logo
#

Latest news with #TonyAward-nominated

Broadway hit Beetlejuice The Musical debuts in Singapore in January 2026
Broadway hit Beetlejuice The Musical debuts in Singapore in January 2026

New Paper

time5 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • New Paper

Broadway hit Beetlejuice The Musical debuts in Singapore in January 2026

Eight-time Tony Award-nominated Beetlejuice The Musical will arrive in Singapore in January. Based on American film-maker Tim Burton's Oscar-winning 1988 film Beetlejuice, the musical follows Lydia Deetz, a gothic teenager who summons a demon to scare away her insufferable parents. It stars Andy Karl as the demon Beetlejuice. He has been nominated at the Tony Awards three times: for Best Actor in a Musical for Rocky (2014) and Groundhog Day (2017), and Best Featured Actor in a Musical for On The Twentieth Century (2015). The production includes the original Broadway set design and costume designs, and special effects that transform the stage into a hilarious and horrifying netherworld. Beetlejuice The Musical will play at the Esplanade Theatre from Jan 15. Tickets go on sale from July 3, with pre-sale access available. Pricing details have not been announced. The production is from Michael Cassel Group and Warner Bros Theatre Venues, which also brought to Singapore the musicals Hamilton and The Lion King. Karl said in a statement: "Beetlejuice is not your typical leading man - unless your typical leading man is a hilarious, fast-talking demon with an attitude and worse fashion sense. He's wildly inappropriate, totally unhinged and, yet, somehow... weirdly lovable?" After the film became a hit, a spin-off animated television series (1989 to 1991) - also developed by Burton - introduced new characters and settings. Beetlejuice was subsequently adapted for the stage in 2018, premiering at the National Theatre in Washington, D.C., before heading to Broadway in 2019. Beetlejuice The Musical Where: Esplanade Theatre, 1 Esplanade Drive When: From Jan 15 Admission: Tickets go on sale from July 3, with pre-sale access available via Ticketek Singapore ( and for Esplanade&Me members

Broadway hit Beetlejuice The Musical debuts in Singapore in January 2026
Broadway hit Beetlejuice The Musical debuts in Singapore in January 2026

Straits Times

time5 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Straits Times

Broadway hit Beetlejuice The Musical debuts in Singapore in January 2026

Broadway's Beetlejuice The Musical will premiere in Singapore in January 2026. PHOTO: MICHELLE GRACE HUNDER Broadway hit Beetlejuice The Musical debuts in Singapore in January 2026 SINGAPORE – Eight-time Tony Award-nominated Beetlejuice The Musical will arrive in Singapore in January 2026. Based on Tim Burton's Oscar-winning 1988 film Beetlejuice, the musical follows Lydia Deetz, a goth teenager who summons a demon to scare away her insufferable parents. It stars Andy Karl as the demon Beetlejuice. He has been nominated at the Tony Awards three times: for Best Actor in a Musical for Rocky (2014) and Groundhog Day (2017), and Best Featured Actor in a Musical for On The Twentieth Century (2015). The production includes the original Broadway set design and costume designs, and special effects that transform the stage into a hilarious and horrifying netherworld. Beetlejuice The Musical will play at the Esplanade Theatre from Jan 15. Tickets go on sale from July 3, with pre-sale access available. Pricing details have not been announced. The production is from Michael Cassel Group and Warner Bros Theatre Venues, which also brought to Singapore the musicals Hamilton and The Lion King. Karl said in a statement: 'Beetlejuice is not your typical leading man – unless your typical leading man is a hilarious fast-talking demon with an attitude and worse fashion sense. He's wildly inappropriate, totally unhinged, and yet somehow... weirdly lovable?' After the film became a hit, a spin-off animated television series (1989 to 1991) – also developed by Burton – introduced new characters and settings. Beetlejuice was subsequently adapted for the stage in 2018, premiering at the National Theatre in Washington, D.C., before heading for Broadway in 2019. Book it/ Beetlejuice The Musical Where: Esplanade Theatre, 1 Esplanade Drive When: From Jan 15 Admission: Tickets go on sale from July 3, with pre-sale access available via Ticketek Singapore and for Esplanade&Me members. Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Kennedy Center ex-president decries ‘false allegations' about her tenure
Kennedy Center ex-president decries ‘false allegations' about her tenure

San Francisco Chronicle​

time24-05-2025

  • Business
  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Kennedy Center ex-president decries ‘false allegations' about her tenure

The offstage drama at the embattled John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts just took another turn. Deborah Rutter, whose tenure as president of the premier Washington, D.C. arts organization was cut short this year by President Donald Trump, issued a withering statement on LinkedIn decrying 'false allegations' about her leadership. Those critics, she wrote on Tuesday, May 20, lack 'the context or expertise to understand the complexities involved in nonprofit and arts management.' The statement follows allegations made Monday, May, 19, by Richard Grenell, who Trump appointed as the institution's interim executive director, that the center's deferred maintenance and deficit were criminal matters for prosecutors to investigate. The remark, reported by the Associated Press, came during a meal with Trump and board members at the White House's State Dining Room. It was not immediately clear what law the center might be breaking; deficit spending by nonprofit arts organizations has practically been the norm, not the exception, since the COVID pandemic. Berkeley's Aurora Theatre Company, for instance, recently announced plans to forego producing a season next year after draining its savings. Moreover, Rutter pointed out that Trump's allies approved previous Kennedy Center budgets. 'The Finance, Audit, and Executive Committees of the Board — composed of appointees from President Trump's first term — had full transparency into all financial transactions and decisions,' she wrote. She also noted that when she left in February, as part of a wave of terminations and resignations that reconstituted the center, the organization had $10 million in reserve funds. 'Perhaps those now in charge are facing significant financial gaps and are seeking to attribute them to past management,' she hypothesized. 'This malicious attempt to distort the facts, which were consistently, transparently and readily available in professionally audited financial reports, recklessly disregards the truth.' The dispute exacerbates an already tumultuous 2025 at the Kennedy Center. In February, Trump appointed himself chair of the board. Soon after, a host of shows at the organization, including Tony Award-nominated 'Eureka Day' by Oakland playwright Jonathan Spector, was axed from the lineup. A Kennedy Center artist leaked 'unprofessional and rude' emails Grenell sent her in April, further exposing the internal chaos there since Trump's takeover. This month, 'Les Miserables' cast members announced plans to boycott Trump's attendance at a June 11 Kennedy Center performance, which recently scheduled a run of 'Mrs. Doubtfire' despite the presidents frequent castigations of drag. Also this month, center employees took steps with the National Labor Relations Board to unionize.

Tony Award nominee Marjan Neshat makes history in celebrated Broadway play 'English'
Tony Award nominee Marjan Neshat makes history in celebrated Broadway play 'English'

Yahoo

time20-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Tony Award nominee Marjan Neshat makes history in celebrated Broadway play 'English'

NEW YORK (AP) — Marjan Neshat is a veteran of stage and screen who teaches fledgling actors. Like so many of us, she sometimes has bouts of self-doubt. 'I think on the first day of class, I still always have imposter syndrome, but I've grown to live with it,' she says. 'I never thought that I had the gravitas to be like, 'I'm going to teach you acting.'' This semester, her students at The New School got to witness self-doubt kicked to the curb when Neshat became a first-time Tony Award nominee. 'I'm sure they're all a bit more smitten with me now,' she says, laughing. Neshat earned the nod for her work — appropriately enough — playing a teacher in Sanaz Toossi's Pulitzer Prize-winning and Tony Award-nominated play 'English,' which premiered on Broadway in the fall. 'There's something about this play that feels so bottomless,' she adds. 'It kind of felt like winning the lottery because it was, to me, everything as an actress that I care about — it was artistic, and it was subtle and it was nuanced.' A different depiction of Middle Eastern life 'English' explores the ways in which language shapes identity, can help people feel understood or misunderstood and the push and pull of culture. It's set in a storefront school near Tehran, where four Iranian students are preparing over several weeks for an English language exam. Neshat plays their teacher, a woman who loves rom-coms and English but who is unmoored, a foot in Iran and one in England, where she lived for many years but never completely felt at home. 'We don't always belong to what we're born to,' says Neshat. 'She understands the potential of language and the potential of reaching beyond yourself. And yet she's at a point in her life where she's also losing a lot of that.' The play is packed with cultural references — like Christiane Amanpour, Hugh Grant and 'Whenever, Wherever' by Shakira. One character admires Julia Roberts' teeth, saying 'They could rip through wire. In a good way.' 'I feel like so often, when you're telling stories about a different culture, especially in the Middle East, it's like, 'Well, we wanna see them behind the veil' and 'We want to see our idea of them.' And I feel like, especially with my character, I feel it defies all of that. I feel she is romantic and flawed and complicated.' The play has made history by making Neshat and co-star Tala Ashe the first female actors of Iranian descent to be Tony-nominated. (The first Iranian-born actor to receive a Tony acting nomination was Arian Moayed.) The two face off at the Tonys on June 8 in the category of best performance by an actress in a featured role in a play alongside Jessica Hecht, Fina Strazza and Kara Young. One woman, two worlds Neshat's family fled postrevolutionary Iran in 1984, when Neshat was 8, and she hasn't been back since. She decided early on she wanted to act, despite her mother's fear that her daughter might share the same fate as Marilyn Monroe. She adores the plays of Anton Chekhov and watching movies on the Criterion Channel, and she's obsessed with the novel 'Anne of Green Gables.' 'I'm not like super-showy. I'm interior and deep,' she says. When 'English' ended its run, she and the cast wept in their dressing rooms. 'She (Neshat) thrives in mystery and yearning and I think I've always strived to capture a feeling that goes beyond language. She's after that, too,' says Toossi. 'I think she holds contradictions and leaves space for the audience. She operates in a register must of us can't quite reach.' Neshat's credits range from the movies 'Sex in the City 2' and 'Rockaway' to an off-Broadway production of 'The Seagull' with Dianne Wiest and Alan Cumming, and to roles on TV in 'New Amsterdam,' 'Quantico,' 'Elementary' and 'Blue Bloods.' 'I've sort of been saved by art in so many ways,' she says. 'It's been sometimes like a really bad boyfriend, and it's brought out all my middle school rejection and angst, but truly, in the best of ways, I have, I think, become more myself or understood who I am.' 'A cry into the void' 'English' — written in the wake of President Donald Trump's ban on travelers from several predominantly Muslim countries during his first term — premiered off-Broadway at Atlantic Theater Company in 2022 with Neshat in the teacher's role. 'There is something very emotional about the fact that she wrote this as like a cry into the void when the Muslim ban happened and the fact we were like opening shortly after Trump became president,' says Neshat. 'Just the culmination of all these things, it felt like an event.' She has a tight bond with Toossi, nurturing her 'English' and also appearing in the playwright's 'Wish You Were Here.' The playwright once saw Neshat at a play reading before they ever met and soon gave the teacher in 'English' the name Marjan. Neshat jokes that 'she wrote me into being.' 'Her writing has given me some of the richest roles of my life,' says. Neshat. For her part, Toossi says getting Neshat and Ashe to be Tony-nominated is her proudest achievement. On the opening night for 'English' on Broadway, Neshat was joined by her mother and her 12-year-old son, Wilder, and they marveled at the journey life takes you. Neshat's grandmother was married at 13 in Iran and never learned to read or write, though she dictated poems and letters. Just two generations later, their family has star on Broadway. 'The little girl I was in Iran would never have imagined that I would be sitting with my mom and nominated for a Tony,' she says. 'It just truly is a ride.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store