logo
Maren Morris on touring, Taylor Swift advice and why she feels like Elphaba in 'Wicked'

Maren Morris on touring, Taylor Swift advice and why she feels like Elphaba in 'Wicked'

USA Today02-05-2025

Maren Morris on touring, Taylor Swift advice and why she feels like Elphaba in 'Wicked'
Show Caption
Hide Caption
Maren Morris gets candid on her past year: 'It hasn't been easy'
Maren Morris chats with USA TODAY's Ralphie Aversa about her Golden Globe nomination and the past year of her life and career.
Maren Morris is a few days past her divergent Coachella performances – a lovely 'My Church' with the LA Philharmonic and a lively 'The Middle' with electro-pop DJ Zedd – and she's still buzzing from the desert music festival.
'Singing 'My Church' with the orchestra, that was my first single and country hit but you saw 10 years later the resonance it still had with the crowd,' Morris says from Nashville. 'I always get emotional during that song, but with the choir and the setting at golden hour when we performed … and then cut to the next night with Zedd. A complete 180. We've had such a great friendship so I didn't feel as nervous. And the artists he brought up – John Mayer and Julia Michaels – are all my friends, so it was a celebratory night.'
Morris has plenty to revel in this year.
Her just-released fourth studio album, 'Dreamsicle,' a lush pop-leaning extension of last summer's 'Intermission' EP, is stocked with equal parts sass and introspection.
The songs 'Bed No Breakfast' and 'Push Me Over' detail modern dating from the bisexual Morris with a mixture of cheeky humor and pure exploratory lust, while the album's glossy title track digs into her continued acceptance that sometimes even things that feel permanent melt away ('Will I ever enjoy anything while I'm standing in it?' she muses in the song).
When it's mentioned that much of the lyrical content on the album has a 'something has changed within me' vibe connected to the "Wicked" song 'Defying Gravity,' Morris immediately agrees.
More: Beyoncé brings Cowboy Carter to life in flawless tour kick off: Review
'I'm a massive 'Wicked' fan and I heavily identify with Elphaba. Her core beliefs have been so rocked that she feels so betrayed, but she also has this intrepid calmness because she knows she can't change the entire system,' Morris, 35, says. 'Everyone comes to the point with their hometown or a relationship and been like, I have reached the finish line of whatever this was and I cannot stick around ... and that is scary.'
Morris, who divorced country singer/songwriter Ryan Hurd in 2024 (they share a 5-year-old son, Hayes) said she reached out to friends including Taylor Swift and The Chicks during her times of personal upheaval and gleaned 'peace and advice' from them.
But her experiences are her own, and Morris views 'Dreamsicle' as a 'demarcation line' in her life.
'It's honoring her,' she says of her younger self, 'and not this 'youth is wasted on the young' bitterness, but more 'thank God she got me here.' These are several chapters of my life going into one full (album) and I'm honoring each of them. I'm so happy I gave myself the time to do so. This is a healing space.'
Along with her new album, Morris will embark on a global trek to support 'Dreamsicle,' with the North American leg starting July 12 in Quebec City and running through Sept. 12 in Atlanta. Tickets are on sale at 10 a.m. local time May 2 via marenmorris.com.
She's been crafting the tour and production for about a year and is excited that plans 'are 3D now and not just an email PDF.'
The mix of festivals, amphitheaters and clubs is something she's become used to since the pandemic caused the cancelation of her 2020 RSVP Tour.
'Since COVID we've been flexible and adaptable to the touring scale, which we learned to do out of necessity. It's worked in our favor because playing some intimate venues, we can get our bearings from day one,' she says. 'I just want (the shows) to feel like a vulnerable, fun experience and escape. I'm really setting an artistically high bar for myself and I want it to feel human to the fan buying the ticket.'
While the color palette of 'Dreamsicle' indicates a '60s-era 'Beach Blanket Bingo' motif, Morris is leaning more toward the trees and ambient lighting of her last tour rather than the 'crazy LED walls and low fog and hydraulic lifts' from her run to support 'Girl' in 2019.
'I love a lamp and a rug and some instruments. Those have always been touchstones to me, like, can these people actually play and sing? I do love an over-the-top show, but for what I do, I think there is a way to blend both worlds and bring it back to an organic space of real humans making music,' she says.
More: Post Malone fires up first stadium tour with trusty accomplice Jelly Roll: Review
As with her 2022 Humble Quest Tour, Morris will be joined by her closest fan, son Hayes, who is already a road warrior who travels well, loves to visit catering and hang out with mom's band.
Morris readily admits that touring with a child changes the dynamic – 'Your day is a lot longer and a lot different,' she says – but she appreciates the ancillary benefits of having her little guy on the bus.
'The biggest gift with kids is experiencing things through their eyes and he's getting me out of my comfort zone of the bus and venue and we're going to the local zoo and park,' she says.
Once she's on stage, though, Morris will sprinkle many of her new songs throughout a set that might include her reworked slow-burn version of Billy Idol's 1983 fist pumper, 'Dancing with Myself' along with new album tracks that she describes as 'living in organic spaces to heavily layered synths and vocal stacks.'
Two standout tracks, the funky 'People Still Show Up' co-produced by Jack Antonoff and the pub singalong 'Too Good,' are prime contenders and also indicative of Morris' personal listening habits during her writing and recording period – a lot of Patty Griffin, Foy Vance and a throwback to her high school years, The Cardigans.
'I was in this deep, deep '70s mindset,' she says. 'There was a lot of vulnerability and chaos in my songwriting, but also a lot of fun and pop … I never feel like I have to change anything.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Judge dismisses multiple claims in Vin Diesel sex abuse lawsuit from ex-assistant
Judge dismisses multiple claims in Vin Diesel sex abuse lawsuit from ex-assistant

USA Today

time19 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Judge dismisses multiple claims in Vin Diesel sex abuse lawsuit from ex-assistant

Judge dismisses multiple claims in Vin Diesel sex abuse lawsuit from ex-assistant Show Caption Hide Caption Elon Musk faces allegations of workplace harassment at SpaceX Elon Musk has been accused of pursuing sexual relationships with women at SpaceX, including a former intern 20 years his junior. unbranded - Newsworthy Over a year after Vin Diesel was sued by a former assistant, who accused him of wrongful termination and sexual assault, the judge in the case is dismissing some of its most potent claims. In a tentative ruling on June 3, Judge Daniel M. Crowley agreed to dismiss four different claims of harassment made by Diesel's former employee Asta Jonasson. Jonasson, who originally sued the actor in December 2023, has alleged he sexually assaulted her in the fall of 2010 during the filming of "Fast Five," the fifth installment of his brand-making "Fast and Furious" franchise. She was then unceremoniously fired, she alleges, a claim that lies at the center of the parts of the lawsuit Crowley opted to dismiss. USA TODAY has reached out to lawyers for both Diesel and Jonasson for comment. 'The Fast and the Furious' turns 20: Vin Diesel recalls fixing Paul Walker's 'goofy lines' A technical rather than substantive error, Crowley ruled that because Jonasson levied her claims under California's Fair Employment and Housing Act, she would have been required to file a complaint with the state's Civil Rights Division within a certain time frame. She would have had to file the complaint within a year of the incident, a deadline which came and went in 2011, Crowley wrote, calling it an "incurable procedural defect" that required he dismiss Jonasson's claims of a hostile work environment, discrimination, retaliation and a failure to prevent harassment on the part of Diesel and his company. While this week's ruling notches a small win for the action star, he will continue to face Jonasson's six other allegations, which include accusations of sexual battery and intentional infliction of emotional distress. Vin Diesel to stay with 'Fast and Furious' franchise after sexual assault lawsuit What is Vin Diesel accused of? According to the original lawsuit, Jonasson was hired by Diesel's production company, One Race (also named in the suit), to work for him in various capacities, including accompanying the actor to parties and ensuring she was nearby in photos if the actor attended events without his longtime girlfriend. After a late night in September 2010, Jonasson's lawyers allege she was asked to wait for Diesel in his suite at the St. Regis hotel while he entertained hostesses from a club. When the women left, Diesel grabbed Jonasson's wrists and pulled her onto the bed, according to the lawsuit. She escaped and asked Diesel to leave, but he allegedly began to grope her breasts, kiss her chest and run his hands along her waist and upper legs, including her inner thighs. Jonasson was afraid to "forcibly refuse her superior" for her personal safety and job security, but after Diesel moved to pull down her underwear, Jonasson screamed and ran down a hallway. According to the lawsuit, Diesel pinned her to the wall and placed her hand on his genitals and then masturbated, while "terrified, Ms. Jonasson closed her eyes, trying to dissociate from the sexual assault and avoid angering him," according to the suit. Hours later, Diesel's sister and president of One Race, Samantha Vincent, called Jonasson to fire her after fewer than two weeks on the job, the suit says. Though Jonasson signed a nondisclosure agreement when she accepted the position, she was able to file the claims because of the Speak Out Act, which prevents the enforcement of nondisclosure agreements in instances of sexual assault and assault and harassment, and California's AB2777, which temporarily waives statutes of limitations for sexual abuse allegations occurring in 2009 or later. Contributing: Melissa Ruggieri, Bryan Alexander, USA TODAY If you or someone you know has experienced sexual violence, RAINN's National Sexual Assault Hotline offers free, confidential, 24/7 support to survivors and their loved ones in English and Spanish at: (4673) and and en Español

'Stick' star Owen Wilson says golf can make you 'crazy,' and wants to earn his own meltdown
'Stick' star Owen Wilson says golf can make you 'crazy,' and wants to earn his own meltdown

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

'Stick' star Owen Wilson says golf can make you 'crazy,' and wants to earn his own meltdown

'Stick' star Owen Wilson says golf can make you 'crazy,' and wants to earn his own meltdown Show Caption Hide Caption Owen Wilson talks new Apple TV+ golf comedy 'Stick' While promoting his new golf comedy series, Owen Wilson reveals the funniest golf meltdown he's ever seen while playing the game with brother Luke. LOS ANGELES — Owen Wilson readily admits that his golf game was already washed up when he agreed to play over-the-hill pro Pryce Cahill in the comedy "Stick." "The Wedding Crashers" star, 56, who says he's more skilled on tennis or pickleball courts, couldn't quite relate to the PGA meltdown on national TV that ended Cahill's promising career in the Apple TV+ series (three episodes now streaming, then weekly on Wednesdays). 'I've definitely tossed a tennis racket, but I haven't gotten good enough at golf to toss a club yet,' Wilson tells USA TODAY. 'If I hit a good shot, it's like, 'Whoa! Where did that come from?' Once you get a level of competence where there's an expectation and then you don't meet that — that's when you have a meltdown. But there is something about golf that can drive you crazy." Wilson is still working to get to 'Stick' golf status Wilson has his reasons for his subpar game, which never flourished while he was growing up in Dallas, with golf-loving father Robert Wilson and actor brothers, Andrew and Luke Wilson. Owen was left-handed in a right-handed house. 'My dad didn't see enough in my game to invest in lefty clubs, so I was left to hack away with righty clubs,' he says. 'That was my excuse to myself.' When "Stick" creator Jason Keller rolled up with the series' boyishly optimistic golf-guru role, Wilson seized the part and pushed himself to improve his game drastically. He hit the links as if it were his full-time job. Working with golf consultant Nathan Leonhardt, however, was more financial strain than golf gain. 'Nathan didn't give me much. He took my money more," says Wilson. "We'd bet on shots and putting matches, and he wouldn't give me much of a handicap.' Pryce Cahill's 'Stick' meltdown sinks marriage to wife Amber-Linn (Judy Greer) The actor already possesses the good-natured gravitas of a down-on-his-luck former golf star who still hangs with his loyal caddy Mitts (Marc Maron). Pryce, known as 'Stick' for his former prowess, has personal reasons for the TV meltdown 20 years earlier. The nightmare haunts him on YouTube and contributed to the end of his marriage to wife Amber-Linn (Judy Greer). But he takes a shot at golf redemption, hitting the road to mentor free-swining phenom Santi Wheeler (Peter Dager) while keeping the peace with Santi's mother Elena (Mariana Treviño), girlfriend Zero (Lilli Kay) and Mitts. When mentor Pryce steps up to hit on camera, Wilson had a blonde-wigged "swing double" professional step in or focused solely on the smooth motion for the camera. "In golf shows, they have you swing a lot without the ball," he says. Owen Wilson plays pickleball in Apple TV+ golf series 'Stick' "Stick" is about teen golf prodigy Santi Wheeler (Peter Dager) learning from coach Pryce Cahill (Owen Wilson). But there is pickleball. Wilson has seen Woody Harrelson get burned in pickleball Wilson feels he's earned the right to act heated during a "Stick" episode featuring a pickleball match. He's got skills from being a regular pickleballer at his Maui, Hawaii, home with a group that includes actor Woody Harrelson. 'Woody has played longer than any of us. But still, when someone came to watch us play recently, they asked Woody, 'Was this your first time today?' That did not go over well,' says Wilson. 'That'd be like someone asking me that same question after seeing me tee off. I've been spending 40 hours a week on this game for more than two years.' Wilson beat pro golfers in a glorious putting contest After all that practice, Wilson savored tooling around with PGA stars Max Homa, Wyndham Clark and Collin Morikawa, among a slew of "Stick" pro-golfer cameos. While competitively putting with the group, Wilson insists he sank a clutch 10-foot putt that the pros missed. 'I made the putt, they didn't. So that was satisfying,' says Wilson. 'That's one of golf's alluring things, making a shot that even a pro would be happy with.' The upstart was brought back to Earth when Morikawa, winner of six PGA tour events, dropped a putt in front of scores of spectators while cameras rolled. 'When the pressure was on, in front of a grandstand of extras, Morikawa sank this incredible putt,' says Wilson. 'I did not.' Still, Keller has hopes for Wilson's golf game that could be unleashed in a potential Season 2. 'I just played 18 holes with him. He's still finding his game, but the golfer I saw Tuesday was a completely different golfer than the one we started with," he says. "That swing was super smooth.' An earned golf meltdown is surely within Wilson's grasp. During a recent outing with brother Andrew, 60, things got so heated that the duo stopped talking to each other for 13 holes. 'Even though we'd driven to the course together, he took an Uber back because we weren't speaking,' says Wilson. 'We even won that day, but he just made me so mad, and apparently I made him so mad that it became this argument.' In a page out of Pryce's playbook, Wilson apologized to make peace. "I took the high road, even though I didn't owe an apology," says Wilson. 'I just said, 'Why aren't we celebrating this win that we had today?' He was like, 'Yeah, you're right!'"

Everything To Know About ‘Wicked: For Good'—And How To Watch The Trailer
Everything To Know About ‘Wicked: For Good'—And How To Watch The Trailer

Forbes

timean hour ago

  • Forbes

Everything To Know About ‘Wicked: For Good'—And How To Watch The Trailer

"Wicked" movie poster Following Wicked's blockbuster release last year, there's a ton of excitement brewing for Part 2 of the fantasy movie musical starring Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo. The official Wicked: For Good trailer is coming out today, June 4, but there's only one way to watch it before it's released to the public. Directed by Jon M. Chu, the Wicked films are based on the Tony-winning Broadway musical 'Wicked,' which itself was inspired by Gregory Maguire's 1995 novel reimagining the iconic characters from The Wizard of Oz. The movie was split into two parts; Wicked: Part One was released on Nov. 22, 2024, while the second part, later renamed Wicked: For Good, will debut later in 2025. For one day only on July 4, Wicked will return to the big screen for a nationwide special screening at a set time, allowing everyone to experience the movie together. Following the film, the official trailer for Wicked: For Good will premiere in theaters before its online debut. Here's everything to know about Wicked: For Good, including how to watch the trailer, the release date, songs and more. "Wicked" movie from Universal Pictures. On Wednesday, June 4, audiences can watch the first trailer for Wicked: For Good at 6 p.m. ET. The trailer will premiere immediately following the limited screening of Wicked that day. To purchase tickets for the screening, visit the official Wicked movie website and select 'Get Tickets.' After moviegoers get the first look at the trailer in theaters, the Wicked: For Good trailer will be available to watch online. (We'll link it here once it's live.) "Wicked" movie from Universal Pictures. Wicked: For Good will premiere in theaters on Nov. 21, 2025 – almost exactly one year after the release of the first film. "Wicked" movie from Universal Pictures. Wicked: For Good picks up after the events of Part One, where Elphaba and Glinda discover that the Wizard is a fraud, and Elphaba is declared the new enemy of Oz. The next chapter will focus on the lead-up to The Wizard of Oz, including how Elphaba becomes the Wicked Witch of the West and how Glinda becomes the Good Witch. 'In full control of her powers, Elphaba is declared an enemy of the state by the Wizard and Madame Morrible,' the synopsis reads. "Wicked" movie from Universal Pictures. Wicked: For Good was filmed back-to-back with Wicked: Part One from December 2022 to July 2023, with production wrapping in January 2024 due to delays caused by the Hollywood strikes. Director Jon M. Chu confirmed to Deadline that he edited both parts side by side ahead of the first film's release. 'I cut both of them at the same time last year so I could watch both of them back to back, and wait til that happens. It's a doozy to see both,' he said. 'I put it to bed. I needed to know that every scene in one had an intention for two, and we put that to bed, and I just opened it up last week. We're tweaking and doing all the things.' It's currently unknown how long the sequel will be. The first cut for Wicked: Part One was close to four hours long before it was edited down to 2 hours and 40 minutes. "Wicked" movie from Universal Pictures. Wicked: For Good is expected to feature beloved hits from the second half of the Broadway musical, including 'As Long As You're Mine' and 'For Good.' However, viewers will also get to hear two new songs written specifically for the films, composer-lyricist Stephen Schwartz confirmed to The Messenger in December 2024. 'The storytelling required it, and therefore they were created,' Schwartz said of the additions. 'The intention was that they were organic and not imposed on the movie.' Erivo later revealed that one of the new songs will be sung by Elphaba – and that she had a hand in co-writing it. 'I don't know if you're ready for it,' the actress said on Variety's Awards Circuit podcast. 'I feel like the song is very, very special. I have a feeling that even the title will move you.' Here are some of the songs you can expect to hear in Wicked: For Good. Wicked: Part One is streaming on Peacock.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store