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Daniel Radcliffe makes Broadway return
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Daniel Radcliffe makes Broadway return

by jummy84 November 2, 2025
written by jummy84

31 October 2025

Daniel Radcliffe is returning to Broadway.

Daniel Radcliife is returning to Broadway

The Harry Potter actor will star in Every Brilliant Thing, a one-person play about depression which will premiere in New York at the Hudson theatre on 21 February, 2026.

The production – which will run until 24 May – was written by Duncan Macmillan, along with the show’s original star Jonny Donahoe, and the writer was “thrilled” to get Daniel involved.

Duncan said: “When Daniel told us how much he loved the play, I couldn’t have been more thrilled.

“He has the intelligence, quick wit and charm to roll with the spontaneous moments that the show invites – he can be a clown one moment, then grab you by the heartstrings the next. He has huge depth and humanity. I can’t wait to get started.”

Every Brilliant Thing revolves around a child reacting to their mother’s suicide attempt and making a list of the things that make life worth living, with the audience encouraged to join in by shouting out the list.

As the child becomes an adult, their list continues to develop but it is now the older ones in need of a reason to be hopeful.

The play debuted at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in 2014 and has been performed in more than 80 countries, with the likes of Sue Perkins, Sir Lenny Henry and Ambika Mod stepping in as the lead when Jonny stopped performing it in 2017.

Minnie Driver is currently starring in a London production of Every Brilliant Thing at @sohoplace, which closed on 8 November.

The structure of the play can be tailored for specific audiences, with 90s Greek popular culture references included when Melina Theo starred in an adaptation in Greece and a specific brand of ice cream mentioned during Oliver Chong’s Singapore performances.

Daniel, 36, made his stage debut in Equus in 2007 and has starred in a number of productions in London and New York since then.

His last Broadway appearance was in Merrily We Roll Along last year, for which he won a Tony Award for Best Featured Actor in a Musical.




November 2, 2025 0 comments
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Trailer for Clooney's 'Good Night, and Good Luck: Live From Broadway'
Hollywood

Trailer for Clooney’s ‘Good Night, and Good Luck: Live From Broadway’

by jummy84 October 3, 2025
written by jummy84

Trailer for Clooney’s ‘Good Night, and Good Luck: Live From Broadway’

by Alex Billington
October 3, 2025
Source: YouTube

“Funny how your life can be upended just for telling the truth.” Magnolia has revealed the trailer for Good Night, and Good Luck: Live From Broadway, a taped version of the stage play from George Clooney. The original Good Night, and Good Luck movie opened in 2005 – it’s co-written by George Clooney, and directed by Clooney, the second feature film he directed (after Confessions of a Dangerous Mind in 2002). Clooney’s Tony-nominated, box-office record-breaking Broadway play chronicling a time in US history when legendary newsman Edward R. Murrow took an on-air stand against a growing tide of fearmongering and disinformation—and won. Their intro: “The recent government interference in Jimmy Kimmel Live and the dubious cancellation of Stephen Colbert’s The Late Show have brought the embattled state of free speech to the forefront of America’s attention. For the first time since the one-time-only CNN broadcast this summer, audiences can experience this story of a free press under assault, and with it can join in a conversation about what it means to stand up above politics for that inalienable right to expression and information.” The cast in the play includes Clooney as Murrow (played by David Strathairn in the film), with Ilana Glazer, Glenn Fleshler, Clark Gregg, Carter Hudson, Paul Gross, Christopher Denham, & Fran Kranz. Even if you know the film, this looks like a must watch new version of this story. Catch it at home on VOD anytime.

Official trailer for the film of Good Night, and Good Luck: Live From Broadway, via YouTube:

Good Night, and Good Luck: Live From Broadway Trailer

Good Night, and Good Luck: Live From Broadway Poster

Good Night, and Good Luck: Live From Broadway is the Broadway live-capture filmed cinematic version of George Clooney’s Tony Award-nominated, box-office record-breaking Broadway play. Based on the film produced by 2929 and Participant, Clooney leads an all-star cast that includes Ilana Glazer, Glenn Fleshler, Clark Gregg, Carter Hudson, Paul Gross, Christopher Denham, Fran Kranz. Under the direction of Tony Award-winner David Cromer, from the original two screenwriters George Clooney and Grant Heslov, Good Night, and Good Luck: Live From Broadway chronicles a time in American history when the legendary newsman Edward R. Murrow (also played by Clooney) took an on-air stand against a growing tide of fearmongering and disinformation—and won. Good Night, and Good Luck: Live From Broadway is a taped version of the Broadway show, directed by David Cromer, which originally premiered in New York City in March 2025 at the Winter Garden Theatre. Magnolia Pictures will release the film version direct-to-VOD starting October 3rd, 2025 – it’s available to view at home right now. Who else has seen the movie?

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Find more posts in: Documentaries, To Watch, Trailer

October 3, 2025 0 comments
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Keanu Reeves, Alex Winter Star on Broadway
TV & Streaming

Keanu Reeves, Alex Winter Star on Broadway

by jummy84 September 29, 2025
written by jummy84

Forget the tree.

That iconic lone tree from the stage directions in Samuel Beckett’s tragicomic masterwork “Waiting for Godot” is offstage in Jamie Lloyd’s re-envisioned revival. The polarizing British director who has placed his conceptual stamp on “A Doll’s House,” “Sunset Boulevard” and “Evita,” again challenges the norms in his latest production, taking on the master of ambiguity, absurdity and minimalism — but with mixed results. 

Though Lloyd supplants Beckett’s bleak and barren setting with something brighter, cleaner and cosmic — but minus any “Sunset Boulevard”-style video flourishes this go-round — the play’s existential angst in an irrational world remains as powerful as ever — and perhaps more attractive to new audiences due to the casting.

This New York revival is driven by the star power of Keanu Reeves (of the “The Matrix” and “John Wick” film series), who is making a respectable Broadway bow. Joining him in this earnest project as Beckett’s Sisyphean vagabonds is Reeves’ longtime bud, Alex Winter, his goofball bro from the loopy time-traveling “Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure” films which began in 1989 (the year of Beckett’s death). 

This return match-up (“Together again at last!”) has turned the playwright’s vaudevillian clowns into comics of a cooler sort. If not stoner dudes — they are, after all, both 60ish now — they’re more like go-with-the-flow buds with their own relaxed rhythms, encircling speech patterns and genuine bond. Though the two actors have a kind of slacker ease in the nonsensical volleys, this lower temperature approach too often misses the work’s humor, horror and emotional resonance.

With scraggly hair and beard and a dazed countenance of man waking up from an unspeakable dream, Reeves brings the tender vulnerability to his Estrogen (aka Gogo). Sometimes with his arms tightly folded in full pout or for protection, sometimes in a fearful fetal position as if protecting himself from the unknown, he’s a man-child lost in time, space and memory. But the sense of the poet that Gogo once was is absent here — and Gogo needs to be a soul worth saving.

However, Winter’s unbowed Vladimir (aka Didi) is. He’s clearly the driver here as the duo patiently and impatiently wait for the mysterious Godot to arrive. Didi considers his tasks to be: staying the course, keeping the faith, buoying his buddy, and clinging to hope, despite a hopeless loop of disappointments and deferrals.

Winter’s face has the weathered look of a person whose struggles for survival in a cruel and violent world have taken its toll. In the end his Didi hangs by a thread as he movingly faces the void, realizing that taking it one day at a time is a life sentence he can barely endure and yet he does.

And about that void: Beckett’s country road is replaced here with a giant spiral structure that encompasses the stage, designed by Soutra Gilmour. It’s a stunning and glistening setting — perhaps it’s an ivory pipeline to the universe or maybe the eye of God or whatever one projects. Though shocking at first sight for this play’s familiar landscape, it also feels thematically fitting.

Jon Clark’s no-place-to-hide lighting unnervingly brightens Beckett’s shadowy world but without losing its sense of dread, allowing both light and dark at the end of this infinite tunnel. The actors also make great physical use of the epic curvature, comically sliding, slipping and cradling themselves to sleep though they’re more often than not swallowed up in the setting that severely limits the playing field.

Breaking into the duo’s static world are Brandon J. Dirden as the pompous interloper Pozzo and Michael Patrick Thornton as his almost-silent, strangely masked slave Lucky.  Dirden brings many colors to the indulgent bombast of this self-centered sociopath, his fascistic brutality disguised as hollow civility. He’s repellent but Dirden makes it so we can’t take our eyes off him.

But Lloyd’s awkward staging here and questionable affectations (including an audience clap-along) makes Pozzo’s relationship with Lucky unfocused and puzzling. Beckett’s symbols of master and slave — the whip, the rope, the servant weighed down with baggage — are either mimed or cut and in doing so lose its real horror. 

Thornton uses a wheelchair, and here his Lucky is guided by his tormentor. But the character’s state of servitude is largely hidden in clumsy blocking. Thornton, however, is magnificent in Lucky’s epic “thinking” tirade, a babbling aria with its own inner logic.

Zaynn Arora as the boy messenger (Eric Williams in alternate performances) who delivers the news of  Godot’s postponement is suitably fragile, fearful and haunting.

One might also wonder what Beckett — whose strict oversight of productions was legendary — would make of Reeves and Winter’s air-guitar riff, echoing the duo’s signature stance from their film partnership. (Robin Williams also tossed pop-culture references into a 1988 production in which he was paired with Steve Martin.) Certainly many in the audience love it. Purists not so much — but this production is clearly not meant for them.

Still, as a resigned Didi says, “the essential doesn’t change.” Whether on stages in post-war Europe, a hall in San Quentin, or on a pandemic Zoom, Beckett’s wandering refugees and their desperate need to be seen as they search for meaning, purpose and hope continue to find fresh relevance. In the current dystopia, this evergreen play and provocative production may just be worth the wait.

September 29, 2025 0 comments
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Constance Wu slams Andrew Barth Feldman over casting in Broadway musical Maybe Happy Ending
Celebrity News

Constance Wu slams Andrew Barth Feldman over casting in Broadway musical Maybe Happy Ending

by jummy84 September 19, 2025
written by jummy84

by Feeds-Bang |

19 September 2025

Constance Wu has criticised Andrew Barth Feldman over his casting in the Broadway musical Maybe Happy Ending.

Constance Wu has criticised Andrew Barth Feldman over his casting in the Broadway musical Maybe Happy Ending

The actress, 43, says she is “so disappointed” after a series of conversations about Asian American representation, and shared her sentiments in a statement on Instagram revealing that she and Andrew had spoken on the phone about the controversy.

She wrote: “It was a peaceful call and we spoke at length, followed up by several emails/texts. It made me hopeful. But after a recent voice memo he sent me, all I can say is that I am so disappointed in him. And feeling pretty discouraged.”

Andrew joined the cast of the South Korea-set musical on 2 September for a nine-week run opposite his girlfriend Helen J Shen.

He replaced Darren Criss, who took a hiatus from the show on 31 August and is scheduled to return on 5 November.

Darren, who is Filipino American, previously led the production in the role of Oliver.

Constance added: “It’s hard to keep speaking up when it feels like no one is listening anymore in this new era. It’s exhausting and increasingly lonely. Once again, Asian Americans are left unheard, unacknowledged, invisible. Sadly, we’re used to this.

“A dozen or so folks bts at @maybehappyending have remained silent perhaps in the hopes that this will all fade away and you know what? It has. Your plan is working, guys – I heard your box office doing great.”

Writers Hue Park and Will Aronson responded earlier, saying in a joint statement: “We wrote a show about robots so we could engage more intimately with the most basic human questions of love and loss, creating the roles of Oliver and Claire to be avatars of these universal questions.

“They were meant to be products created by a global company, and so never bore Korean names, even in the Korean version of the show. At the same time, we understand that for many in the AAPI community, the makeup of our opening night cast became a meaningful and rare point of visibility.

“We’ve heard how strongly people connected to that representation, even if it wasn’t our original intent, and how this casting decision has re-opened old wounds.”

Constance also referenced a petition launched by B.D. Wong, who wrote on Instagram on 10 August that Andrew’s casting was “taken as a hard slap in the face of both the Asian actor community and the Asian audience.”

B.D. added more than 2,400 people had signed the petition, which he described as “a detailed articulation of our POV.”

Constance concluded: “I’m sorry to the thousands of people on @wongbd’s petition whose signatures he and the producers have yet to publicly acknowledge.

“And honestly, I’m sorry ABF that you’ve been (perhaps unfairly) saddled with this responsibility by your producers. But sometimes we don’t choose our responsibilities, they choose us. So the question that remains is: what are you choosing to do with it?”

Maybe Happy Ending, which follows two robots in Seoul who form an unlikely romance, was written by Aronson and Park and won six Tony awards, including best musical, in June.

Andrew’s limited run as Oliver continues until 1 November.




September 19, 2025 0 comments
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Jay-Z Defends Times Square Casino Bid As Cultural Investment + Says It's About 'Strengthening' Broadway & Creating 'Real Value' Within The Community
Celebrity News

Jay-Z Defends Times Square Casino Bid As Cultural Investment + Says It’s About ‘Strengthening’ Broadway & Creating ‘Real Value’ Within The Community

by jummy84 September 12, 2025
written by jummy84

Jay-Z Defends Times Square Casino Bid As Cultural Investment + Says It’s About ‘Strengthening’ Broadway & Creating ‘Real Value’ Within The Community

Jay-Z is doubling down on his love for New York City by investing in what he calls a “world class destination” in the heart of Times Square. He shared his vision in a new interview with City & State New York.

Through Roc Nation, Jay-Z has partnered with SL Green and Caesars to propose a casino at 1515 Broadway.

“New York City is the entertainment capital of the world,” he said. “Caesars Palace Times Square is an extension of culture.”

He believes the project will support the community and Broadway.

“Casino visitors will buy tickets, fill seats, book dinners before shows, and keep hotels full,” he explained. “This project isn’t about taking away from Broadway – it’s about strengthening it.”

Addressing critics, he emphasized responsible gaming programs and investments in arts and public resources.

“Our goal is to create opportunity and ensure this project delivers real value,” he added.

When asked what he loves most about NYC, he said, “The attitude, the culture, the energy. You can’t replicate New York anywhere else.”

Do you think the casino project is a good idea?


September 12, 2025 0 comments
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