Comedian, actor and writer Tim Murray, famed for his sharp-witted TikToks and stage work that blends Broadway flair with queer culture, is on his way to Orlando. Murray is bringing his solo show Witches!, a dazzling mix of stand-up, music and drag, to the Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts to mark the spooky season with a comedic Halloween cabaret.
“It is exciting and I am pumped to do it again,” Murray tells Orlando Weekly. “But, I want this to be the last time because I really want to write a new show. It is a big production and a lot of work with costumes, makeup, wigs, props and prep for the show.”
In just over an hour, Murray blends storytelling, musical comedy, improv, drag and crowd work, seamlessly combining all of his passions, topped off with a perfectly pointy hat. He belts out parody songs and riffs with audience members about their personal favorite witches all while dressed in his Wicked Witch of the West best.
First staged in 2022 as a one-off Halloween show, Witches! quickly grew into a phenomenon. Murray toured the show across multiple U.S. cities before taking it to the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, where he refined it for international audiences.
“I want people to experience the feeling of celebration with their friends and to grow up and feel proud of being queer,” Murray says. “Going to Fire Island, trying on wigs, playing dumb games — it’s about the joy of finding your people.”
On his journey with Witches!, Murray has created a coven of fans. One fan gave him a VHS copy of The Worst Witch after he joked about not knowing the film during a set. An Orlando local named Patty was so moved by the show’s message of finding your coven that she had Murray’s face tattooed on her arm.
“I want people to feel frivolity and joy, especially in this current time we’re living in,” Murray says. “I just want people to be able to turn their brains off for an hour and laugh and leave feeling refreshed and like they can party for a little bit.”
For Murray, the project is personal. He grew up obsessed with witches, from Bewitched and Sabrina the Teenage Witch to Buffy’s Willow and Hocus Pocus. As a queer performer, those spellcasters embodied power, transformation and community. That throughline becomes the show’s message, urging audiences to “find your coven.”
“I have always felt like I loved being creative, but I had a hard time finding my path,” Murray says. “So, this show felt like a way to get 10,000 hours doing all my favorite things in one show.”
This fall, Murray will finally capture Witches! on film for an upcoming comedy special as a final document. Beyond that, he has his eyes on new creative horizons, including writing Broadway musicals and plays. He’s also set to perform in the 10th anniversary of I Put a Spell on You, a star-studded Halloween concert event in New York.
But for now, he’s savoring the chance to share his witchy world live with audiences one last time.
“I’ve wanted to bring this show to Orlando for a long time,” Murray says. “The fact that it’s finally happening on this last tour is thrilling. I just love that city, I always have a great time there.”
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On Sunday, Cabaret producers announced the star has been forced to “withdraw” from the Broadway show after developing a “serious case of sepsis.” They wrote on the official Cabaret at the Kit Kat ClubInstagram account:
“Due to a serious case of sepsis, Billy Porter must also withdraw from the production. His doctors are confident that he will make a full recovery but have advised him to maintain a restful schedule. “
Whoa! Scary!
According to the Mayo Clinic, “sepsis is a serious condition in which the body responds improperly to an infection. The infection-fighting processes turn on the body, causing the organs to work poorly. Sepsis may progress to septic shock. This is a dramatic drop in blood pressure that can damage the lungs, kidneys, liver and other organs. When the damage is severe, it can lead to death. Early treatment of sepsis improves chances for survival.”
How terrifying! We’re glad it’s been caught and Billy is prioritizing his health.
The producers also announced the show will be coming to an end on September 21 and that Marty Lauter and David Merino will step in to take over the role of Emcee for Billy for the final two weeks.
We’re sending him so much healing energy! We hope he makes a full recovery. Share your support in the comments down below.
Candlelight set the mood for a cozy Saturday evening that delivered adrenaline-inducing performances, including a chair acrobat and a juggling duo, clownish comedy skits and vulnerable poetry. Eight acts — some with deaf performers and others who are allies of the deaf community — were showcased on night two of the 258 (ASL slang for “very Interesting”) Deaf Variety Show designed by deaf artists for deaf audiences…
The Phoenix Theatre Company’s Artistic Director Michael Barnard brings a fresh but faithful take to the classic Kander and Ebb musical “Cabaret” to the stage, now in its final week, through Sept. 1. The musical has long since been revered as a classic tale of friendship, endurance and the dangers of ignoring a changing political climate, something scarily apropos for modern times…
They’re talking about the house that Ruth built over at Stages.
No, not Yankee Stadium. Not Babe Ruth.
The house, in this case, is Atlantic Records, and Stages is talking about Ruth Brown, whose musical talents and string of No. 1 hits propped up Atlantic when it was just a little startup label and whose life and legacy are featured in Miss Rhythm: The Legend of Ruth Brown, now playing on their Rochelle and Max Levit Stage.
Brown’s name isn’t heard as much these days, though she was crowned the “Queen of Rhythm and Blues” in the ‘50s, is a possessor of both a Tony and a Grammy, and is in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. This approximately 80-minute, intermission-less cabaret-style production seeks to rectify this situation. Created by David Nehls and Sheryl McCallum, this “peek inside the Book of Ruth” – literally based on Brown’s autobiography, Miss Rhythm: The Autobiography of Ruth Brown, Rhythm and Blues Legend, written with Andrew Yule and released in 1996 – is designed to both introduce Brown to new audiences and maybe teach those that may recognize the name and know a song or two more about her.
Nehls and McCallum tell Brown’s story in a linear fashion. We go from her parents’ meeting and her upbringing in Portsmouth, Virginia, where the then Ruth Weston sang with her father and in church, to her teen years, when she would sneak into clubs, eventually deciding to run away from home to pursue “devil music” against her father’s wishes. We learn about her relationship with Jimmy Earl Brown, which got her a brief musical partnership, an annulled marriage, and the last name we know her by today. We find out that it was her meeting with Blanche Calloway, older sister of Cab and an orchestra leader in her own right, that led her to the men over at Atlantic Records, who signed her from a hospital bed, where she lay recovering from a terrible accident. The suits from Atlantic also convinced her to move from ballads to rhythm and blues, with the hits raining down after. That said, the years that followed didn’t all treat Brown as kindly.
McCallum serves as the evening’s storyteller, supported by a five-piece band. She doesn’t play Brown per se, but she embodies her persona so well as she regales with stories and performs some of Brown’s greatest tunes, that it’s easy to forget that she doesn’t. It’s McCallum’s skill at channeling Brown that allays possibly the first and biggest concern about Miss Rhythm: That the biographical text wrapped around the music would end up being the equivalent of someone reading from a Wikipedia page. It doesn’t – not between Kenny Moten’s snappy direction and the vivacious McCallum.
McCallum plays to the crowd with ease, and it’s not long before everyone is in the palm of her hand. Early on, she encourages the audience to engage – just as Brown would have wanted it – and clap their hands and tap their toes to the music. And, to be fair, there is an irresistible stream of toe-tappers in the show, which kicks off with a couple: “This Little Girl’s Gone Rockin’,” “Mambo Baby,” and “I Want to Do More.”
Ronnie Mason and Sheryl McCallum in Miss Rhythm: The Legend of Ruth Brown at Stages.
Photo by Melissa Taylor Photography
McCallum makes it look easy as she tackles Brown’s biggest hits, like “Mama, He Treats Your Daughter Mean” and “5-10-15 Hours,” which gets an assist from Ronnie “King” Mason, Jr. The smooth-voiced Mason, Jr., the show’s pianist and conductor, has great chemistry with McCallum and the crowd, even engaging in a pre-show drink with them. On the ballad side, “Be Anything (But Be Mine)” is the production’s first showstopper, and a good part of that can be attributed to Brent Nabors, who plays tenor and baritone sax in the show. “Wild, Wild Young Men” is used to chilling effect to reflect the realities of being Black and traveling in segregated times, and the wistful “Oh What a Dream,” associated with Brown’s decline, is hauntingly beautiful.
Brown herself brought a certain theatricality to the stage, and McCallum owns it as well, particularly on numbers like “Cabbage Head” and “If I Can’t Sell It, I’ll Keep Sittin’ on It,” the latter of which, delightfully bawdy and suggestive, might be reason enough to see the show all by itself.
The set, from Scenic Designer Joel Burkholder and Properties Designer Jodi Bobrovsky, is intimate and perfect for the production. Imagined as a smoky little club – Club Levit, to be exact, a nod to the Gordy stage on which the show is being performed – with each aspect reminiscent of days past. The past glows with a modern style, especially under Janessa A. Harris’s lighting designs.
There’s a timelessness to Meghan Anderson Doyle’s costume designs, too, and of note is McCallum’s lovely red pantsuit. It’s adorned with long stretches of fabric on the sides, giving it the appearance of a dress, which turns out to be very practical during a great moment that won’t be spoiled here. But the past is always present, especially with that old-fashioned, Shure 55-style mic standing on the stage. That mic proved incredibly crucial to the show, though not in a way anyone probably hoped.
First, there were some lovely touches in the sound design by Edward Ryan Thornton, like the tinny music that greets you as you enter Club Levit. But McCallum’s mic didn’t work, forcing her to carry that old-fashioned, Shure 55-style standing mic all around the stage. McCallum, however, was a pro. If not for the way the sound dropped when McCallum ventured a step too far away (and some jarring noise earlier in the show), it probably wouldn’t have been that noticeable.
The one aspect of the production that gives me pause is the use of video screens to display song information. Two screens flank the stage, displaying music video-style details about each song that undermines the show’s vibe more than a little. On the other hand, our first glimpse of the real Brown is on those screens, via a black-and-white clip from the ‘50s of Brown being introduced by Willie Bryant on an episode of Showtime at the Apollo, and some of the production’s most moving moments are shown on those screens, like footage of Brown’s Tony Award acceptance speech and a bit of Bonnie Raitt’s speech during Brown’s induction. So, they definitely add something overall.
Both those moments show Brown’s legacy being cemented, albeit fairly late. Brown went through a 20-year legal battle to get the royalties owed to her and flipped her experiences into the creation of the Rhythm and Blues Foundation in 1988, and this is probably the part of Brown’s life, the part not singing on a stage, that gets the least attention by the public but plays an important part in her legacy, too. Luckily, there’s now a show out there where you can get the best of both worlds – Brown’s unforgettable music and the legacy that should be just as unforgettable.
Performances are scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Wednesdays through Fridays, 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. Saturdays, and 2:30 p.m. Sundays through October 13. For more information, call 713-537-0123 or visit stageshouston.com. $52-$105.
Life is a cabaret for reality star Luann de Lesseps, and she’s bringing that energy to town for her new stage show “Marry F Kill.” The 59-year-old famously known as Countess Luann began her television career on the Bravo reality television juggernaut “The Real Housewives of New York City.” The former nurse practitioner not only became famous for airing her social life on “Real Housewives” but became a kind of pop music icon in the nightclub scene with her 2010 chart-topping dance hit “Money Can’t Buy You Class.”…
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?
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.
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…
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 🐝
Adam Lambert and 23-year-old Auli’i Cravalho (the voice of the title character in the film “Moana”) will take over as the Emcee and Sally Bowles, respectively, in “Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club” beginning Sept. 16.
Provided
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Despite divided reviews and widespread ridicule of Eddie Redmayne’s performance as the mysterious Emcee on the Tony Awards (which may seem bewildering and creepy when taken out of context), the new Broadway revival of “Cabaret” has managed to remain a hot-selling ticket.
That’s mainly due to Redmayne’s star power and the ingenuity, energy, and expense of its immersive concept, including a 75-minute pre-show in which audience members engage with performers and imbibe alcoholic drinks throughout the theater. Now comes the big question: Will the show (which reportedly has substantial weekly running costs) survive financially after Redmayne and Gayle Rankin, who plays Sally Bowles, exit the show on Sept. 14?
Last week, the show announced that Adam Lambert (a 2009 standout of “American Idol” who has gone on to front for the rock band Queen and record solo albums) and 23-year-old Auli’i Cravalho (the voice of the title character in the film “Moana”) will take over as the Emcee and Sally Bowles, respectively, beginning Sept. 16 for a limited run through March 30. Both will be making their Broadway debuts.
Years ago, Lambert appeared in the national tour of “Wicked,” and Cravalho recently appeared in the film adaptation of “Mean Girls” and a one-night concert production of “Children of Eden” at Lincoln Center. Both Lambert and Cravalho will only play seven performances a week rather than the standard eight.
Peter Dinklage and more will lead starry ‘Twelfth Night’ next summer
Peter Dinklage is scheduled to be part of the “Twelfth Night” cast during Shakespeare in the Park’s return season in 2025.REUTERS/David Swanson
If one thing in particular is missing this summer in New York, it is Shakespeare in the Park, which is currently on hiatus due to long-overdue reconstruction work at the Delacorte Theatre in Central Park.
Looking to the future, the Public Theater has released initial casting for the production of “Twelfth Night” that will reopen the Delacorte in August 2025, including Peter Dinklage (“Game of Thrones”) as Malvolio, Jesse Tyler Ferguson (“Modern Family”) as Andrew Aguecheek, Lupita Nyong’o (“12 Years a Slave”) as Viola, and Sandra Oh (“Grey’s Anatomy”) as Olivia.
In 2009, the Public Theater presented an extraordinary Shakespeare in the Park production of “Twelfth Night” with Anne Hathaway, Hamish Linklater, Audra McDonald, and Raul Esparza. In 2018, a musical adaptation of “Twelfth Night” was produced as part of the Public Works series with Shaina Taub and Nikki M. James.
Osborne joins Washington and Gyllenhaal for ‘Othello’
Molly Osborne, a little-known English actress, will play Desdemona in next season’s Broadway production of “Othello” opposite Denzel Washington as Othello and Jake Gyllenhaal as Iago.
In a statement, director Kelly Leon praised Osborne’s “unique blend of heart and intellect, coupled with a natural vulnerability.” By comparison, a high-profile 2016 Off-Broadway production of “Othello” featured David Oyelowo as Othello, Daniel Craig as Iago, and a then-unknown Rachel Brosnahan as Desdemona.
Shaina Taub lands another activist role in ‘Ragtime’
In our last piece of casting news this week, Shaina Taub, who recently won Tony Awards for her score and book for the new musical “Suffs,” and who plays the women’s rights activist Alice Paul in the musical, is set to portray another early 20th–century political activist, Emma Goldman, in the upcoming City Center gala presentation of the musical “Ragtime” in the fall.
Also new to the cast are Colin Donnell (“The Shark is Broken”) as Father, Ben Levi Ross (“Dear Evan Hansen”) as Younger Brother, and Joy Woods (“The Notebook”) as Sarah. They join the previously announced Caissie Levy (“Frozen”) as Mother, Joshua Henry (“The Scottsboro Boys”) as Coalhouse Walker, and Brandon Uranowitz (“Falsettos”) as Tateh.
Eddie Redmayne as the Emcee in the 2024 revival of “Cabaret.”
Photo by Marc Brenner/provided
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“Willkommen, bienvenue, welcome” to the newest Cabaret revival on Broadway.
Considering all of the ingenuity, energy, and expense that went into creating and designing the 75-minute immersive preshow for the new Broadway revival of “Cabaret” (in which audience members are led through narrow alleyways into art deco speakeasy bars overflowing with champagne and liquor and featuring roaming dancers and musicians), not to mention the reconstruction of the theater itself into an in-the-round nightclub space (with a new onstage mezzanine level and newly-installed ledges for holding drinks in between rows of seats), one might easy forget about the musical itself.
One of the most daring and politically-edged musicals of Broadway’s golden age, “Cabaret,” which premiered in 1966 in a groundbreaking production directed by Hal Prince and starring Joel Grey as the mysterious Emcee, follows Cliff, an American writer, who travels to Berlin in the early 1930s and observes how Hitler’s rise to power was greeted by the city’s inhabitants with a mix of open arms, indifference, and weary resignation.
What made the musical so revolutionary, in addition to its political content and disturbing visuals, was how the plot was indirectly reflected in elaborate production numbers taking place at the Kit Kat Klub, the nightclub ruled over by the Emcee and featuring diva performer Sally Bowles.
Over the years, “Cabaret” has become a creature of repeated reinvention and reexamination, including Bob Fosse’s 1972 film adaptation (which overhauled the script and score with an eye towards cinematic realism) and the sexy-chic 1998 Broadway revival (led by Alan Cumming as the Emcee and the late Natasha Richardson as Sally, who were followed by numerous replacements), which was remounted at Studio 54 in 2014.
Gayle Rankin (c.) as Sally Bowles with the Kit Kat Girls in the 2024 “Cabaret” revival on Broadway.Photo by Marc Brenner/provided
The cultural and political turmoil evoked in “Cabaret,” including the rise of antisemitism and threat of violent fascism, has probably never felt more urgent during the show’s 60-year-history than it does today. (Of course, one wishes that the state of the world was such that “Cabaret” felt less relevant and more improbable.)
The new Broadway revival (which premiered in London in 2021 and directed by Rebecca Frecknall) stars film actor Eddie Redmayne (who last appeared on Broadway in 2010 in “Red”) as the Emcee and Scottish actress Gayle Rankin (“Perry Mason”) as the reckless and hedonistic Sally, who are joined by Ato-Blankson Wood (“Slave Play”) as Cliff, Tony Award winner Bebe Neuwirth as the pragmatic landlady Fraulein Schneider, and Steven Skybell (“Fiddler on the Roof in Yiddish”) as the Jewish fruit seller Herr Schultz.
Steven Skybell and Bebe Newirth in the 2024 “Cabaret” revival on BroadwayPhoto by Marc Brenner/provided
Staged in the round (with circular patterns of choreography and a center-stage platform that rises and falls), it builds upon the environmental atmosphere, decadent flare and gender fluidity of the 1997 production (and maintains its version of the script and score), though ultimately becoming more tawdry, bleak and unsettling than before.
Whereas Cumming’s Emcee openly mocked the Third Reich (and ultimately became one of its victims), Redmayne’s impish, physically and vocally-twisted Emcee is closer in style to Joel Grey’s sinister interpretation of the character, as a demonic clown who metaphorically reflects the rise of the Nazi regime. Rankin’s self-absorbed and demanding Sally is rough and raw and unapologetically unsympathetic, whereas Wood makes for a sensitive Cliff (making the most of a rather flavorless role) and Neuwirth and Skybell are endearing and full of personality.
One might question whether the lengthy prologue enhances or takes away from the musical itself, which together last approximately four hours (imagine sitting through “Macbeth” in its entirety after attending “Sleep No More”) and whether some of the other production choices and characterizations are too extreme. However, it all makes for an exciting, edgy, and painstakingly-detailed production.
August Wilson Theatre, 245 W. 52nd St., kitkat.club.
On the Upper West Side, where she’s lived for years in an apartment with a large terrace, Bridget Everett sits down to talk about her HBO series Somebody Somewhere, the quiet and emotional family story set in Everett’s own Kansas hometown. The neighborhood has little of the flash of the downtown cabaret scene that Everett in many ways defines, but the off-stage Everett is very different from the on-stage one.
Somebody Somewhere, which Everett co-created, plays out like an alternate version of her life. Her character Sam is grieving the loss of her sister, like Everett did when she lost her sister Brinton in 2008. Sam has an earth shatteringly beautiful voice but is remarkably closed off. Surprisingly, Everett says she’s even more so. Her revealing, raucous cabaret acts feel safer to her than much of her real life. “I know that may seem bizarre, but with my own friends, with my own relationships, I have a really hard time sharing things, because I feel like it destabilizes me. But through the show, I’m learning that that’s not true,” she says. “There’s something that happens in the very last episode, which is a reflection on who I am. It’s about the things you do to protect yourself. I’m 50 years old, but it’ll make you feel like a kid, kind of.”
The show has made Everett, long a star in New York’s theater scene, a figure on the national stage. Over years in the city, she gradually found herself in a new kind of cabaret scene, developing an act that is fully original in its humor and raunchiness. She’s a signature at the celebrated venue Joe’s Pub, where she performs with her band The Tender Moments and has made fans out of the likes of Patti LuPone. Somebody Somewhere is closer to home.
Everett in season two of Somebody Somewhere.
Sandy Morris / HBO
In season 2, Sam is still making slow progress towards repairing her relationship with her sister, understanding her friends, and accepting that her parents are aging. Everett is herself taking some of the same steps Sam is. “I’m just a little baby girl sheep. I’ve lived alone for a very long time, me and my dog, and I’m very happy there. But Sam is being forced into life and she’s two steps up, one step back. And I’m trying to just shave a little bit of her knowledge off as we go,” she explains. “We’re pushing Sam beyond where I’m comfortable going. Because if it were up to me, Sam would always be depressing, on the couch.”
Living life has always terrified Everett a bit and the pandemic only made things harder. “COVID’s been 10 steps back for me. I’m no different than anybody else. I’ve been trying to work through a lot of depression, just based on the isolation of it all,” she says. Singing has always given her freedom. Somebody Somewhere does, too. “Karaoke was the first time I felt really alive. Being on top of the bars, singing ‘Piece of My Heart’ with my shirt open. I felt on the edge of life, I felt awake, I felt present,” she says. “This is just another iteration of that. That’s why I have to be in the writer’s room. I have to be involved in what’s on the set. I have to be involved with every bit of it, because it has to feel like it’s me.”
With the show, Everett has created a world with a sense of warmth that recalls her artistic community in New York. Sam’s sister Tricia is played by Mary Catherine Garrison, Everett’s friend and former roommate. Murray Hill, who plays a life of the party agricultural professor, is another longtime friend and Jeff Hiller, cast as Sam’s close friend Joel, orbited around her for years. On set in Illinois, Everett, Hiller, and Hill lived together in a home they called the Ding Dong Dorm. “It feels like family. You have a cocktail at the end of the night and talk about your day, go over your lines and then get up at 5:30 in the morning and you see each other in the kitchen,” she says. “You end up waving and just like, ‘Did you sleep okay?’ ‘Not really. Did you sleep okay?’ ‘Not really.’ ‘Okay. I’ll see you there.’ ‘All right.’”
“Most of my friends know that I can retreat very easily. So they make calls.”
Everett’s had a similar dynamic at home, but sometimes doesn’t realize it. “Murray used to call me every night for my check-ins. It’s interesting how isolated I have felt and feel like I am sometimes, but that’s not really the truth. I have people all around me. Most of my friends know that I can retreat very easily. So they make calls,” she says. “I try, but my default is, ‘I don’t want to bother them.’ And a lot of my friends just see past that and see through that. And that’s a large part, too, of my time living with Mary Catherine and my friend Zach, they really put in a lot of work to crack me open a little bit.”
It was supposed to be the first season that was about grief. Then last May, as the show was in pre-production, Mike Hagerty, who featured prominently in season 1 as Everett’s father, died suddenly. “It was a lot of really quick thinking and re-imagining scripts. It came together, thank God, trying to figure out how to carry him with us, as opposed to leaving him behind.”
A glimmer of sorrow is visible, even in the sunnier storyline and a new layer was added to the question of how a family reconfigures when a member is gone. “When somebody leaves the family, it sets it off its axis. Because in the show, Holly, and in my case, my sister Brinton, was a buffer or a safe place. When she was gone, then it’s like, where are you, in your own family? Where do you fit in?” Everett asks.
Mike Hagerty and Bridget Everett in Somebody Somewhere.
HBO
Season 1 explores the tension between Sam, who is single, and her sister Tricia, married with a child, as they mourn their sister Holly and experience loneliness in different ways. “Just because somebody has a different kind of family unit, it doesn’t mean that the ache in their heart isn’t the same. I historically, think of things in those terms. Like when you have all that happiness, could this possibly be as hard for you as it is for me?” says Everett. “As Sam has learned some of that stuff, so has Bridget, through the show. I still think that I have it harder than anybody else. I’m just kidding!”
Everett hopes other people can see elements of themselves, or their families, in the show. “One of the biggest takeaways, for me, is the message of the first episode: Don’t give up. It really is about taking a chance on yourself and trying to plug back into life and all the complications that that involves. I watch it and it makes me feel more hopeful that I might feel my old self, living my life,” she says.
“Maybe nobody will watch it,” Everett says, at one point. They will.
Editor
Adrienne Gaffney is an editor at ELLE who previously worked at WSJ Magazine and Vanity Fair.