Suffs. Joan Marcus

    Taub tapped into the audience’s intellect not from the wings, but from the stage—in addition to creating the show, she stars as Alice Paul, a key figure in the movement. “Performing in the show helps because you get their data pool,” she says. The audience became her guide when it came to revising the show before it’s Broadway debut. “I know what always works. I know what never works. I know what works sometimes, and I can make the necessary adjustments based on that.” 

    By the time Suffs got to Broadway and the Music Box Theater last October, Taub had added dialogue scenes to the originally sung-though musical. She is the first woman to ever independently win Tony Awards for Best Book and Best Score in the same season—and the second woman to write the book, lyrics and music for a show and act a leading role; the last (and only other) person to accomplish this was Micki Grant for 1972’s Don’t Bother Me, I Can’t Cope.

    It took Taub a decade to create Suffs—and two more years to overhaul it. Depending on how you count it (which is difficult), Broadway is getting 17 new, or relatively new, songs. “Basically, I’m not sure,” she admits of the count. “Some songs the music completely changes. Some songs, I change the lyric. Some songs, I kept the lyric but added a new melody. It’s hard to quantify.”

    One new addition gets the show off to a bouncy, ingratiating start—a marked improvement over the Brechtian Off-Broadway opener “Watch Out for the Suffragette,” in which the ensemble of revolutionary women (made up of female and nonbinary actors) sock it to their male detractors and threaten “to scold you for three hours.” That opener played for years in development before Taub realized how off-putting it was for audiences who knew nothing of what they were getting into, so she lightened the lecture-to-come with a sprightly bit of vaudeville, “Let Mother Vote.”

    “Those three words were like a campaign slogan for the suffrage movement of that era,” Taub explains. “There were buttons that said ‘Let Mother Vote.’” Taub says she “palmed that” and thought, “Why not have a fun, upbeat ditty that would convey that message?”

    The number clarifies what’s to come for the uninitiated much like the way the late addition of “Comedy Tonight” told people what to expect from A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum. Almost all the cast show up for it, including some name-brand performers parading as vintage suffragists: Jenn Colella as Carrie Chapman Catt, Emily Skinner as Alva Belmont, Nikki M. James as Ida B. Wells, Hannah Cruz as Inez Milholland. These characters are old and young, moderate and radical, Black and white—they don’t mix well, but, despite the clashes, their eyes are on the prize.

    Nikki M. James as Ida B. Wells and the company of Suffs. Joan Marcus

    Once these ladies sing their say, Taub makes her entrance—16th in a cast of 17—as the young and impatient Alice Paul, singing the firebrand’s anthem, “Finish the Fight.” In her mind, Taub says she was thinking of her own fight: “I’ve been trying to finish the show all these years.”

    The song is reprised at the very end of the show, followed by another late addition number that literally gives the audience its marching orders, a rousing closer called “Keep Marching.”

    Will Taub be leaving Suffs to play the anarchist revolutionary, Emma Goldman when City Center’s Encores! stages Ragtime from October 30th to November 10th? “Yes and no,” she answers. “I’ll be out for most of those two weeks, yes. But I’m excited that on election night and on the Wednesday matinee the day after the election, they’re not having Ragtime performances—so I can do Suffs those 24 hours. No matter what happens, it will be quite an intense and emotional place to be.”

    Being able to perform in both Ragtime and Suffs is particularly exciting for Taub, since Ragtime is her favorite show. “That’s what I grew up listening to,” she says. “It was such an inspiration for me.” In fact, the Ragtime song “He Wanted to Say”—which has Emma Goldman narrating the thoughts of another character—inspired a song in Suffs, “She and I,” a duet between Alice Paul and  Carrie Chapman Catt. “I use a similar form where you get to hear Carrie’s inner life, which she can’t express too well,” says Taub. “That’s my homage to ‘He Wanted to Say.’”

    There’s a certain casting logic that would turn Taub from Alice Paul into Emma Goldman. 

    “I love giving to play a fiery activist—especially Emma,” she admits, “I grew up in rural Vermont, where there was no Jewish community per se, but I became so obsessed with Ragtime that it made me look up Emma Goldman. She is the first model of a Jewish activist I ever had as a kid.” 

    Goldman shows up in several musicals—not just Ragtime but in Assassins and Tintypes. That last one, Taub says with pride, “I actually did at summer camp. Emma’s winding in and out of American-history musicals. I hope eventually that someone writes an Emma Goldman musical, full stop.”

    Whatever, it won’t be her, she promises. “I may take a break from historical musicals.”

    Evidently so: She spent the summer of ‘22 in Chicago, supplying lyrics to Elton John’s music for The Devil Wears Prada. More work is needed. “When it became clear the schedules were going to overlap, I wanted to make sure that Prada would have someone who would be there to meet in the room and collaborate when I’m bound to the Music Box Theater for God knows how long.”

    Will she be leaving Suffs to go to London to work on Prada? The answer to that, she’s happy to say, is an emphatic no. “I actually brought on an additional lyricist, Mark Sonnenblick, who will do additional lyrics and revisions because I can’t be there. I’m in touch with him every day, weighing in from afar, but there’s only so much you can do when you don’t have eyes and ears on it.”

    With projects that take years from start to stage, such an arrangement makes sense. “I think we should normalize that kind of collaboration in musical theater,” Taub says. “Given our schedules and our lives, it’s not always realistic to be fully there.”

    Meanwhile, crowds keep coming to the Music Box. “Our audiences have blown me away. To look out there at a full house or meet people at the stage door is wonderful. They’re of all ages and genders—but especially mothers and daughters and grandmothers.” Return visits are common, she adds. 

    “The hunger, I think, that people have for a story like this—a feeling of possibilities in these hard times—I hope we’re lucky enough to get to continue providing that for them as long as we can.” 

    Buy Tickets Here

    Shaina Taub On Her Tony Winning ‘Suffs’ Providing Possibilities in Hard Times

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  • Your Favorite Celebrity Just Hit The Broadway Stages. Here’s Who We’re Seeing Next!

    Your Favorite Celebrity Just Hit The Broadway Stages. Here’s Who We’re Seeing Next!

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    We’re calling all Broadway bees! If you’ve been keeping up with Broadway news every day like us, you’ll probably already be aware that the NYC stages are welcoming new faces! Luckily, we’ve got the inside scoop on which shows are coming to the stages and which of your favorite musicians and celebrities are staring in them.

    Adam Lambert In Cabaret

    The latest Broadway news is featuring none other than Adam Lambert. He’ll be taking on the iconic role of Emcee during the next run of Cabaret. For Broadway lovers, Cabaret is an important show with a special place in many people’s hearts, including ours. Based on the promotional images already swirling around social media, we can’t help but be super excited!

    We can already see how Adam’s colorful personality will shine through in this role, and we are crossing our fingers that we secure tickets for opening night! Will we see you there?

    Image Source: Full Coverage Communications

    TO LEARN MORE ABOUT ADAM LAMBERT:
    FACEBOOK | INSTAGRAM | TWITTER | WEBSITE | YOUTUBE

    Nick Jonas In The Last Five Years

    Since we were little, we’ve wanted to see Nick Jonas on that Broadway stage. We never had the opportunity, but today just might be our lucky day. Nick will star in The Last Five Years, a musical about two young actors hungry for fame but struggling to keep their marriage together. If you’ve seen The Jonas Brothers live in concert, you know just how stellar Nick’s vocals are (even from the nosebleeds).

    Pre-sale for tickets is happening now, and the show will only be running for 14 weeks, so make sure you plan that NYC trip sooner rather than later.

    TO LEARN MORE ABOUT NICK JONAS:
    FACEBOOK | INSTAGRAM | TIKTOK | TWITTER | WEBSITE | YOUTUBE

    Jordan Fisher In Hadestown

    We know that Hadestown has been on Broadway for a while now, but we just had to shout it out. Anytime we see Jordan Fisher’s name in spotlights, we just have to stop what we’re doing and read all about it. Fisher will play the role of Orpheus until mid-September, so the underworld party is just getting started! That’s good news for us because now we have time to get tickets and plan a trip to the Big Apple!

    Check out a teaser clip below for a taste of Fisher’s infectious talent…

    TO LEARN MORE ABOUT JORDAN FISHER:
    FACEBOOK | INSTAGRAM | TIKTOK | TWITTER YOUTUBE

    We also have to shout out some of our faves who are no longer on Broadway but certainly captured our hearts when they were. Reneé Rapp on Mean Girls, JoJo on Moulin Rouge!, Carly Rae Jepsen on Rodgers + Hammerstein’s Cinderella, and Ariana Grande in 13.

    Which Broadway musicals are on your bucket list? Let us know if you’re a Broadway bee like us in the comments below or by buzzing with us over on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook 🐝

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    ableimann

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  • Sol Tribe Tattoo & Piercing closes on Broadway after 15 years

    Sol Tribe Tattoo & Piercing closes on Broadway after 15 years

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    A white supremacist murdered founder Alicia Cardenas in 2021. The shop was a leader in the national body art scene.

    A vigil for the victims of a white supremacist murder spree outside of Sol Tribe Tattoo on South Broadway in Denver. Jan. 8, 2022.

    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    South Broadway’s Sol Tribe Tattoo & Piercing, at 56 Broadway, closed permanently on Monday.

    “It’s with a very heavy heart that the staff of Sol Tribe say final goodbyes to the studio today suddenly,” the shop posted to social media. “We thought we had another month of sorting out details before the final closing of Sol Tribe, but that wasn’t the case. We are completely devastated.”

    Staff at Sol Tribe were not immediately available for comment. 

    The shop was founded by artist Alicia Cardenas, who was killed there by a white supremacist in a December 2021 mass shooting.

    Cardenas is credited with pushing forward national standards for healthier body-art creation. She challenged cultural appropriation and patriarchy within body-art culture, and often collaborating with activist projects around town.

    The shop continued that legacy after her death. 

    Alicia Cardenas, owner of Sol Tribe Tattoo and Body Piercing, stands in her Broadway shop as her kid, Xochitl, plays on a silk behind her. April 22, 2020. (Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite)

    Supporters of the shop commented on the post in droves. 

    Some described Sol Tribe as a “sacred space.”

    Others said they were heartbroken after reading the news.

    “Yall are an inspiration, strong, kind and will never be forgotten as leaders in the industry in Denver!!!” the Wolf Den Tattoo Shop wrote on social media. “Cheers to new endeavors and hope yall find peace and creativity in your hearts!” 

    Many commenters reminisced about receiving their first tattoos or piercings at the shop, and they shouted out the various artists they worked with over the years.

    “We are so sorry for the sudden closure,” the shop posted on social media. “We thought we had another month of work before this was official.”

    Many of the artists at Sol Tribe will be moving on to other opportunities. 

    The shop encouraged customers to follow their favorite artists elsewhere. 

    Some will be founding and working at a soon-to-open shop, Cold Moon Piercing and Tattoo

    Others will go to other shops including Wolf and Goat, Rising Tide Tattoo, Bound by Design, The Crypt Denver and Landmark Tattoo.

    Sol Tribe posted the full list on social media

    “We want to thank you, our amazing clients and friends, for an incredible 15 years of piercing and tattooing you,” Sol Tribe wrote. “Y’all have supported us through figurative hell, and during our hardest moments and we will never forget that. We are stunned by this news and we are heartbroken.”

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  • A.D. Players’ Fiddler on the Roof Is Classic Broadway

    A.D. Players’ Fiddler on the Roof Is Classic Broadway

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    When radical student Perchik (Patrick Fretwell) makes his entrance in the third scene of Fiddler on the Roof (1964), the multiple Tony Award-winning Jerry Bock (music), Sheldon Harnick (lyrics), Joseph Stein (book) and Jerome Robbins (director/choreographer) musical about Jewish life in imperial Russia’s Pale of Settlement, deftly on stage via A.D. Players, he states that he’s newly arrived in Anatevka from Kiev. The word slaps us in the face. You can hear the audience’s breath being taken aback. In that one word, this classic musical pulsates with relevancy.

    All Jews were forced to live in the Pale, which would now be Ukraine, Poland, and Crimea. In small impoverished villages, the infamous shtetls, Jews were discriminated, brutalized, and demeaned. Their threadbare lives were circumscribed; the communities forced into menial labor that kept them mired in bleakness; their daily existence threatened by the Czar’s racist pogroms.

    But the Jews had one thing – one faint hope – that buoyed them in the darkness: their Tradition. It’s the musical’s through line and constant source of conflict for Tevye the milkman (Adam B. Shapiro), as modern life constantly upends his authority. The Papa, as the bracing opening number tells us, “Who, day and night, must scramble for a living, Feed a wife and children, say his daily prayers? And who has the right, as master of the house, To have the final word at home?”

    His rights are being chiseled away by his feisty daughters, his bossy wife Golde (Aviva Pressman), and electrifying new ideas from the outside world. Tradition solidifies the past. Change is the future, and Tevye’s beloved tradition is fading fast. Whether he is ready for it or not, the future will be forced upon him.

    Under the sure hand of director Aaron Brown, the spirited feet of choreographer Courtney D. Jones, the klezmer-inspired baton of maestro Jonathan Craft as he leads an 11-piece orchestra, the sprightly ensemble cast, the set pieces from Torsten Louis that glide in from the wings or descend from the flies, the bejeweled lighting from David Gipson, and Leah Smith’s patched woolens and babushkas, this beloved musical gleams with freshness and a radiant spirituality that isn’t often seen on today’s stage.

    It wasn’t seen on stage in the ’60s either, which is one major reason this most original musical was an instant hit and became the longest running theater piece in Broadway history up to that point. It’s easy to see why. It’s about family and the community as family. The show is stuffed with characters we respond to. In Stein’s masterful book, they come alive. In Harnick and Bock’s songs, with their chromatic wisps of liturgical chant and equal doses of Broadway bounce, the show melds into a cohesive whole. Fiddler portrays a forgotten little world now made universal.

    Shapiro breathes an easy charm, a bit softer than what we’ve seen in other interpretations, but his comedy timing is rich, and Tevye is chockablock with Borscht Belt shtick when he “negotiates” with God or spars with Golde and his older daughters, Tzeitel (Elliett Reinecke), Hodel (Paige Klase), and Chava (Cara DeGaish), who itch to get married to the ones they love, not the ones their Papa has arranged with prickly village matchmaker Yente (Shondra Marie). Tzeitel loves Motel the Tailor (Jared Guidry), Hodel falls for firebrand Perchik, and literary Chava sets her sights on Russian Christian Fyredka (Gabriel Mullen). All are in fine voice.

    The original show boasted Robbins’ iconic dances – the “Bottle Dance” sequence from Tzeitel and Motel’s wedding is one such set piece, and you can’t stage a proper Fiddler without it. Jones creates a fine facsimile for the four dancers who crouch, kick, and plunge with wine bottles atop their brimmed hoiche hats. The routine stops the show, as it should.

    My favorite scene has always been “Tevye’s Dream,” where he convinces Golde that Motel is the correct suitor, not the butcher Lazar Wolf (Michael C. Morrison). He conjures cuddly Grandma Tzeitel (Megan Haines) and Lazar’s vengeful former wife Fruma-Sarah (Mara Jill Herman) from behind and between their bed to predict doom if Tzeitel marries the butcher. “How can you allow your daughter to take my place/House, keys, clothes, pearls.” It’s comically spooky as Herman’s soprano goes into overdrive while the ensemble gyrates under Gipson’s eerie green lighting. It’s tremendously effective and so much fun.

    Fiddler’s relevance is more pronounced than ever. Its message of family tradition and a community that suffers through hardship yet perseveres speaks to all. The fiddler on the roof (Carolina Ornelas) is both symbol of their precarious existence and their indomitable faith. At the end as the villagers disperse after the Czar’s edict, the mysterious fiddler follows Tevye and his family on their journey to America. (Why he leaves his fiddle on the pile of discarded belongings seems the wrong message for the somewhat hopeful conclusion of the show. His music – Anatevka’s binding tie – must follow Tevye. He’s going to need it.)

    Fiddler is one of the great masterwork musicals. No question. Take your children. They will be uplifted. And they will thank you.

    Fiddler on the Roof continues through August 4 at 7:30 p.m. Wednesdays and Thursdays; 8 p.m. Fridays; 2:30 p.m. and 8 p.m. Saturdays; 2:30 p.m. Sundays at A.D. Players at the George Theater 5420 Westheimer. For more information, call 713-526-2721 or visit adplayers.org. $25-$75.

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    D. L. Groover

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  • 15th annual Jimmy Awards high school theater competition takes place in New York City

    15th annual Jimmy Awards high school theater competition takes place in New York City

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    NEW YORK CITY (WABC) — The curtain has opened for the 15th annual National High School Musical Theatre Awards, better known as the Jimmy Awards.

    The ceremony is a coast-to-coast celebration of outstanding student achievement – recognizing talent in vocal, dance and acting performance.

    This year’s show is hosted by Emmy, Tony and Grammy-nominated singer and actor Josh Groban, and features performances by 102 student participants at the Minskoff Theatre.

    RELATED: Jimmy Award nominees get to see their faces on giant Times Square billboard

    Sonia Rincon reports from Times Square where the 2024 Jimmy Award nominees got to see their faces up close on a giant billboard.

    The nominees are competing for the Best Performance by an Actor and Actress as well as top honors and scholarships.

    Who are the nominees?

    Eyewitness News entertainment reporter Joelle Garguillo hosted a preview of the show, introducing some of the 102 student participants in the special, “On The Red Carpet at the Jimmy Awards National High School Musical Theater Awards.

    Entertainment reporter Joelle Garguilo takes you behind the scenes at the Jimmy Awards

    2024 Inspiring Teacher Award recipients

    The Jimmy Awards congratulated the recipients of the 2024 Inspiring Teacher Award, which is given to teachers nominated by their students and chosen by a committee in recognition for their roles in guiding their students who excelled during the previous year’s ceremony. This year’s recipients were Jacqueline McLean of Le Roy Jr. Sr. High School in Rochester, New York, and Paul Fillingim of Ronald Reagan High School in San Antonio, Texas.

    Jimmy Awards student reporters

    The Jimmy Awards welcomes two student reporters to New York City: Nicole Scimeca from Broadway In Chicago Illinois High School Musical Theatre Awards in Chicago, and Richard “Ricky” Ragazzo from the Tommy Tune Awards in Houston, Texas. The two are aspiring journalists who were selected following a nationwide submissions process and are covering The Jimmy Awards on social media.

    The Jimmy Awards has been the catalyst for more than $6,000,000 in educational scholarships.

    The show will be streamed live on the Jimmy Awards website beginning at 7:30 p.m. on Monday, June 24.

    The Intermission Show hosted by Eyewitness News entertainment reporter Joelle Garguilo will be streamed on ABC 7 New York.

    WABC-TV is the official media partner of the Jimmy Awards.

    ALSO WATCH | Roger Rees Award winners to compete in 15th annual Jimmy Awards

    Joelle Garguilo has details on the 15th annual Jimmy Awards high school theater competition taking place in NYC tonight.

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  • ‘Stereophonic’ Pays Tribute To Donald Sutherland Without Changing A Word Of Dialogue

    ‘Stereophonic’ Pays Tribute To Donald Sutherland Without Changing A Word Of Dialogue

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    About three-quarters of the way through every performance of David Adjmi’s Tony-winning play Stereophonic, two characters – Holly, the British keyboardist/vocalist (played by Juliana Canfield) and Grover, the American recording engineer (Eli Gelb) get into a debate over their favorite movies. Their favorite erotic movies, to be exact.

    The setting being, as it were, a cantankerous rock & roll recording studio session circa 1976, there’s no surprise that Holly and Grover likely won’t agree, and indeed, Grover chooses Last Tango in Paris, making sure to point out that every woman he’s ever dated has had a crush on Marlon Brando.

    Not so Holly. She finds Brando mean and misogynist, and much prefers the sensitive poignance of Donald Sutherland in the grief-stricken romantic thriller Don’t Look Now.

    Now, Holly mentions Don’t Look Now every night, but on Friday night the words landed quite a bit differently among the audience at Broadway‘s Golden Theatre: Sutherland died just two days ago at 88 following a lengthy illness.

    As soon as Holly began to extol the romantic, melancholy appeal of Sutherland, the Broadway audience gasped as one and then let out a heartbroken blend of “oooohhhs” and “aawwwws.”

    As Canfield continued her scripted praise of Sutherland and his Don’t Look Now grief-stricken performance, the audience at the Golden peppered the speech with scattered applause and other expressions of commiseration.

    “Rest in Peace, Donald Sutherland,” tweeted Stereophonic playwright David Adjmi, predicting his audience’s emotions to the note.

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    Greg Evans

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  • Former Ace Hotel in downtown L.A. reopens as ‘Airbnb on steroids’

    Former Ace Hotel in downtown L.A. reopens as ‘Airbnb on steroids’

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    The former Ace Hotel in downtown Los Angeles, which helped lead an economic revival on a historic stretch of Broadway a decade ago, has reopened as a minimal-service operation akin to Airbnb, following a strategy that has become increasingly common for struggling hotels in recent years.

    Now called Stile Downtown Los Angeles by Kasa, the 1920s-vintage hotel tower has resumed limited operations after shutting down nearly six months ago. Downtown hotels were particularly hard-hit by the pandemic, and some have changed owners or operators.

    Ace Hotel Group had operated the 182-room hotel near Broadway and Olympic Boulevard since it opened in 2014, even as its ownership changed twice over the years. The chic brand made the Ace a destination for travelers as well as local residents who patronized its buzzy rooftop bar and restaurants.

    South Korea-based AJU Continuum, which bought the hotel in 2019, announced last week that it had brought in Kasa Living Inc. to operate the property.

    Kasa, which is based in San Francisco and has a national presence, “offers the consistency of a major hotel chain with the convenience and character of a modern short-term rental,” AJU Continuum said in a statement.

    Ace Hotel said upon its departure that the Broadway hotel would be operated in the future as “a limited-service, rooms-only operation, managed via a tech platform.”

    The limited-service model under which guests typically receive codes to get into their rooms via their phones is “basically an Airbnb on steroids,” said Donald Wise, a hotel investment banker at Turnbull Capital Group. “You’re not going to someone’s house or a condo, but to a box that has no more or less service than an Airbnb would have.”

    The independent United Theater on Broadway, which is connected to the hotel, will continue to operate as an open venue hosting concerts, performances and special events, AJU Continuum said. The hotel will have a rooftop wine bar but no restaurants.

    The site has had multiple identities since it was built in 1927. Constructed with backing from film luminaries Mary Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks, Charlie Chaplin and D.W. Griffith, it originally was meant in part to provide a theater for the United Artists movie production company they founded.

    The Spanish Gothic theater was designed by C. Howard Crane and the tower by Walker & Eisen, the team behind other local landmarks including the Fine Arts Building downtown and the Beverly Wilshire hotel in Beverly Hills. It held offices for rent and a theater where United Artists pictures premiered, starting with Pickford’s film “My Best Girl.”

    Other prominent occupants of the property through the years include California Petroleum Corp., Texaco and flamboyant preacher Gene Scott, whose broadcasts were heard nationally. He died in 2005.

    The opening of the Ace in 2014 was a pivotal point in the residential renaissance of downtown that helped spur growth nearby, said Nick Griffin, executive vice president of DTLA Alliance, formerly the Downtown Center Business Improvement District.

    “It was evocative of that particular moment in downtown, arriving as a kind of a hipster paradise,” he said. “That area of Ninth and Broadway was a particularly hip area with fashion and hotels at the intersection of the Historic Core, the fashion district and the downtown center.”

    Two other boutique hotels created in historic buildings followed the Ace to the neighborhood: the Hoxton Downtown LA and Downtown L.A. Proper. Both are also on Broadway.

    Short-term rentals in former traditional hotels and apartment buildings have been popping up downtown as business owners work to find financial equilibrium, Griffin said.

    “The new model of short-term rentals is sort of indicative of this moment in downtown as we continue to evolve and innovate coming out of the pandemic.”

    Griffin’s improvement district reported that average downtown hotel occupancy, which plunged during the pandemic, has reached nearly 69%, up a percentage point from a year ago. That’s close to what is usually considered a healthy rate but down from late 2019 when occupancy was closer to 80% and average room rates were higher.

    “The downtown Los Angeles market is still lagging, hasn’t recovered fully to the numbers that were pre-COVID,” said consultant Alan Reay of Atlas Hospitality Group. “We are definitely starting to see more distress among owners.”

    Challenges for hotel owners include a reduction in business travelers to downtown offices as more people work from home. They also face high interest rates on their loans and rising labor costs.

    Limited service hotels such as Stile may produce more profit for their owners while also lowering rates for guests who don’t mind having fewer services, Reay said.

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    Roger Vincent

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  • Avett Brothers musical ‘Swept Away’ sets ticket sales, opening date for Broadway

    Avett Brothers musical ‘Swept Away’ sets ticket sales, opening date for Broadway

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    Tickets go on sale this week for the Broadway-bound Avett Brothers musical “Swept Away,” the show’s producers said Tuesday.

    The powerful show about sacrifice and redemption features music from The Avett Brothers catalog and centers on four survivors of a whaling boat shipwreck in 19th century New England. Tickets go on sale at 10 a.m. this Friday, June 21, on the show’s website sweptawaymusical.com, producers Matthew Masten, Sean Hudock and Madison Wells Live announced.

    They also announced performance dates and which Shubert-owned theater will house the production. Preview performances start Oct. 29 at the Longacre Theatre, and opening night is Nov. 19.

    Masten, who grew up in Charlotte, teamed with Hudock to shepherd the project over the last decade. It had its world premiere at Berekely Rep in California in 2022, followed by another well-received run at Arena Stage in Washington, D.C., last November.

    Here are five other things to know about “Swept Away”:

    Adrian Blake Enscoe (Little Brother) in an exuberant moment of “Swept Away” at Arena Stage’s East Coast premiere in Washington, D.C., in 2023. Tickets for its Broadway debut go on sale June 21.
    Adrian Blake Enscoe (Little Brother) in an exuberant moment of “Swept Away” at Arena Stage’s East Coast premiere in Washington, D.C., in 2023. Tickets for its Broadway debut go on sale June 21. Julieta Cervantes

    What’s ‘Swept Away’ about?

    The show revolves around four men who survive a shipwreck, the lengths they go to live and how they face the consequences of their actions. Those characters are a veteran sea captain, his worldly mate, a protective older brother and his younger brother who is seeking adventure.

    An early Avett Brothers album, “Mignonette,” had initially given Masten the idea it could work as a musical. That 2004 album was inspired by real life, where a 19th-century yacht called the Mignonette sank during a storm off the South African coast, and survivors managed to live without food or water.

    From left, Stark Sands (Big Brother), John Gallagher Jr. (Mate), Wayne Duvall (Captain) and Adrian Blake Enscoe (Little Brother) in “Swept Away” at Arena Stage. The show starts performances on Broadway Oct. 29.
    From left, Stark Sands (Big Brother), John Gallagher Jr. (Mate), Wayne Duvall (Captain) and Adrian Blake Enscoe (Little Brother) in “Swept Away” at Arena Stage. The show starts performances on Broadway Oct. 29. Julieta Cervantes

    Can I get pre-sale tickets for ‘Swept Away’?

    Yes. You can sign up for pre-sale tickets and news about the production at the show’s website. Those tickets go on sale at 10 a.m. Thursday, June 20.

    Has the Broadway cast been announced yet?

    No casting has been announced. In mid-May during a concert in New York City, The Avett Brothers revealed that the show was going to Broadway in the fall. They were joined on stage by the four leads from the show in its California and Washington productions: Wayne Duvall (Captain); Adrian Blake Enscoe (Little Brother); John Gallagher Jr. (Mate); and Stark Sands (Big Brother).

    The cast of “Swept Away” joined The Avett Brothers at a concert in New York May 17 where the band announced that the musical was headed to Broadway.
    The cast of “Swept Away” joined The Avett Brothers at a concert in New York May 17 where the band announced that the musical was headed to Broadway. crackerfarm

    Well, what can you tell me about who is working on the show?

    Swept Away features a book by Tony Award winner John Logan (“Red”, “Moulin Rouge! The Musical”), direction by Tony Award winner Michael Mayer (“Spring Awakening”, “American Idiot”) and choreography by Tony Award nominee David Neumann (“Hadestown”). The Avetts have been involved with the production every step of the way too.

    What’s the history of the Longacre Theatre?

    The 111-year-old theater on 48th Street in New York City was named for Longacre Square, which later was renamed as Times Square. The Longacre opened in 1913, and was built by Boston Red Sox owner Harry Frazee, who sold it to the Shuberts in 1919. The theater has 1,091 seats.

    It’s first show was “Are You A Crook?” according to the Internet Broadway Database. Other memorable shows over the years at the theater have included “Purlie Victorious” by Ossie Davis, “Jesus Christ Superstar” with music by Andrew Lloyd Webber, “Ain’t Misbehavin’,” music by Thomas “Fats” Waller and “Leopoldstadt” by Tom Stoppard. Its most recent tenant was “Lempicka,” which recently closed.

    More arts coverage

    Want to see more stories like this? Sign up here for our free “Inside Charlotte Arts” newsletter: charlotteobserver.com/newsletters. And you can join our Facebook group, “Inside Charlotte Arts,” by going here: facebook.com/groups/insidecharlottearts.

    Related stories from Charlotte Observer

    Award-winning journalist Adam Bell has worked for The Charlotte Observer since 1999 in a variety of reporting and editing roles. He currently is the business editor and the arts editor. The Philly native and U.Va. grad also is a big fan of cheesesteaks and showtunes.
    Support my work with a digital subscription

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    Adam Bell

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  • ‘Stereophonic’ Wins Best Play:  Tony Awards Winners List

    ‘Stereophonic’ Wins Best Play:  Tony Awards Winners List

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    The 77th annual Tony Awards are being handed out tonight in Manhattan, and Deadline is posting the winners live as they are announced. See the list of winners thus far below, followed by the remaining nominees.

    Ariana DeBose hosts the ceremony for a third consecutive time, this year from Lincoln Center’s David H. Koch Theater. CBS is airing the celebration of Broadway excellence live coast-to-coast.

    RELATED: Tony Noms Snubs & Surprises: None For Big Names Steve Carell & Michael Imperioli; Little Love For Brit Hit ‘Patriots’ & Hearty Welcome For ‘Outsiders’

    Here are the winners and remaining nominees for the 2024 Tony Awards:

    Winners

    Best Play

    Stereophonic
    Author: David Adjmi
    Producers: Sue Wagner, John Johnson, Seaview, Sonia Friedman Productions, Linden Productions, Ashley Melone, Nick Mills, Jillian Robbins, Stella La Rue, Alex Levy & David Aron, Dori Berinstein, James Bolosh, Burnt Umber Productions, The Cohn Sisters, Cathy Dantchik, Alexander R. Donnelly, Emerald Drive, Federman Koenigsberg, Dann Fink, Ruth Hendel, Larry Hirschhorn, Jenen Rubin, John Gore Organization, Willette & Manny Klausner, LAMF Protozoa, Katrina McCann, Stephanie P. McClelland, No Guarantees, Marissa Palley & Daniel Aron, Anna Schafer, Soto Namoff Productions, Sean Walsh, Bruce & Peggy Wanta, Hillary Wyatt, deRoy Howard, Winkler & Smalberg, 42nd.club, Craig Balsam, Concord Theatricals, Creative Partners Productions, Jonathan Demar, Douglas Denoff, DJD Productions, Echo Lake Entertainment, Faliro House, FilmNation Entertainment, Roy Gabay, GFour Productions, Candy Kosow Gold, Wes Grantom, Rachel Bendit & Mark Bernstein, Playwrights Horizons, Adam Greenfield, Leslie Marcus, Carol Fishman

    Best Revival of a Play 

    Appropriate 
    Author: Branden Jacobs-Jenkins 
    Producers: Second Stage Theater, Carole Rothman, Lisa Lawer Post, Ambassador Theatre Group, Amanda Dubois, Annapurna Theatre, Bad Robot Live 

    Best Original Score (Music and/or Lyrics) Written for the Theatre 
    Suffs 
    Music & Lyrics: Shaina Taub

    Best Performance by an Actor in a Featured Role in a Musical 
    Daniel Radcliffe, Merrily We Roll Along 

    Best Performance by an Actress in a Featured Role in a Musical 
    Kecia Lewis, Hell’s Kitchen 

    Best Direction of a Musical 
    Danya Taymor, The Outsiders 

    Best Direction of a Play 

    Daniel Aukin, Stereophonic

    Best Performance by an Actress in a Featured Role in a Play 
    Kara Young, Purlie Victorious: A Non-Confederate Romp Through the Cotton Patch 

    Best Performance by an Actor in a Featured Role in a Play 

    Will Brill, Stereophonic

    Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role in a Play
    Jeremy Strong, An Enemy of the People

    Best Sound Design of a Play 
    Ryan Rumery, Stereophonic 

    Best Sound Design of a Musical 
    Cody Spencer, The Outsiders 

    Best Lighting Design of a Musical 
    Brian MacDevitt and Hana S. Kim, The Outsiders 

    Best Lighting Design of a Play 
    Jane Cox, Apropriate

    Best Costume Design of a Play 
    Dede Ayite, Jaja’s African Hair Braiding  

    Best Costume Design of a Musical 
    Linda Cho, The Great Gatsby

    Best Choreography 
    Justin Peck, Illinoise 

    Best Scenic Design of a Musical 
    Tom Scutt, Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club 

    Best Scenic Design of a Play 
    David Zinn, Stereophonic

    Best Orchestrations 
    Jonathan Tunick, Merrily We Roll Along

    Best Book of a Musical 
    Suffs
    Shaina Taub 

    Nominees

    Best Musical

    Hell’s Kitchen
    Producers: AK Worldwide Media, Inc., Roc Nation, DML Productions, Mandy Hackett, The Sunshine Group, Julie Yorn, The Jacobs Family, No Guarantees Productions, Front Row Productions, Sharpton Swindal Productions, Grove Entertainment, The Jaime Family, John Gore Organization, Terria Joseph, Andy Nahas, James L. Nederlander, Candy Spelling, Clara Wu Tsai, Universal Music Publishing, Independent Presenters Network, Della Pietra Spark Theatricals, Today Tix ARGU, Score 3 Partners, Aaron Lustbader, The Public Theater, Oskar Eustis, Patrick Willingham

    Illinoise
    Producers: Orin Wolf, Seaview, John Styles, David Binder, Emily Blavatnik, Susan Rose, ArKtype/Thomas O. Kriegsmann, David F. Schwartz, Patrick Catullo, Jon B. Platt, Diamond & Melvin, Nelson & Tao, Ruth Hendel, Elysabeth Kleinhans, Ted & Mary Jo Shen, Putnam & Thau, Chase & F.K.R., GJJJM Productions, Steve & Leticia Trauber, Tim Forbes, John Gore Organization, James L. Nederlander, Park Avenue Armory, Chicago Shakespeare Theater, Nate Koch, TT Partners, Fisher Center at Bard

    The Outsiders
    Producers: The Araca Group, American Zoetrope, Olympus Theatricals, Sue Gilad & Larry Rogowsky, Angelina Jolie, Betsy Dollinger, Jonathan & Michelle Clay, Cristina Marie Vivenzio, The Shubert Organization, LaChanze & Marylee Fairbanks, Debra Martin Chase, Sony Music Masterworks, Jamestown Revival Theater, Jennifer & Jonathan Allan Soros, Tanninger Entertainment, Tamlyn Brooke Shusterman, Geffen Playhouse/Howard Tenenbaum/Linda B. Rubin, Kevin Ryan, Mistry Theatrical Ventures, Galt & Irvin Productions, Tulsa Clarks, Paul & Margaret Liljenquist, Bob & Claire Patterson, Voltron Global Media, James L. Nederlander, Warner Bros. Theatre Ventures, The John Gore Organization, Independent Presenters Network, Stephen Lindsay & Brett Sirota, Jeffrey Finn, Playhouse Square, Sue Marks, Indelible InK, Lionheart Productions, The Broadway Investor’s Club, Starhawk Productions, Distant Rumble, Green Leaf Partnership, Michael & Elizabeth Venuti, Leslie Kavanaugh, Deborah & Dave Smith, Belle Productions, Chas & Jen Grossman, Miranda & Sahra Esmonde-White, Rungnapa & Jim Teague, Michael & Molly Schroeder, Casey & Chelsea Baugh, James L. Flautt, Jon L. Morris, Becky Winkler, William Moran Hickey, Jr. & William Horan Hickey, III, Oddly Specific Productions, Melissa Chamberlain & Michael McCartney, Rachel Weinstein, Wavelength Productions, Rob O’Neill & Shane Snow, Eric Stine, Cornice Productions, La Jolla Playhouse

    Suffs
    Producers: Jill Furman, Rachel Sussman, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Malala Yousafzai, Roy Furman, Allison Rubler, Cue to Cue Productions, Sandy Robertson, Kevin Ryan & Diane Scott Carter, Renee Ring & Paul Zofnass, Walport Productions, Judith Teel Davis & Joe Carroll, Tom D’Angora & Michael D’Angora, Louise Gund, Erica Lynn Schwartz, Stone Arch Theatricals/Mayer Productions, Xan Weiser/Matters of the Art, Nothing Ventured Productions, Christin Brecher, Chutzpah Productions, Morgan Steward, 16 Sunset Productions, The Broadway Investor’s Club, Ari Conte, Rose Maxi, Jennifer Friedland, David Carroll, Julie E. Cohen, The Garelicks, Ruth Ann Harnisch, Meena Harris, John Gore Organization, Laura Lonergan, Sally Martin, Peter May, The Mehiels, Nederlander Presentations, Brian Spector, Candy Spelling, Ed Walson, Zuckerberg/Segal, Needle Productions/Oddly Specific Productions, Alissandra Aronow/Wandi Productions, Craig Balsam/Jennifer Kroman, Burkhardt Jones Productions/Adam Cohen, Vibecke Dahle Dellapolla/Samantha Squeri, Funroe Productions/Kim Khoury, Sheri Clark Henriksen/Robert Tichio, Michelle Noh/Todd B. Rubin, Nick Padgett/Vasi Laurence

    Water for Elephants
    Producers: Peter Schneider, Jennifer Costello, Grove Entertainment, Frank Marshall, Isaac Robert Hurwitz, Seth A. Goldstein, Jane Bergère, Elizabeth Armstrong, Jason M. Brady, Carl & Jennifer Pasbjerg, Erica Rotstein & Crista Marie Jackson, Jana Bezdek & Jen Hoguet, John H. Tyson, Rich Entertainment Group, Jeremiah J. Harris, John Gore Organization, Jeff & Shannon Fallick, Patti & Mike Sullivan, Rodney Rigby, Larry Lelli, Bonnie Feld, Yonge Street Theatricals, Larry J. Kroll, The Shubert Organization, Nederlander Presentations, Nancy Gibbs, Jack Lane, Amy & PJ Lampi, Gwen Arment & Vasi Laurence, Mark Parkman Fairview Productions, Nothing Ventured Productions, Pam Hurst-Della Pietra & Stephen Pietra, Steven Spielberg & Kate Capshaw, The Glasshouse USA, Willette & Manny Klausner, John Paterakis, Hope Tschopik Schneider, Patty Baker, The Burcaws & Q’d Up Productions, Crescent Road, Cynthia Stroum, Sally Jacobs & Warren Baker, Tawnia Knox & Stuart Snyder, Madison Wells Live & Takonkiet Viravan, Terry H. Morgenthaler, Pamela Moschetti, Gabrielle Palitz & Fahs Productions, The Roehl Family & Chema Verduzco, Shapiro Jensen Schroeder, Tre Amici Productions, We Eat Dreams Productions, Rachel Weinstein, Maik Klokow, Margot Astrachan, Mehr-BB Entertainment

    Best Revival of a Musical 

    Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club 
    Producers: ATG Productions, Underbelly, Gavin Kalin Productions, Hunter Arnold, Smith & Brant Theatricals, Wessex Grove, Julie Boardman, Tom Smedes, Peter Stern, Heather Shields, Caiola Productions, Kate Cannova, Adam Blanshay Productions & Nicolas Talar, Aleri Entertainment, Alex Levy Productions, Bunny Rabbit Productions, D’Angora Padgett Productions, Cyrene Esposito, David Treatman, Eddie Redmayne, The Array IV, Bad Robot Live, BlueJay Productions, Grace Street Creative Group, Iocane Productions, Jim Kierstead, Marco Santarelli, Tokyo Broadcasting System Television, George Waud, Yonge Street Theatricals, Federman Koenigsberg Productions/Sara Beth Zivitz, Tina Marie Casamento/Jennifer Johns, M. Kilburg Reedy/Tilman Kemmler, Greenspan Proffer/Kat Kit 4, Patty Baker/Matthew Christopher Pietras, Broadway Strategic Return Fund/Red Mountain Theatre Company, Evan Coles/The Cohn Sisters, Nolan Doran/Fakston Productions, Epic Theatricals/Jeffrey Grove, Jessica Goldman Foung/Andrew Paradis, William Frisbie Tilted Marguerite Steed Hoffman/Willette & Manny Klausner, Vasi Laurence/Stephen C Byrd, Brian & Dayna Lee/City Cowboy Productions, Maybe This Time/3D Productions, Nothing Ventured Productions/Theatre Producers of Color, Perfectly Marvelous/Catherine Schreiber & Co, Second Act/Freedom Theatricals, SSP Holdings/Todd & Bronwyn Bradley, Two Ladies/Nicole Eisenberg, Ilana Waldenberg/W Stage Productions, The Wolf Pack/Burnt Umber Productions, The Shubert Organization 

    Gutenberg! The Musical! 
    Producers: Ambassador Theatre Group, Patrick Catullo, Bad Robot Live, Seth A. Goldstein, Isaac Robert Hurwitz, Runyonland Productions, Elizabeth Armstrong, Timothy Bloom, Larry Lelli, Alchemation, The Council, Crescent Road, Wendy Federman, Marcia Goldberg, Hariton deRoy, LD Entertainment, James L. Nederlander, Al Nocciolino, Spencer Ross, Independent Presenters Network, Medley Houlihan/Score 3 Partners, Tryptyk Studios/Iris Smith, Jonathan Demar/Griffin Dohr, Andrew Diamond/Alexander Donnelly, Futurehome Productions/Koenigsberg Subhedar, Roy Gabay/Nicole Eisenberg, Jessica R. Jenen/Linda B. Rubin, Daniel Powell/Amplify Pictures, Jeremy Wein/Walport Productions, Kristin Caskey, Mike Isaacson, Bee Carrozzini 

    Merrily We Roll Along 
    Producers: Sonia Friedman Productions, David Babani, Patrick Catullo, Jeff Romley, Debbie Bisno, Lang Entertainment Group, OHenry Productions, Winkler & Smalberg, Stephanie P. McClelland, Timothy Bloom, Creative Partners Productions, Eastern Standard Time, Fakston Productions, Marc David Levine, No Guarantees, Ted & Mary Jo Shen, Gilad Rogowsky, Playing Field, Key to the City Productions, Richard Batchelder/Trunfio Ryan, FineWomen Productions/Henry R. Muñoz, III, Thomas Swayne/Lamar Richardson, Abrams Corr/Mary Maggio, Osh Ashruf/Brenner-Ivey, Craig Balsam/PBL Productions, deRoy DiMauro Productions/Medley Houlihan, Andrew Diamond/Katler-Solomon Productions, Dodge Hall Productions/Carl Moellenberg, Friedman Simpson/Vernon Stuckelman, William Frisbie/J.J. Powell, Robert Greenblatt/Jonathan Littman, Cleveland O’Neal, III/Tom Tuft, Roth-Manella Productions/Seaview, New York Theatre Workshop 

    The Who’s Tommy 
    Producers: Stephen Gabriel, Ira Pittelman, Sue Gilad & Larry Rogowsky, Mary Maggio & Scott Abrams, Tom Tuft and Glenn Fuhrman, Batman Harris/Elliott Cornelious, Laura Matalon/Spencer Waller, Richard Winkler, Sheldon Stone, Firemused Productions/Stone Arch Theatricals, LeonoffFedermanWolosky Productions/Koenigsberg Batchelder, Roy Putrino/Narang Moran, Rich Martino, Aged in Wood/Lee Sachs, Paul and Margaret Liljenquist, R & R Productions, Marla McNally Phillips, Merrie Robin, O’Neill Snow, Work Light Productions, Nederlander Presentations, Independent Presenters Network, John Gore Organization, Palomino Performing Arts, Wavelength Productions, Robert Nederlander, Jr., Botwin Ignal Dawson, Jamie deRoy, Betsy Dollinger, Stacey Woolf Feinberg, Gold Weinstein, Tyce Green, Jenen Rubin, Jim Kierstead, Marco Santarelli, Nancy Timmers, Thomas B. McGrath, Olympus Theatricals, Goodman Theatre 

    Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Musical

    Eden Espinosa, Lempicka
    Maleah Joi Moon, Hell’s Kitchen
    Kelli O’Hara, Days of Wine and Roses
    Maryann Plunkett, The Notebook
    Gayle Rankin, Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club

    Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role in a Musical

    Brody Grant, The Outsiders
    Jonathan Groff, Merrily We Roll Along
    Dorian Harewood, The Notebook
    Brian d’Arcy James, Days of Wine and Roses
    Eddie Redmayne, Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club

    Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Play

    Betsy Aidem, Prayer for the French Republic
    Jessica Lange, Mother Play
    Rachel McAdams, Mary Jane
    Sarah Paulson, Appropriate
    Amy Ryan, Doubt: A Parable

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    Erik Pedersen

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  • Watch interviews with the 2024 Tony nominees

    Watch interviews with the 2024 Tony nominees

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    The 2024 Tony Awards will be presented live on CBS and Paramount+ Sunday, June 16. 

    Watch “Sunday Morning” and “CBS Mornings” behind-the-scenes features and interviews with this year’s Tony-nominated performers and creatives. 


    Best Musical

    “Hell’s Kitchen,” nominated for 13 Tonys, including best musical


    “Hell’s Kitchen”: Alicia Keys’ life and music inspire a new musical

    08:23

    “Illinoise,” nominated for 4 Tonys including best musical;


    “Illinoise” and the origin of an unlikely Broadway musical

    05:11

    “Suffs,” nominated for 6 Tonys including best musical;


    Hillary Clinton, Malala Yousafzai talk “Suffs” on Broadway

    07:53


    Best Musical Revival

    “Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club,” nominated for 9 Tonys, including best musical revival


    Eddie Redmayne, Gayle Rankin on the return of “Cabaret” to Broadway

    07:23

    “Merrily We Roll Along,” nominated for 7 Tonys, including best musical revival


    Sondheim’s “Merrily We Roll Along” returns to Broadway

    07:34


    Jonathan Groff talks Tony nomination, role in “Merrily We Roll Along”

    05:30

    “The Who’s Tommy,” nominated for 1 Tony (best revival of a musical)


    The Who’s “Tommy” returns to Broadway

    07:54


    Best Play

    “Stereophonic,” nominated for 13 Tonys, including best play


    How the actors of “Stereophonic” became a convincing band

    08:14


    Best Play Revival

    “Appropriate,” nominated for 8 Tonys, including Sarah Paulson for best leading actress in a play


    Tony-nominee Sarah Paulson on “Appropriate”

    07:44


    Sarah Paulson, Branden Jacobs-Jenkins on Tony nominations and Paulson’s return to Broadway

    07:47

    “Purlie Victorious: A Non-Confederate Romp Through the Cotton Patch,” nominated for 6 Tonys, including Leslie Odom Jr. for best leading actor in a play


    Leslie Odom Jr. says Broadway “means something” to the acting industry

    06:57


    Featured Performances

    Roger Bart, Doc Brown in “Back to the Future”


    Roger Bart on playing Doc Brown in “Back to the Future: The Musical”

    05:57

    Shoshana Bean, “Hell’s Kitchen”


    Tony-nominated star Shoshana Bean on collaborating with Alicia Keys on musical “Hell’s Kitchen”

    05:51

    Daniel Radcliffe, “Merrily We Roll Along”


    Daniel Radcliffe on becoming a Tony-nominated actor

    08:48

    Bebe Neuwirth, “Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club”


    Bebe Neuwirth returns to Broadway in “Cabaret” revival

    05:33


    Behind the Scenes

    “The Notebook,” nominated for 3 Tonys, including best book of a musical


    “The Notebook” brings its romance to Broadway

    07:00

    “Here Lies Love,” nominated for 4 Tonys, including David Byrne and Fatboy Slim’s original score


    “Here Lies Love,” the Imelda Marcos dance-pop musical

    08:04


    David Byrne on new musical “Here Lies Love” and its path to Broadway

    02:23

    LaChanze, producer of best new play nominee “Jaja’s African Hair Braiding”


    Broadway star LaChanze on expanding diversity behind the scenes

    07:00


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  • How to get “Hamilton” tickets this fall in Denver

    How to get “Hamilton” tickets this fall in Denver

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    Lin-Manuel Miranda’s Tony-winning “Hamilton” is returning to Denver this fall, but you’ll have to wait until next month to buy tickets.

    At least, that is, if you aren’t a subscriber to Denver Center for the Performing Arts. If you are, a members-only sale will run June 11-17, based on availability. After that, public tickets go on at 10 a.m. on Tuesday, July 9. Call 303-893-4100 or visit hamilton.denvercenter.org to buy.

    The touring Broadway show runs Oct. 16-Nov. 24 at the Buell Theatre. Here’s what else you need to know, according to DCPA officials:

    • There is a maximum purchase limit of 9 tickets per account for the engagement.
    • When tickets go on sale on July 9, prices will range from $49 to $199, with a select number of premium seats available from $229 for all performances.
    • There will be a lottery for 40 $10 seats for all performances, and those details will be announced closer to the engagement.
    • Visit denvercenter.org/hamilton — which is different than the ticket-sales site linked above — for more details as they become available
    • The show is considered an “added attraction” for the regularly scheduled, 2024-25 DCPA season. Visit dpo.st/3VwdmqU for the full season’s schedule and more information.

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    John Wenzel

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  • Legendary Clifton’s is reopening in a struggling downtown L.A. Its owner hopes crowds return.

    Legendary Clifton’s is reopening in a struggling downtown L.A. Its owner hopes crowds return.

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    Andrew Meieran is about to reopen the doors of one of L.A.’s legendary restaurants in a bid to once again make it an offbeat dining and entertainment destination.

    Meieran is the proprietor of Clifton’s Republic, the kitschy, forest-themed restaurant on Broadway in downtown’s Historic Core that for nearly a century served up comfort food such as pot roast, mashed potatoes and Jell-O. The five-story restaurant and bar complex has been closed for the last year after a burst water pipe caused a flood that destroyed the kitchen and collapsed the ceilings on three floors.

    Clifton’s is scheduled to reopen next month after extensive repairs and renovations. Among the changes patrons will find is a basement venue several years in the making that Meieran said is “dedicated to innovation and the magic of experiences” with “entertainment, cocktails and culinary offerings.”

    Meieran is keeping details under wraps for now, but he has demonstrated a knack for creating provocative entertainment and dining venues through an obsessive attention to offbeat details, as well as a willingness to spend more money than most real estate developers to realize his vision and preserve the historic integrity of his projects.

    A Bay Area transplant with a background in real estate development and filmmaking, Meieran emerged on the L.A. scene in 2007 when he opened the Edison, a subterranean nightclub he created in a former power plant deep under a century-old building on 2nd Street.

    In 2010 he took over Clifton’s from the family that had operated it since the 1930s, when founder Clifford Clinton purchased the lease of the former Boos Bros. cafeteria on Broadway and set out to create a space that would evoke the coastal redwoods of the Santa Cruz Mountains, where Clinton spent summers growing up. After taking over, Meieran closed the restaurant for nearly four years for renovations and upgrades and again during the COVID-19 pandemic.

    The Times spoke with Meieran to discuss his plans for reviving Clifton’s after the current shutdown, as well as his thoughts about the evolving nature of the bar and restaurant business during a time of change downtown. The interview has been edited for brevity and clarity.

    Since the pandemic began, the restaurant business has been battered and put through changes that have made it hard for owners to operate profitably. How do you intend to make a go of it?

    People need, and I emphasize “NEED” in capital letters, to be able to disengage from their devices and balance their life with physical and social interaction with people who are there and present around them. We are catering to people who are looking for a much more interactive lifestyle and are craving physical experiences to balance the ubiquitous online presence.

    A view of the interior of Clifton’s Republic.

    (Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)

    Clifton’s exists in L.A.’s collective memory as a vast cafeteria in a whimsical woodland setting, but we don’t see cafeterias much anymore. Why is that? Will we get back Clifton’s as we remember it?

    Cafeterias used to be the dominant form of food delivery and food service and now, with very few exceptions, it’s not. There are clear reasons for that that are understandable and reasonable — you need tons of people in a captive audience to make a cafeteria work. You need volume and you need stable, reasonable food prices that you can pass on to your guests. That’s completely absent in this era.

    So what will Clifton’s include when it reopens?

    It will be fully operating as a restaurant, lounge and nightlife destination that will include the Brookdale historic dining hall people remember as Forest Glen, Walt Disney’s original inspiration for Disneyland. We’ll also reopen the Monarch Bar on the second floor and the Pacific Seas “adventure bar” on the third floor. The basement will open in midsummer.

    Obviously downtown has changed a lot from Clifton’s heyday in the 20th century when Broadway was L.A.’s premier shopping and entertainment district. Occupancy in office buildings, which used to provide a steady source of lunchtime customers, has dwindled substantially since the COVID-19 lockdown. What are the prospects for downtown businesses like Clifton’s?

    It’s obviously a very different environment from what it was before the pandemic. People have altered their habits and patterns and businesses have responded accordingly, with some closing and others shifting their focuses. It’s a tectonic level shift, something that hasn’t happened in generations, and it’s happening very rapidly now. It was triggered initially by the pandemic but followed up by technological shifts that have altered the dining experience such as app-based ordering, touchscreens and the potentially revolutionary impact of artificial intelligence.

    It’s hard for people to really recognize what’s coming next and where this is all going. Obviously that makes it difficult for a business to respond and for other people to make investments and to determine where we’re going to be in 18 months, three years or five years down the road, which is what you need in business.

    Downtown, because of the level of the impact and its density, is slower to respond to change than some other, more nimble communities. It’s like turning a tanker ship that doesn’t turn on a dime. It’s taking a lot more effort and and concerted focus to shift its direction.

    What are the odds that the Historic Core can mount a comeback?

    Broadway, in particular, has all of the ingredients that make for extraordinary projects and extraordinary communities sitting here waiting for the right catalyst. It has density, historic infrastructure and buildings that have an intrinsic beauty and an intrinsic connection to guests, residents,and visitors. And it’s got the location in terms of accessibility with plenty of parking and service by transit.

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    Roger Vincent

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  • Sacramento hit-and-run suspect who left pedestrian in critical condition arrested

    Sacramento hit-and-run suspect who left pedestrian in critical condition arrested

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    (FOX40.COM) — A person accused of a hit-and-run crash that left a pedestrian with critical injuries was arrested.

    At around 1 a.m. on Friday, the Sacramento Police Department responded to reports of a collision near 16th Street between a vehicle and a pedestrian. Upon arrival, officers said they found a 32-year-old man with significant injuries. He was transported to a local hospital and remains in critical condition.

    The driver reportedly fled the scene but was later identified by SPD as 41-year-old Joe Johnson of Sacramento. At around 7 p.m. Johnson was arrested in the 2300 block of Broadway and booked at the Sacramento County Main Jail on felony hit-and-run related charges.

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    Veronica Catlin

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  • Tony Nominee Jessica Stone on Her Journey From Actor to Director of ‘Water for Elephants’

    Tony Nominee Jessica Stone on Her Journey From Actor to Director of ‘Water for Elephants’

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    Director Jessica Stone at the opening night of Water for Elephants at the Imperial Theatre on March 21, 2024 in New York City. Jenny Anderson Photo/Courtesy of Polk & Co

    Jessica Stone—who directed last year’s Tony-winning Best Musical, Kimberly Akimbo, and may just have directed this year’s Tony-winning Best Musical, Water for Elephants—first met her husband, actor Christopher Fitzgerald, onstage. This was back in 1999, when there were still babes in arms and rehearsing, appropriately enough, a New York City Center Encores! production of Babes in Arms, the Rodgers and Hart perennial. Specifically, it was while rehearsing a fast-paced, roughhouse rendition of R&H’s “I Wish I Were in Love Again.”

    “It was a very physical number,” Stone tells Observer. “The first day we met, we were kicking each other and beating each other up.” But the result was gang-busters. “When you work hard at something and people appreciate it, you feel pretty great.”

    Four years later, they returned to the stage of that triumph, Fitzgerald having lured her there, using the ruse that Encores! musical director, Rob Fisher, wanted to see them. When it became clear Fisher was a no-show, Fitzgerald dropped to one knee and popped the question. She said yes. They now have two sons, 17 and 15, but they travel on quite different showbiz planes. 

    Not long after Babes in Arms, Stone traded in her dancing shoes and for a director’s megaphone. Fitzgerald remains a clown prince of Broadway—he handled three roles in the recent revival of Spamalot—while Stone toils behind the scenes.

    Stone sees her switch from dancing to directing as a natural progression. “I always had a desire to collaborate with other kinds of storytellers, to think about the story in a larger way than just the character that I was playing,” she says. 

    Nevertheless, she tiptoed into this new profession. Whenever she had free time between gigs, she’d sign up to assist friends who were already directors—Joe Mantello, Christopher Ashley, David Warren—and acquaint herself with varied works from Shakespeare to Shaw to Simon. 

    Paul Alexander Nolan and the cast of Water For Elephants. Matthew Murphy

    One of her director-friends, the late Nicholas Martin, started her off on solo-directing in 2010 when he provided her with the mainstage at Williamstown and she filled it with A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum. Just to make it characteristically complicated, she used an all-male ensemble and had everybody double-cast. “I loved the puzzle of it,” she admits. “It’s so silly, and that score is just so elegant. It elevates the entire evening. I just love that show. 

    “Even then, I didn’t know that I was pivoting away from acting. I thought, ‘Oh, that was kind of a lark,’ but, when serious job offers to direct started coming in, I realized I was more interested in those than in the acting offers. I’d lost my desire for that a while ago, and I felt much happier, more fulfilled and excited. Also, I had much more energy for directing than I had for acting.”

    Stone guided Kimberly Akimbo—about a teenage girl suffering from a form of progeria, which causes her to age four-and-a-half times faster than normal—to no less than five Tony wins out of seven nominations. The elaborately staged Water for Elephants—which uses horse and elephant puppets to help tell the story of a run-down, one-ring circus traveling through the Depression —has seven Tony noms itself.   

    Both shows seem, on paper, difficult if not impossible to musicalize. “I gravitate toward stories that intertwine pain and hope and joy in any given second,” Stone says. “When I was presented with the opportunity to think about Water for Elephants, it was less about ‘Ooooh, this sounds hard—I want to do it’ and more about ‘How’d I do that—and still have the train and a stampede and puppetry? What might it look like?’”

    She knows who to thank for getting her somewhat unwieldy epic vision on stage. “I had the luck to work with an incredible producing team—Jennifer Costello and Peter Schneider—who allowed a lot of room for research and development and a lot of time to sit down with Rick Elice and the writers to crack the code,” she insists. Then, there’s that surprisingly tuneful and sprightly score from an aggregate of seven known collectively as PigPen Theatre Co.

    Strengthening her stage vision are the idyllic memories of her own circuses from childhood. “ I loved the circus as a kid, and I still love it, as an adult,” she says. “There’s such skill and such fragility in the entire experience, such trust among the company members because they hold each other and carry each other.”

    But circus love wasn’t exactly what drew her to the project. “The attraction was the fact that the main character loses everything, and it changes the entire trajectory of his life,” she opines. “He faces again his life, and what he chooses to do with what’s left of it—how he uses that previous chapter of his life to teach himself to think about what he might want to do next.”

    This would be Jacob Jankowaki, a veterinarian who loses his parents in a car crash. Transitioning from an Ivy League school to anywhere, he hops a cross-country train shared by the Benzini Brothers Circus, and his life is upended. Grant Gustin, in his Broadway debut, has this lead role. He was recommended by friends to Stone, who “knew he was the guy as soon as we met.”

    Young Jacob, too, develops a circus love—specifically for the beautiful horseback-rider (Isabelle McCalla), who unfortunately is married to the ringmaster (Paul Alexander Nolan). I say “young Jacob” because there’s an old Jacob (Gregg Edelman), who muses over the life that he survived.

    Grant Gustin, Paul Alexander Nolan, Isabelle McCalla and the company of Water For Elephants. Matthew Murphy

    Thus running around loose in Water for Elephants is a circus story, a love story, a triangle and a memory play. That’s a lot for a director to crack her whip over. Stone had help from choreographers Shana Carroll and Jesse Robb, scenic designer Takeshi Kata and costume designer David Israel Reynoso, each of them Tony nominated themselves. 

    She also had time. Water for Elephants unfurled its tent for the first time last year for a world premiere at the Alliance Theater in Atlanta. “I think it’s important to give new musicals a chance to breathe,” Stone contends. “People say, ‘Oh, it takes seven years to make a musical,’ and, in a funny way, it really does. It’s not just the time it takes to write and revise and design. You need room to look at it and then to step away from it. We had so much support at the Alliance. It gave us the opportunity to see it on its feet first and then make changes where we still wanted to that the story. We were able to tinker and make a few changes, actually, upon leaving Atlanta.”

    Stone said goodbye to a performing career some time ago and doesn’t miss the acclaim that went with it, but she relishes the kudos she’s getting for directing Water for Elephants. “I love that people really enjoy the show, that they scream at the end of Act I, that they leap to their feet at the end of Act II and tell me it takes their breath away. That’s the thing that moves me. I’m proud of the show we’ve all created. I love the team that I worked with and the company of actors. And I feel really, really proud that this show is getting the kind of praise it’s getting.

    “When you get a nomination for Best Musical, it belongs to everybody. You don’t make a musical without everybody. That’s the thing I’m most pleased about, what nobody told me when I was an actor. When you’re a director, you work so closely with every single person on a project. This one has a lot of people attached to it, and there’s not a bad apple in the bunch. It’s an incredible group of storytellers—on stage and off—and Water for Elephants is truly the thing that makes me happy to hang my hat on because it’s a show that belongs to all of us.”

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    Tony Nominee Jessica Stone on Her Journey From Actor to Director of ‘Water for Elephants’

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    Harry Haun

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  • Tony-nominated star Shoshana Bean on collaborating with Alicia Keys on musical “Hell’s Kitchen”

    Tony-nominated star Shoshana Bean on collaborating with Alicia Keys on musical “Hell’s Kitchen”

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    Tony-nominated star Shoshana Bean on collaborating with Alicia Keys on musical “Hell’s Kitchen” – CBS News


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    Shoshana Bean is one of the Tony-nominated stars of the musical “Hell’s Kitchen.” It’s inspired by the life of Alicia Keys, who developed the show. The musical follows Ali, who’s yearning for independence from her overprotective mother, played by Bean.

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