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Tag: Charmed

  • Alyssa Milano takes on role of Roxy Hart in Broadway’s ‘Chicago’

    Alyssa Milano takes on role of Roxy Hart in Broadway’s ‘Chicago’

    NEW YORK CITY (WABC) — Alyssa Milano has been a TV staple since she was 10 with iconic shows like “Who’s the Boss,” “Charmed, and “Melrose Place.”

    The New York native is making her Broadway debut in “Chicago.”

    The name on everybody’s lips is going to be…Alyssa. She’s stepping into the iconic shoes of Roxy Hart.

    While you likely know her from TV and film, Milano’s roots are in theater.

    The star is ready to charm audiences as the curtain has officially risen for her in “Chicago.”

    “To see my picture under ‘Chicago’ is just like, dreams really do come true. Everyone keep dreaming. Dream big. But there are little things that each actor who plays Roxy tweaks, which I had no idea about. So, so we just had a great time with that,” Milano said. “And I think the thing that was so important to Anne Rankin when she choreographed it was just knowing that different actors were going to take on this role. And how they can alter the choreography for each actor and their strengths. So, we’ve, you know, the making of Roxy, that’s what I keep calling it every day. I am like, well, what are we going to discover today about her?”

    It’s a character that Milano says she feels empowered playing.

    “Well, I think that she really was and the way I’m looking at the character is she’s a feminist, right? She is a true, something happened to her. She, she got famous for maybe, you know, things she shouldn’t have gotten famous for, but she is taking advantage of it. She’s ambitious. She always, again, dreamed big,” Milano said. “My mom used to say never stop chasing your moonbeams. And so, when I look at Roxy, I think she’s someone who never stopped chasing her moonbeams. And I think as the show progresses, the thing that’s so special is that she forms this alliance with Velma.”

    Milano said that she’s had many “Velma’s” in the business throughout her career.

    “I’ve been so blessed. I’ve been so blessed. I mean, Judith Light. Who has always been iconic, just the most supportive. And of course, Katherine Helmond, may she rest in peace. But I was so blessed to grow up on ‘Who’s the Boss?’ and have Judith, who is such, first of all, we used to joke that she could cry one eye at a time. She’s so brilliant. It is, it is mind-boggling. So to have that professionalism to emulate was, yeah. So beneficial. But also just such a warm, kind person. And also, you know, an activist, you know, from the very beginning, beginning. So I was raised looking at her saying, oh, this is what you do when you’re a celebrity. You use your name for causes that are important to you. Yeah. So yeah, I would say even there is a huge age difference because I was just a kid. I think she was very, very important in my life. I’m very blessed. And to still be doing this, you know, 40 years later is a blessing. It really is,” Milano said.

    Although a veteran actress, Milano said it was “terrifying” in all the right ways to take on Broadway.

    “My daughter, who’s now in musical theater she’s 10, she came over to me and she said Mom, you’re going to be on Broadway. And I started crying, you know, obviously. And I was like, so, what have I done? You know, and I said, we had this big family meeting with my parents and my kids and my husband and all the, all the people, the dogs. And I was like, I don’t know if I could do this guys. I don’t know if I can leave everybody. And it just seems really daunting. And my daughter with a totally straight face looked at me and she went, ‘You’d be an idiot not to do this,’” she said.

    “Are you ready to see your name in lights?” Eyewitness News Entertainment Reporter Joelle Garguilo asked.

    “Woo! I don’t know,” Milano said. “Yes. You know, I did that. And I will be able to do that. And I will be able to have said, you know what? We and I can look at my kids and say to them, we can do hard things. Yeah. We can do things we never did before or never even thought we’d do before. And our dreams can come true. And, I think that the biggest gift is to be able to look at them and say, stick with it. Dreams come true. You got to just stick it, stick it out.”

    You can catch watch Milano in “Chicago” through November 10 at the Ambassador Theatre.

    ALSO READ: Neighborhood Eats: Casa Della Mozzarella on Arthur Avenue’s family history

    Neighborhood Eats takes you to the Little Italy of the Bronx for a taste of mozzarella that’s considered the best in the city.

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    Joelle Garguilo

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  • Shannen Doherty Remembered by Co-Stars and Friends

    Shannen Doherty Remembered by Co-Stars and Friends

    Photo: MICHAEL TRAN/AFP via Getty Images

    Shannen Doherty — who played a Beverly Hills High student, a Heather, and a Charmed one — died this week. She was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2015, which metastasized to her brain in 2023. Friends and co-stars poured out their grief for one of the women who defined the ’90s. Holly Marie Combs, Doherty’s co-star on Charmed and ally in the show’s long afterlife, said there was a hole in her heart. “My most ardent champion. My loyal protector. My best friend,” she wrote on Instagram. “You taught me the meaning of family. You were and will be forevermore my sister. I love you.” Sarah Michelle Gellar, one of Doherty’s closest friends, wrote “I keep reminding myself it only hurts this much because, there was so much love.”

    Her Mallrats director called Doherty “an American icon” and claimed she broke the internet before the internet. Her on-screen brother, Jason Priestley, wrote: “She was a force of nature and I will miss her.” Many of these same co-stars tributed Luke Perry when he died suddenly of a stroke in 2019. Rose McGowan, who replaced Doherty on Charmed, wrote she had “the heart of a lion. Passion for craft is often mislabeled as trouble. Shannen was passion.”

    A tribute from Fox Entertainment said the actor elevated the network with her craft. “All of us at Fox mourn the loss of our friend Shannen Doherty and grieve alongside her family, friends, and fans,” Fox said in a statement. “We are grateful for Shannen’s undeniable talent and light, especially through her unforgettable, groundbreaking role in Beverly Hills, 90210, the iconic series that cemented her place among television royalty and helped define the bold, provocative identity Fox became known for. While Shannen was far too young to leave us, over her decadeslong career, she built a legacy that will be remembered and celebrated forever.” Charmed co-star Brian Krause wrote simply, “You showed me what strength is.” Below are more remembrances from Brian Austin Green, Gabrielle Carteris, Dan Savage, and more.

    This post has been updated.

    Bethy Squires

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  • Holly Marie Combs’ Heart Shattering Tribute To ‘Better Half’ Shannen Doherty: ‘A Part Of Me Is Missing’ – Perez Hilton

    Holly Marie Combs’ Heart Shattering Tribute To ‘Better Half’ Shannen Doherty: ‘A Part Of Me Is Missing’ – Perez Hilton

    Holly Marie Combs just broke our hearts AGAIN while mourning her bestie Shannen Doherty.

    Taking to her Instagram Story on Monday with a lengthy caption in honor of her Charmed co-star, who died on Saturday following a cancer battle, Holly revealed how deeply she is feeling this loss, writing:

    “My better half of 31 years. There is a hollow in my chest and I can’t seem to catch my breath. A part of me is missing even though I know exactly what you would say to me right now. I know exactly what you would tell me to do right now.”

    The loss of a loved one — let along an onscreen sister — is never easy!

    Related: Shannen FINALLY Settled Divorce The Day Before She Died!

    The one thing keeping Holly strong is reminding herself the Heathers star’s spirit will live on in herself and all those she touched, the actress continued:

    “I know your undying spirit will live in me and my kids who you loved as your own. They will walk with your sense of purpose and pride. They will be truthful and stand up for what is right. No matter what and zero f**ks given. Your fire will live on in them and the many other Charmed ones you helped raise. A fierce fighter til the end. My most ardent champion. My loyal protector. My best friend. You taught me the meaning of family. You were and will be forevermore my sister. I love you.”

    Whoa. So beautifully written… and now we’re crying again! This passing just hurts so much. See Holly’s full tribute, which included many sweet photos of the duo from over the years, HERE. Plus, see an intimate moment between Holly’s son Finely and auntie Shannen:

    The Picket Fences alum then uploaded a montage of photos set to Carrie Underwood‘s See You Again (HERE), captioning it:

    “Heaven got a little bit louder. You know where I’ll be waiting. #Legacy @thehouseofhalliwell”

    FYI, The House of Halliwell is the Charmed rewatch podcast Shannen had signed on to do with Holly, Drew Fuller, and Brian Krause. According to the show’s second episode description, they were able to record five episodes with the 53-year-old before her passing. So fans will get to hear just a little bit more from the beloved star…

    Shannen and Holly played sisters Piper and Prue Halliwell, respectively, on Charmed starting in the late ’90s. They starred alongside Alyssa Milano — who had a messy AF relationship with the Beverly Hills, 90210 alum. Despite the years-long feud, Alyssa released a statement after her former castmate’s death, saying:

    “It’s no secret that Shannen and I had a complicated relationship, but at its core was someone I deeply respected and was in awe of. She was a talented actress, beloved by many and the world is less without her. My condolences to all who loved her.”

    Several other co-stars and friends of Shannen’s have been vocal about her death, as well. It’s truly been such an outpouring of love! Our hearts go out to all her family and friends grieving this tremendous loss…

    [Image via MEGA/Daniel Tanner/WENN]

    Perez Hilton

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  • Shannen Doherty Admits 90210 Firing Was All HER Fault! – Perez Hilton

    Shannen Doherty Admits 90210 Firing Was All HER Fault! – Perez Hilton

    Shannen Doherty has been dropping truth bombs on her podcast. Which we obviously love.

    But telling hard truths sometimes means looking at your own mistakes with a really honest lens. And we’re glad to say she’s doing that, too! After she and Holly Marie Combs claimed co-star Alyssa Milano was fully to blame for Shannen’s ousting from Charmed, this time, she’s taking full ownership for her firing from Beverly Hills 90210!

    TV brother Jason Priestley stopped by the Let’s Be Clear podcast this time, and they eventually got to the touchy subject of Shannen’s firing from their hit TV show. And Shannen, now 52, admits it was on her. She began:

    Yeah, at the time she had been in the industry a long time — but she was also only in her mid 20s and in some ways just didn’t know how to handle these really difficult subjects.

    Related: Jason Dishes Dirt On Young Brad Pitt

    Jason actually told her he felt guilty about not being more compassionate at the time, but Shannen quickly stopped him and said her behavior was no one’s fault but her own:

    It’s so brave of her to talk really candidly about all of this. Hear the whole conversation for yourself (below):

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tklZnmXMrLc

    [Image via The Kelly Clarkson Show/Beverly Hills 90210/YouTube.]

    Perez Hilton

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  • Shannen Doherty Says ‘Charmed’ Fired Her Amid Alyssa Milano Feud; Holly Marie Combs Was Told Milano Threatened to Sue for Hostile Workplace

    Shannen Doherty Says ‘Charmed’ Fired Her Amid Alyssa Milano Feud; Holly Marie Combs Was Told Milano Threatened to Sue for Hostile Workplace

    Shannen Doherty and Hollie Marie Combs revealed on the “Let’s Be Clear” podcast (via Huff Post) that Doherty was fired from “Charmed” due to an alleged ultimatum their co-star Alyssa Milano gave producers. A feud among the actors reportedly led to Milano telling “Charmed” producers they had to fire one of them, and if it was her she would threaten to sue them for a hostile work environment.

    According to Combs, it was Milano who strong-armed the producers into firing Doherty after three seasons. While Doherty has often said she chose to leave “Charmed” on her own volition, it appears that was just a cover-up planned by her team at the time since she had already been forced off “Beverly Hills 90210.”

    “One can’t keep telling the same story over and over and over again, when it’s not the truth,” Doherty said.

    “My representatives, I remember them looking at me at the time and said, ‘No, no, no, your career won’t survive another firing, so we’re just going to say that you chose to leave,’” the actor revealed. “I remember I started laughing, going, ‘Who is going to believe that I’m crazy enough to leave a hit show?’”

    Doherty was an original cast member on “Charmed” alongside Milano and Combs. Doherty’s character was killed after three seasons and she was replaced by Rose McGowan, who stayed with the show until it wrapped after Season 8. Combs was the guest on Doherty’s new podcast episode, with Combs revealing that “Charmed” producer Jonathan Levin once told her that Milano approached him with the ultimatum.

    “He said, you know, ‘We’re basically in a position where it’s one or the other. We were told [by Alyssa] that it’s [Shannen] or me, and Alyssa has threatened to sue us for a hostile workplace environment,’” Combs said, adding that Milano “built a case for herself” by using a mediator to document every time she felt uncomfortable on set.

    “I don’t ever remember being mean to [Milano] on set,” Doherty later added. “I couldn’t have been more kind and understanding…I wish that I had been older and wiser because I definitely would’ve sued, and I would’ve been honest about the situation because the rumors followed me regardless.”

    Combs noted that Milano’s legal action threats “wouldn’t fucking fly” by today’s standards. The actor stressed there was never any “brawls” or “harsh words” said on set between Milano and Doherty.

    Variety has reached out to Milano’s representative for comment.

    On a previous episode of the “Let’s Be Clear” podcast, Doherty traced the origins of her feud with Milano back to how “Charmed” was promoted before its first season launched. She said that there was some resentment created due to the show being marketed around her despite Milano and Combs also being leads.

    “I was cast first, the show was originally sold to the WB based on me,” Doherty said. “But once those magazine covers started happening, and one person is being asked and the other one isn’t … I felt like .. the competitiveness was kicking in. And I’m not saying with you, I’m saying with Alyssa and myself. There was a lack of female support.”

    Listen to the latest’s “Let’s Be Clear” podcast episode here.

    Zack Sharf

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  • Holly Marie Combs Claims Alyssa Milano Purposely Got Shannen Doherty FIRED From Charmed! – Perez Hilton

    Holly Marie Combs Claims Alyssa Milano Purposely Got Shannen Doherty FIRED From Charmed! – Perez Hilton

    Well, there it is. So much for the Power of Three.

    The feuding behind the scenes of Charmed is the stuff of TV legend, but it’s quickly becoming a matter of record, thanks to Shannen Doherty‘s new podcast.

    For those who haven’t heard, Let’s Be Clear is not only a podcast, it’s serving as Shannen’s oral memoirs, and she’s chosen to get some of the dirtiest laundry out of the way early. She brought on co-star Holly Marie Combs, and the two have been dishing all the dirt on what went on when the cameras weren’t rolling. And on Monday’s episode, Holly finally let the biggest familiar out of the bag. The rumors were true: Alyssa Milano got Shannen fired!!!

    From the moment Shannen’s character Prue Halliwell was killed off at the end of Season 3 (well, really in between seasons), the rumors started to swirl it was because of the whispered feud with her TV sister.

    Related: Britney Spears Threw Some Elbows With This Justin Timberlake Diss!

    Now, over two decades later, Holly has confirmed it! Moreover, she says it wasn’t that Shannen quit, she got pushed out by Alyssa! She recalled how show producer Jonathan Levin explained it to her:

    “‘We didn’t mean to — but we’ve been backed into this corner — we’re basically in this position where it’s one or the other. We were told it’s her or [Shannen] and Alyssa has threatened to sue us for a hostile workplace environment.’”

    Wha??

    Yes, per Holly, their co-star had “documented every time she felt uncomfortable on set” in an effort to build a case and force producers’ hands. But Holly says it was all BS as, feud or no, Shannen didn’t do anything wrong. She said, obviously still upset:

    “There are actually people who behave badly and get away with it. I don’t think people understand that never happened here.”

    Holly was so upset, she said she’d leave the show, too — but claims Levin told her she’d get sued if she tried to walk! Damn!

    This is a huge accusation against Alyssa, who has managed to seem like she was taking the high ground all these years. In 2013, she was asked on Watch What Happens Live whether Shannen got fired, and she demurred:

    “I don’t know if she got fired, we never really found out what happened. I can tell you that we were on the air with her for three years and there were definitely some rough days. Holly and Shannen were best friends for like 10 years before the show started so it was very much sort of like high school. I would hope that in our thirties it wouldn’t feel like that anymore.”

    Notice no mention of it being such a “hostile workplace” that she needed to document a whole list — or that she knew very well Shannen was fired because she’s the one who made it happen. So, we can’t know for sure if this is true, as it is their word against hers at this point. Oof.

    [Image via Spelling Television/Peacock/YouTube.]

    Perez Hilton

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  • Softcore Gloom: The Gentrification of Wednesday Addams Includes Nods to Charmed, Chilling Adventures of Sabrina, Gilmore Girls and Harry Potter

    Softcore Gloom: The Gentrification of Wednesday Addams Includes Nods to Charmed, Chilling Adventures of Sabrina, Gilmore Girls and Harry Potter

    Maybe it seems ironic to say that the character of Wednesday Addams has been “gentrified,” considering she’s no longer white. And sure, in Jenna Ortega’s hands (whether that includes Thing or not), Wednesday is perfectly “passable” as a macabre dark mistress. To those who examine the presentation of the character more deeply, however, it’s clear to see that she’s been sanitized for the sake of making her more “likable” (read: watchable) to normies and outcasts alike. Except that the true outcasts of this world will not be encouraged to find that Wednesday’s so-called black heart is as penetrable as the Grinch’s.

    It all starts promisingly enough when Wednesday reveals her lust for exacting revenge to be uncompromising in the first episode, “Wednesday’s Child Is Full of Woe.” This is where we’re introduced to her at Nancy Reagan High—the school’s namesake being a pointed dig at any preppy, pastel-wearing git that Wednesday might be likely to encounter. Except for the fact that, in the present, with the greater commodification of “weird” as normal, one would be less likely to see such 80s-era “queen bees” of a Republican persuasion “running” the school. Nonetheless, one is willing to go along (at first) on this journey helmed by Tim Burton and writers Alfred Gough and Miles Millar (all three being white men serves as something of a “behind-the-scenes” case in point of the aforementioned gentrification).

    Suspending disbelief that “normies” still reign supreme in the era of their disfavor (with normies themselves having adopted the “trends” embodied by “freakdom”), we watch as Wednesday vindicates her brother Pugsley’s (Isaac Ordonez) bullying by the jocks of the water polo team, their ringleader being the fittingly-named Dalton (Max Pemberton). To secure justice for Pugsley, she thusly targets the team at their most vulnerable: half-naked in the pool during practice. Unleashing two bags’ worth of piranhas (as Edith Piaf’s “Non, je ne regrette rien” plays) into the water, we learn afterward that Dalton ends up losing a testicle. But Wednesday maintains, “I did the world a favor. People like Dalton shouldn’t procreate.” For yes, she does hold fast to her “savagery” for all of episode one, complete with her declaration, “I don’t have a phone. I refuse to be a slave to technology.” Her Luddite ways, of course, will be thrown out the window by the eighth and final episode, “A Murder of Woes,” after fellow student and semi-“love” interest, Xavier Thorpe (Percy Hynes White), gives her one as a parting gift at the premature end of the school year.

    Xavier is sort of like the Tristan Dugray (Chad Michael Murray) to townie Tyler Galpin’s (Hunter Doohan) version of Dean Forester (Jared Padalecki). Which brings us to Wednesday’s Rory Gilmore-esque (Alexis Bledel) nature in this edition. Complete with both girls being bookish introverts with writerly aspirations, each starting out at public school (in Rory’s case, Stars Hollow High) before being presented with the opportunity (fine, obligation for Wednesday) to attend a private. Wednesday’s is called Nevermore Academy, not just a private school like Rory’s Chilton, but a private boarding school. Which is where the Hogwarts Academy element comes in. But more on the Harry Potter similarities later. As for those well-versed in poetry ought to detect, “Nevermore” is a direct reference to Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Raven.”

    Poe being the “mascot,” of sorts, for darkness and lovers of the grim and grotesque, it’s only natural that the writers should see fit to make him a former alumnus of the academy. There’s even a Poe Cup competition in episode two, “Woe Is the Loneliest Number,” during which Wednesday’s blooming friendship with her roommate and would-be werewolf, Enid Sinclair (Emma Myers), is further solidified by Wednesday’s desire to help her beat the long-reigning winner, Bianca Barclay (Joy Sunday). It is she who embodies the school’s proverbial “most popular girl” role—though no one can say for sure if that’s because she’s a siren with a very persuasive voice.

    The character of Bianca harkens back to yet another Netflix series, Chilling Adventures of Sabrina. A show that, who would have predicted, turned out to be much less afraid of full-stop darkness than Wednesday. In it, Sabrina Spellman’s (Kiernan Shipka) own rival at The Academy of Unseen Arts, Prudence Blackwood (Tati Gabrielle), serves as the locks shorn, Black mean girl of the equation. And, like Wednesday and Bianca, Sabrina and Prudence eventually seem to develop a mutual respect for one another after Bianca and Prudence get over the fact that the chosen boy of her affection prefers Sabrina and Wednesday, respectively, to her.

    The magical facet of Wednesday’s Burton-ified persona doesn’t just relate to Chilling Adventures of Sabrina, either. Even more than that, it echoes Charmed. Most overtly via Wednesday’s powers of premonition mirroring Phoebe Halliwell’s (Alyssa Milano). Charmed in general also seems to cast a towering shadow over the series. At one point, Wednesday tells Thing as she touches a book of spells in “Friend or Woe, “Codex Umbarum—that’s Latin for Book of Shadows.” This being the name of the book the Halliwell sisters use as well for their spellcasting. Then there is Rowan Laslow (Calum Ross), a fellow student at Nevermore with the power of telekinesis… just like Phoebe’s oldest sister, Prue (Shannen Doherty). But yes, more obviously connected to Charmed is Wednesday getting premonitions the same way Phoebe does. The latter, too, can’t control when or where the premonitions will arrive, triggered by touching something seemingly arbitrary that leads to a vision that will ultimately offer a bigger clue.

    This is the component that suddenly makes Wednesday a teen detective who actually gives a shit about saving her school from an unknown and sinister antagonist. That Wednesday and Pugsley had to be forced to go to school in general during the first series run of The Addams Family should be an indication, however, that Wednesday would never care enough about any “institution” of learning to stick around and save it. Indeed, there are glimmers of Wednesday’s contempt for the entire construct of school at the beginning, when she notes of Nancy Reagan High, “I’m not sure whose twisted idea it was to put hundreds of adolescents in underfunded schools run by people whose dreams were crushed years ago, but I admire the sadism.”

    Other callbacks to Wednesdays of the past show up in moments both big and small, from Wednesday telling Tyler she used to decapitate her dolls with a guillotine as a child (this being mentioned in the 60s sitcom version of the show) to her particular way of dancing to her having an ancestor who was a witch to her utter contempt for whitewashed pilgrim history just the same as Christina Ricci’s Wednesday in Addams Family Values. And, speaking of, Ricci’s own presence in the show goes largely wasted and underused. Except when she has the gumption to say to Wednesday, “Never lose that, Wednesday. The ability to not let others define you.”

    Alas, Wednesday is gradually being conditioned, molded and defined by norms and conventions as the series goes on. This includes her cringeworthy romance plotlines with both Tyler and Xavier. If anything, Wednesday would be more prone to asexual tendencies, the antithesis of Morticia (Catherine Zeta-Jones). Worse still, they actually have Wednesday kissing a boy already in season one. Goddamn, at least work up to that kind of thing. All “sexual” interactions when it comes to Wednesday Addams, after all, should be strictly Bollywood.

    Even more unnatural is that Tyler, who writes her off as “Grim Reaper Barbie” (that “Barbie” can be associated with Wednesday at all in this series should tell one everything), has the gall to actually take some kind of “ownership” over Wednesday. Doing so when she confesses to him that she is deigning to attend the Rave’n dance (Nevermore’s version of a prom) with Xavier in episode four, “Woe What A Night.” He then bitches out, Dean-style in Gilmore Girls, and berates her, “I mean, call me crazy, Wednesday, but you keep giving me these signals.”

    Of course, the “real” Wednesday would never give any signals to a boy apart from a death stare. Regardless, she lets him continue to whine, “I thought we liked each other, but then you pull something like this and I have no idea where I stand. Am I in the ‘more-than-friend’ zone or just a pawn in some game you’re playing?” Wednesday, genuinely looking guilty, therefore emotional, about what he’s saying, becomes cliché enough to reply, “I’m just dealing with a lot right now.” No outright ignoring or horrification over how some guy would try to make her apologize in any way for her behavior.  

    But herein lies the rub with the true essence of the character. No normie actually has the stomach to watch how a misanthrope would realistically behave without some “light” sugar-coating to it. Some glimmer, through plot device, that all the character really needs is to be “drawn out.” That their defenses are only up because they’re just protecting themselves, but secretly want to be an active participant in “society.”

    Maybe that’s why something about Wednesday feels tantamount to “dark and weird” Billie Eilish going blonde pin-up and then dating an older white male that fronts an “indie” band. In both scenarios, the lack of faith in audiences to want to stick with such a bleak character/persona—an “anti-hero” (and not in the chirpy, Taylor way), if you will—is part of the capitulation to “Disney-fication.” But oh, let’s not forget about the Harry Potter-fication as well. For, not only does the headmaster, Principal Weems (Gwendoline Christie), end up dead, but the “Voldemort” of the narrative also ends up inexplicably brought back to life in the last episode. A dash of Pretty Little Liars even gets thrown in when Wednesday receives a stalker-y text (because, lest one forget, she has an iPhone now) in the vein of “A.” By this juncture, the only on-the-nose “quirky” aspect missing is some background music from Lana Del Rey (“Ultraviolence” would be a good choice).

    Hence, whatever season two holds, it’s sure to provide more of Wednesday “gradually” opening up to people as she feigns cold-bloodedness through her barbing dialogue. Yet, to borrow from a meme that gained traction during the Trump presidency (“I know this isn’t the USA Miley was talking about partying in”), “I know this is isn’t the dark and macabre Wednesday that Christina Ricci’s version would have grown up to be.”

    Angela Chase once told Jordan Catalano, “Admit it… That you have emotions.” That appears to be what Tim Burton, et al. is saying to Wednesday with this “modernized” rendering of her. And yet, to quote another character from a teen drama, Blair Waldorf, “You have to be cold to be queen.” In this instance, queen of misanthropy. Which Wednesday no longer really is, leaving that, ostensibly, to the descendants she inspired in the animated personages of Daria and Emily the Strange.

    Genna Rivieccio

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