VIDEO: Watch Marc Shaiman and Friends on STARS IN THE HOUSE with Seth Rudetsky- Live Now!
Stars in The House continues tonight8pm with Marc Shaiman and friends
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Stars in The House continues tonight8pm with Marc Shaiman and friends
Stars in the House, the daily live streamed concert series created by Playbill correspondent and SiriusXM Broadway host Seth Rudetsky and producer James Wesley, welcomes Tony-winning Hairspray and Smash composer-lyricist Marc Shaiman April 13 at 8 PM.
Also stopping by are Jenifer Lewis, Tony winner Martin Short, and Tony nominee Kerry Butler.
The Stars in the House series—which launched March 16 with Tony winner Kelli O’Hara—promotes support for The Actors Fund and its services in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic.
New shows air daily at 2 PM ET and 8 PM ET, featuring performances by stars of stage and screen and conversations with Rudetsky between each tune. Rudetsky will encourage live viewers to donate, and Wesley will give updates from The Fund as well as shout-outs to people donating in real time. Dr. Jonathan LaPook, chief medical correspondent for CBS News, will also make frequent appearances to answer questions and offer best practices.
Watch previous Stars in the House presentations here.
READ: How to Help Unemployed Theatre Industry Professionals During the Coronavirus Shutdown
As the situation surrounding the coronavirus outbreak continues to evolve, The Actors Fund will provide services online and via phone. These services include Artists Health Insurance Resource Center, The Career Center, Housing Resources, Addiction & Recovery, HIV/AIDS and Senior Services, Counseling and Emergency Financial Assistance, as well as The Friedman Health Center for the Performing Arts in New York City.
To make a tax-deductible donation to The Actors Fund visit ActorsFund.org/Donate.
During the closing of the first-ever ‘Saturday Night Live From Home,’ the show paid tribute to its sketch-music producer Hal Willner, who recently passed away with symptoms consistent with COVID-19. Willner produced the music for SNL for nearly 40 years, beginning in 1981.
The 1992 revival of Tennessee William’s Pulitzer Prize-winning drama A Street Car Named Desire, starring Jessica Lange and Alec Baldwin, opened at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre April 12, 1992. Directed by Gregory Mosher, the production played through August 9, 1992, garnering Baldwin a Tony Award nomination for Best Actor in a Play for his performance.
A Streetcar Named Desire tells the story of the sparks and clash that occurs when southern belle Blanche DuBois (Lange) moves to New Orleans to live with her sister, Stella, and her brutish brother-in-law, Stanley Kowalski (Baldwin).
Flip through photos of the production below:
The revival also starred Timothy Carhart as Harold Mitchell, Amy Madigan as Stella Kowalski, Susan Aston as Nurse, William Cain as Doctor, Sol Echeverria as Flower Vendor, James Gandolfini as Steve Hubbell, Edwina Lewis as Negro Woman, Matt McGrath as Young Collector, Lazaro Perez as Pablo Gonzales, and Aida Turturro as Eunice Hubbell.
The production featured scenic design by Ben Edwards, costume design by Jane Greenwood, lighting design by Kevin Rigdon, and sound design by Scott Lehrer.
Beardo, an early musical from Tony-nominated composer Dave Malloy Natasha, Pierre, and the Great Comet of 1812 will be available for streaming for two weeks.
1914 Mrs. Patrick Campbell and Herbert Beerbohm Tree are the very first Eliza Doolittle and Professor Higgins. George Bernard Shaw‘s tale of class and character, Pygmalion, plays 118 performances at His Majesty’s Theatre in London.
1932 Birthday of Broadway hoofer and leading man Joel Grey, whose best-known roles include the title character in George M!, the spectral Emcee in the original Cabaret, and the morally compromised Wonderful Wizard of Oz in Wicked.
1936 Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart provide music and lyrics for On Your Toes at Broadway’s Imperial Theatre. George Balanchine choreographs the jazz ballet, Slaughter on Tenth Avenue, featuring Ray Bolger and Tamara Geva. The show runs nearly 10 months.
1950 Birthday of actor and New Vaudeville clown Bill Irwin. Irwin appears on Broadway in three runs of Fool Moon (in 1993, 1995, and 1998), and wins a Tony Award for his performance as George in the 2005 revival of Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?
1967 What happens offstage in Hamlet is the premise of Tom Stoppard‘s comedy, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead. John Stride and Edward Petherbridge are the doomed pair at London’s Old Vic.
1967 Melina Mercouri has the lead in Jules Dassin‘s Illya Darling. Joe Darion provides the lyrics for Manos Hadjidakis‘ music. Dassin adapted the book from Never on Sunday, and he provides the staging. There are 319 performances at the Mark Hellinger Theatre on Broadway.
1991 Alain Boublil and Claude-Michel Schonberg‘s Miss Saigon opens, updating Madame Butterfly, making a star of Lea Salonga, and causing a ruckus when Englishman Jonathan Pryce is chosen to play a Eurasian “Engineer.” Both Pryce and Salonga win Tony Awards for their performances, and it runs for 4,092 performances at the Broadway Theatre.
1996 Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II‘s most famous duo, The King and I, return to Broadway at the Neil Simon Theatre. Lou Diamond Phillips and Donna Murphy shall dance their way to the Tony Awards to capture the Best Actress and Best Revival awards.
2000 Michael Frayn‘s drama about the much-debated 1941 meeting between German physicist Werner Heisenberg and Danish counterpart, Niels Bohr, in Copenhagen opens at the Royale Theatre on Broadway. The play with minimal set and characters, starring Philip Bosco, Blair Brown, and Michael Cumpsty, wins the Tony Award for Best Play and Best Director for Michael Blakemore (who also wins the Best Director award for the revival musical Kiss Me, Kate the same night).
2005 Margo Skinner, who played the role of Miss Poppenghul, the harried secretary of movie mogul David O. Selznick, in the spring run of Manhattan Theatre Club‘s production of Moonlight and Magnolias, is found dead in her apartment during the run of the play. She was 55.
2007 Actor and director Roscoe Lee Browne dies of cancer at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles at age 81. He received a Tony nomination for his performance as Holloway in August Wilson‘s Two Trains Running.
2010 Million Dollar Quartet, a musical about the legendary 1956 recording session that brought together Johnny Cash, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins, and Elvis Presley, opens at the Nederlander Theatre. Directed by Eric Schaeffer, the production stars Eddie Clendening, Lance Guest, Levi Kreis, and Robert Britton Lyons. Kreis, who made his Broadway debut in the production, wins a Tony Award for his performance as Jerry Lee Lewis.
2011 Actor-comic Chris Rock makes his Broadway debut in Stephen Adly Guirgis‘ The Motherf**ker With the Hat, which opens at the Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre. The play, which is described as a “high-octane, verbal cage match about love, fidelity, and misplaced haberdashery,” also stars of Bobby Cannavale, Elizabeth Rodriguez, Annabella Sciorra, and Yul Vazquez.
2012 Magic/Bird, Eric Simonson‘s highly theatrical drama about the college-to-Olympics rivalry and friendship of basketball heroes Earvin “Magic” Johnson and Larry Bird, opens at Broadway’s Longacre Theatre. Tug Coker and Kevin Daniels play household-names Bird and Johnson, respectively. The production fails to catch on with audiences, and closes after 37 performances.
2013 Roald Dahl‘s beloved children’s book about a precocious bookworm with magical powers comes to life as Dennis Kelly and Tim Minchin‘s Matilda The Musical opens on Broadway at the Shubert Theatre. Young actors Sophia Gennusa, Oona Laurence, Bailey Ryon, and Milly Shapiro share the title role. The cast also includes Bertie Carvel as Miss Trunchbull, Lauren Ward as Miss Honey, and Gabriel Ebert and Lesli Margherita as Mr. and Mrs. Wormwood. The production runs almost four years, for a total of 1,554 performances.
More of Today’s Birthdays: Paul Douglas 1907. Louise Lasser 1939. Peter Riegert 1947.
Watch highlights from the 2013 Broadway production of Matilda The Musical:
The Stage Directors and Choreographers Foundation has announcedthe creation of an Emergency Assistance Fund to aid Members of the Stage Directors and Choreographers Society who are experiencing financial hardship due to the COVID-19 crisis.
Traditionally, Broadway theatres go dark in memory of a theatre artist upon their passing. April 9, however, theatres will dim their lights and instead shine messages of encouragement for essential service workers fighting on the front lines during the coronavirus pandemic.
Theatres with remotely accessible digital marquees will activate the new displays April 9 from 8 PM to 8:15 PM.
The move marks Broadway’s participation in the country-wide #LightItBlue campaign, organized by members of the entertainment industry in an effort to have major landmarks in New York City and beyond simultaneously turn blue as a sign of support.