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Lin-Manuel Miranda will turn 'Hamilton' 10th anniversary into a fundraiser for immigration services

Lin-Manuel Miranda will turn 'Hamilton' 10th anniversary into a fundraiser for immigration services

Lin-Manuel Miranda plans to use the 10th anniversary Broadway performance of his award-winning cultural phenomenon 'Hamilton' as a fundraiser for a coalition of nonprofits providing immigration services.
The Aug. 6 performance of 'Hamilton' at Broadway's Richard Rodgers Theatre is expected to raise about $3 million for the Immigrants: We Get the Job Done Coalition, 14 nonprofits ranging from the Hispanic Federation and National Immigration Law Center to the Haitian Bridge Alliance and the Tahirih Justice Center. The donation will come from Miranda, the Miranda Family and Miranda Family Fund, and the 'Hamilton' cast.
It seemed like a fitting tribute to 'Hamilton' and its inspiration, Founding Father Alexander Hamilton, Miranda told The Associated Press, though he recognizes that Hamilton wouldn't have called himself an immigrant.
'His narrative in our country kind of mirrors that of an immigrant story,' Miranda said. 'He did not grow up here. He didn't come from England. He came from the Caribbean, escaping harsh circumstances. And he really helped shape this country.'
Miranda did exclusively reveal some plans for the special, invite-only 'Hamilton' anniversary show and the preshow reception that he will host. Fans already know the possibilities after the special 'Hamilton' medley at the Tonys in June. Even the audience will be 'stacked,' he said, since every actor who has ever performed during the show's Broadway run will be invited to be in the audience to watch the show's current Broadway cast that night. 'We're working on something special for the curtain call and another nice special thing after that,' Miranda said. 'That's about all I can say.'
The bulk of the invites have gone to winners selected from a Prizeo sweepstakes, where entrants donated at least $10 to the Immigrants coalition. A few dozen VIP packages, ranging from $2,500 to $10,000, will be available Thursday through the Hispanic Federation, with proceeds also going to the coalition.
'One of America's greatest exports -- at least for me growing up -- was the immigration narrative,' Miranda said. 'So many people I know… came to this country from somewhere else seeking a better life and then helped make this country better by being here. And I believe that's one of the greatest promises, one of greatest things about the American experiment, and I'll continue to fight for that and support organizations that are helping that cause.'
And the organizations that will benefit from the donations generated by the 'Hamilton' 10th anniversary, better known as #Hamilten, say the donations and encouragement are sorely needed now.
Since the start of his second term, President Donald Trump swiftly moved to make good on 'Mass Deportation Now!' promises from his campaign. His administration has encouraged U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to detain and deport people quickly, even to countries where they have never been, in order to rein in illegal immigration.
Hispanic Federation President and CEO Frankie Miranda, no relation to Lin-Manuel Miranda, said he is heartened by the more than 125,000 people who have donated to the 'Hamilton' fundraiser. 'I think it is the beginning of what could be an incredible movement of philanthropy and individual donors basically saying, 'Enough is enough',' he said. 'We have seen it also in the different demonstrations of people around the country where they are expressing their concern and their frustration out in the streets.'
Hispanic Federation has already lost millions in federal funding, as the Trump administration cuts support for workplace development initiatives and environmental justice work, Frankie Miranda said. He has also seen some corporations withdraw their financial support because they fear reprisals from the Trump administration. 'We need bold ideas like 'Hamilton' where everybody feels that they can stand behind it,' he said.
Aarti Kohli, executive director of the Asian Law Caucus, another coalition member, said the donations would help her group continue to provide community legal services to individuals, while also pursuing lawsuits like its challenge to the Trump executive order seeking to strip away birthright citizenship from some children born in the United States.
'At this time, when so many people are afraid to speak out and support vulnerable communities, Lin-Manuel Miranda being willing to use the 'Hamilton' platform just shows real leadership and bravery,' Kohli said. 'And I'm hoping that more donors will step up and support our sector. We are the firewall between authoritarianism and democracy.'
Kica Matos, president of the National Immigration Law Center, said her nonprofit plans to use the donations from the coalition to support its Defending Democracy initiative, which informs immigrants of their rights and uses the law as 'a bulwark against unconstitutional actions carried out by this administration.'
Matos sees it as a 'full circle' moment to use funding generated by 'the story of one of our nation's Founding Fathers who himself was an indigent immigrant, who through his own grit, determination and his brilliance, worked his way up.' 'He was somebody who thought deeply about this new nation's democracy,' she added. 'What better way to honor Hamilton and to express our gratitude for these resources?'
'Immigrants: We get the job done' was a line that surprisingly resonated
For Lin-Manuel Miranda, the fact that people remain fascinated by 'Hamilton' 10 years later also leaves him feeling grateful.
And he remains surprised by the resonance of the line 'Immigrants: We get the job done,' a line shared in the show by Hamilton and French military officer Marquis de Lafayette at the Battle of Yorktown.
'I thought it was no big deal,' he said. 'But from the moment it was performed on stage, the audience reaction was so joyous at just the utterance of that simple fact. It's one of the things that just heartens me and gives me hope. In these dark times, it still gets a big cheer.'
The cheering still requires the show to add extra measures of music to wait for the audience to calm down before continuing with the song 'Yorktown.' Miranda attributes it to the fact that so many Americans are only one or two generations away from an immigrant.
'It's the same reason why that No Kings protest vastly outnumbered the military parade happening on the same day,' he said. 'There are still a lot of people who believe in basic decency and treating people who come here -- often from really tough situations -- with humanity.'
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Trump opens new golf course in Scotland
Trump opens new golf course in Scotland

The Hill

time6 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Trump opens new golf course in Scotland

President Trump on Tuesday opened his new golf course in Aberdeen, playing a round of golf before returning back to Washington, D.C. after his swing in Scotland. 'We'll play it very quickly and then I go back to D.C. and we put out fires all over the world,' Trump said at the opening ceremony. 'We did one yesterday, as you know, we stopped the war,' he continued, referring to Thailand and Cambodia agreeing to a ceasefire to end five days of fighting. 'That's much more important than playing golf. As much as I like it, it's much more important,' The president, surrounded by his sons Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr., cut a long red ribbon to mark the official opening. The president's signature song, 'YMCA,' played at the course and then the family exited the tee area before he hit a drive. After he hit a drive, Eric Trump did the same, followed by Irish professional golfer Paul McGinley and American professional golfer Rich Beem. The president watched and then walked along to continue his round of golf. Before exiting to go play, Trump responded to a shouted question on what he would say to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu amid the war in Gaza. He responded that he's 'trying to get things straightened out' The president called the Aberdeen course 'an unbelievable development' during his remarks. 'I guess we're going to be hitting a couple of balls. And we're going to play the round,' he added. 'I'll be playing quickly and then I'll be heading back. I look forward to that but I really look forward to playing.' Trump also thanked the media for being 'terrific' during the trip and said they're 'wonderful news' and not 'fake news' as of Tuesday. The president's sons spoke before the president and Eric Trump said the course started as a 'passion project for my father.' The new 18-hole course is outside of Aberdeen and will be named after his mother, Mary Anne MacLeod, who was born in Scotland. Trump owns two other golf courses in Scotland — a separate one in Aberdeen that opened in 2012 and one at Turnberry that opened in 2014.

Gwyneth Paltrow's Goop ‘Can Be A Tough Place To Work,' But Its Vision Is Clear, A New Biography Claims: ‘It's All About Gwyneth'
Gwyneth Paltrow's Goop ‘Can Be A Tough Place To Work,' But Its Vision Is Clear, A New Biography Claims: ‘It's All About Gwyneth'

Forbes

time33 minutes ago

  • Forbes

Gwyneth Paltrow's Goop ‘Can Be A Tough Place To Work,' But Its Vision Is Clear, A New Biography Claims: ‘It's All About Gwyneth'

Gwyneth Paltrow attends the 2023 CFDA Awards at American Museum of Natural History on November 6, ... More 2023 in New York City. (Photo by Taylor Hill/FilmMagic) Love her or hate her—when it comes to Gwyneth Paltrow, it's difficult to look away. This has led to the popularity of Paltrow's lifestyle brand, Goop, since its creation in 2008 as a newsletter written from her kitchen table—and that public fascination has now led to the writing of journalist Amy Odell's new book Gwyneth: The Biography, out July 29. Odell tells me over Zoom that she spent three years interviewing more than 220 people who knew Paltrow at different stages of her life—ranging from friends to those who worked with her on movie sets to those who worked with her at Goop—'and I wanted to pull back the curtain on how she became so famous and so polarizing,' she says. 'She's someone people are magnetically attracted to, but she's also been super controversial, and that's what I think the book does, is really tell that story and also explain how she impacted various industries—entertainment, obviously, but also fashion, beauty and, perhaps most significantly, wellness.' All of Paltrow's life experiences—from being a 1990s 'It Girl' and winning the Academy Award for Best Actress at just 26 years old to being raised as the privileged daughter of Bruce Paltrow and Blythe Danner (as Odell reminds me, 'I mean, Steven Spielberg is her godfather') and so much in between—led to the creation of Goop 17 years ago and its trajectory ever since. While Odell's book covers so much more than Goop—from her high-profile relationships to her childhood to her acting career—it also leans heavily into Paltrow as an entrepreneur. 'She seems really ambitious,' Odell tells me. 'She obviously juggles a lot of things capably.' She's authentic, she adds, and 'was never shy about just being who she is. This is all she knows. So I think that really works in her favor.' Gwyneth Paltrow attends Veuve Clicquot Celebrates 250th Anniversary with Solaire Exhibition on ... More October 25, 2022 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by Frazer Harrison/WireImage) It's nearly impossible to separate Paltrow the businesswoman from Paltrow the woman, and Gwyneth paints a holistic portrait of the 52-year-old's life. Of Goop, Odell says, 'Gwyneth made it very appealing through her taste—her really good taste—and she made it a world that people wanted to be a part of.' 'The problem is, she wanted to do everything, and she wanted to do it all perfectly' At the office, Paltrow is known mostly as 'GP'; she often rolls up to the Goop offices—wearing, of course, Goop's G. Label clothing line—and parks her white Range Rover in a spot labeled 'Reserved for G-Spot.' As a boss, 'Some people find it to be quite challenging,' Odell says of Paltrow. 'But I think the good thing about working for her is that her vision is very clear. She has this extraordinary taste—a really sophisticated aesthetic and aspirational aesthetic that she brought to the wellness industry. I think that's, in part, what made Goop and Goop's wellness content so appealing. It was this gorgeous, aspirational aesthetic she brought to it.' Dr. Ella Bell and Gwyneth Paltrow, CEO and Founder of Goop, speak onstage during day three of The ... More MAKERS Conference 2024 at The Beverly Hilton on February 29, 2024 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo byfor The 2024 MAKERS Conference) Right down to the company's name, Paltrow is in the midst of it—Goop was chosen as a moniker because of Paltrow's initials, GP, and the perceived fact that companies with double Os—think Google or Yahoo!—did well. According to Odell's book, Paltrow initially thought the name was 'stupid and funny,' and she has also said in the past that Goop was 'an old nickname' (her father, Bruce, apparently used to call her 'Goopie'). True to Paltrow's authentic nature, two Miramax executives told Odell that they remembered Paltrow using a Goop@ email address back in the 1990s. She is who she is. As a boss—Paltrow has served as CEO of Goop since 2016, eight years after founding it—she has 'very strong ideas and a very clear vision,' Odell says. 'The problem is, she wanted to do everything, and she wanted to do it all perfectly.' Paltrow, known as a perfectionist, has also seen Goop spread itself rather thin—from beauty to fashion to wellness to food to newsletters to podcasts to Netflix shows, there are few verticals that the company hasn't touched. 'So people felt overworked, and there wasn't a lot of money for everything they were doing—some people felt like they didn't have enough budget for freelancers and things like that,' Odell says. 'So there's a lot of work to be done, and there's this perfectionism that she wants to achieve. So people felt pressure from that.' Gwyneth Paltrow, Powerhouse Brand of the Year Award recipient, attends The Daily Front Row's Seventh ... More Annual Fashion Los Angeles Awards at The Beverly Hills Hotel on April 23, 2023 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo byfor Daily Front Row) If you walk into Paltrow's office, she wants you to get directly to the point, Odell says, and 'then you could just go.' When Paltrow shines her light on someone, 'it feels amazing and people really thrive, but there's a fear that it's going to be taken away,' Odell tells me. If it does get taken away, in comes the stress, and 'that stress could just permeate the office environment.' Some, Odell says, called Paltrow 'icy and cold and aloof,' drawing comparisons to Vogue's departing editor-in-chief Anna Wintour, whom Odell also profiled in a 2022 biography. 'I think it can be a tough place to work,' Odell says. 'That said—[it's] not for everybody. Some people found it to be really tough. Some people ignored the chaos and were fine, and people said they liked that the vision was very clear, which was that it's Gwyneth. It's all about Gwyneth.' 'She's like the original influencer' Much like when Paltrow shines her light on an employee and they feel her warmth, so it is when Paltrow promotes Goop's products—that's when they do the best. 'They do sell,' Odell says. 'People want to buy what she's wearing. She looks great in the clothes, and she looks great wearing the mascara. So she's very powerful in that way. But what if she gets tired of it? People tell me she doesn't love doing the social media content—not that I can blame her. She's got a lot on her plate.' Gwyneth Paltrow, CEO and founder of lifestyle juggernaut Goop, makes her first appearance in the ... More Tank as a guest Shark on 'Shark Tank.' (Christopher Willard/ABC via Getty Images) Goop came about when Paltrow was living in London with her ex-husband Chris Martin and their two young kids: Apple, born in 2004, and Moses, born in 2006. After becoming a mother, Paltrow dialed back her work as an actress, which seems to be revving up again after both kids have now gone away to college. That leaves questions about the future of Goop—after all, what is Goop without Paltrow? 'I'm not saying Gwyneth is not there for the company, but if she changes her mind—so the investors I spoke to, they did not see a super bright future for Goop, I have to say,' Odell says. Before Goop, Paltrow threw her star power behind brands like American Express and Estée Lauder before she realized, 'Hey, why am I using my image to promote these other brands when I can use it to build my own brand?' Odell says of Paltrow's possible thought patterns during that time period. 'Which is incredibly savvy. And I think, in that way, she's like the original influencer, because she realized that she could use her image to drive purchases, and she did really early affiliate deals before anyone was calling them affiliate deals, and now affiliate deals are this huge industry.' 'I think she's been so strategic,' Odell tells me. Gwyneth Paltrow celebrates the launch of at Goop on October 18, 2023 in Santa ... More Monica, California. (Photo byfor Since its newsletter origins, it has focused on the aforementioned beauty (Goop Beauty and Good Clean Goop), fashion (G. Label), wellness (Goop Wellness) and food (Goop Kitchen) verticals; it has had a Netflix series, a podcast, dipped its toe into home furnishings and courted controversy for its perceived pseudoscience and boundary-pushing products, like a viral candle advertised as smelling like Paltrow's orgasm. Many people told Odell that Goop has spread itself too thin, 'that they did too much,' she says. 'They raised a lot of money, too. One expert I talked to said they probably never should have raised that much money.' Odell's many interviews led her to believe that 'they can keep going probably for a very long time, just as they are today,' she says. 'I think it's probably really up to Gwyneth—do I want to keep doing this? Do I want to have a little bit more flexibility and maybe license more of this business? I think it's really up to her.' In September 2024, Goop let go 18 percent of its staff—affecting about 40 people—followed by a second round of layoffs last November. The goal of the reduction is to 'optimize operational efficiency and revenue growth in our key verticals of beauty and fashion,' a Goop spokesperson told Business Insider. The spokesperson declined to provide specific revenue figures, but said revenue grew year-over-year in 2023 and was on track to grow again in 2024. While the spokesperson declined to say if Goop—a privately-held company—is profitable, Business Insider did report in November that Goop Beauty revenue was up 21 percent over the year prior, and the fashion brand G. Label was up 45 percent. The outlet reported that Goop has raised more than $140 million and was most recently valued at $433 million (per PitchBook); last fall, Paltrow told WWD that, after the first round of layoffs, Goop was 'back in growth mode.' 'What I'm most excited about is the refining of the brand that we're doing—our hyperfocus on beauty, fashion and food,' Paltrow told Fortune in March. 'Those are the verticals where we're seeing incredible product-market fit and margin. Food, beauty and G. Label all grew exponentially last year. Since COVID, we've had to stay so agile, and getting to the other side of that and focusing on our strengths—there's power in that.' Founder and CEO of Goop Gwyneth Paltrow speaks onstage during 'The Rise of Goop: Building a ... More Tastemaking Empire' at Vanity Fair's 6th Annual New Establishment Summit at Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts on October 22, 2019 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo byfor Vanity Fair) Paltrow called layoffs 'painful' and told the publication that 'it's always a very difficult thing to do, but sometimes for the rigor of the business, it's necessary.' 'I hate doing that more than anything in the world,' she continued, adding that Goop was 'very, very close' to being profitable, 'which is incredibly exciting, and a big milestone.' Not bad for a newsletter sharing recipes and recommendations with no monetization strategy in place in the company's early days. Back then, Odell writes, 'the whole spectacle of Goop was just plain entertaining, like a very curated look into her life.' Speaking of a look into her life—and into Paltrow's influence—after she announced in 2014 that she and Martin were separating after 10 years of marriage, famously calling it a 'conscious uncoupling,' 'received so much traffic, the site crashed,' Odell writes. As the company monetized and got into e-commerce, 'I didn't understand anything,' Paltrow said, as quoted in Gwyneth. 'I didn't finish college. I didn't go to business school. I didn't go up through a corporate environment.' 'They just grew too big' Going forward, as Paltrow said herself, Goop's strategy is to niche down on beauty, fashion and food: 'The best thing to do is just embrace your niche, and scale can come from that,' Paltrow said at the 2024 Forbes Power Women's Summit. 'A lot of mistakes have come from me not understanding that.' 'We have a lot of intention around what we're doing, and I'm proud that we're still alive and kicking,' she added. Gwyneth Paltrow attends the 'Encore! Embracing the new entertainment era' session during the Cannes ... More Lions International Festival Of Creativity 2024 day two at Amazon Port Plaza Stage on June 18, 2024 in Cannes, France. (Photo by) If Goop could go back in time, it should have done this from the start, Odell tells me. 'People I talked to said she might've been better off just trying to prove one vertical first—just do beauty and kill it in beauty, and then maybe you iterate from there,' she says, citing Kim Kardashian's Skims and its commitment to shapewear as an example. While Skims was founded by Kardashian, it's not all about Kardashian, 'and that makes you stronger, I think, as a celebrity brand,' Odell says. With Goop, 'I think what happened there—this is my informed view on it—is that they built out all those different businesses, the clothing, the beauty, the events, all of that,' Odell says. 'And they just grew too big. It was just too expensive to do all of that, a lot to build out a staff, to do a beauty line, to do a clothing line, a staff to do content. So they cut back because they needed to. The expenses were just too high.' As Odell writes in Gwyneth, 'Not only was the pace and breadth of work unsustainable for employees, it would also prove unsustainable for Goop.' '[But] they're still there and the company's still going,' Odell tells me. 'And Gwyneth is still the CEO.' These days, Odell was told the Goop Kitchen is the company's biggest moneymaker—hence food making the cut alongside beauty and fashion as the path forward. When asked about a possible exit someday, Paltrow told Fortune, 'I'm in building mode and not thinking about an exit right now. I don't even really want to think about it for another three years, or even start thinking about it.' Gwyneth Paltrow and Michaela Boehm speak onstage during the goop lab Special Screening in Los ... More Angeles, California on January 21, 2020. (Photo by) It remains uncertain what will come of Goop, but what Odell knows? 'Whatever happens with Goop, Gwyneth will be fine,' she writes in the book. 'She has a way of emerging victorious from any calamity.' Goop's success, in large part, boils down to Paltrow and the public's inability to take its eyes off her, a woman who Odell writes possesses 'an enduring level of status and fascination few ever achieve.' 'Goop was a window into a certain elitism,' she continues in the book. 'And people couldn't look away.' To a degree, they still can't.

Blue Green Works Unveils Sculptural Lighting Collection 'Crown'
Blue Green Works Unveils Sculptural Lighting Collection 'Crown'

Hypebeast

timean hour ago

  • Hypebeast

Blue Green Works Unveils Sculptural Lighting Collection 'Crown'

Summary Blue Green Worksintroduces the 'Crown' collection, a sculptural lighting series that reinterprets the regal emblem through a minimalist lens. Conceived by Creative DirectorPeter B. Staples, the collection draws from his early fascination with tattoo iconography and medieval heraldry, distilling the crown's ceremonial weight into four refined fixtures. Each piece, crafted from hand-formed glass and polished steel or brass, strips away ornamentation while preserving the symbol's quiet authority, offering a modern meditation on tradition and form. Evolving from the studio's acclaimed 'Palm' series, 'Crown' continues Blue Green Works' exploration of materiality and silhouette. Glass 'petals' radiate from a central metal core, echoing Pierre Paulin's biomorphic curves and nodding to the legacy of Modernist design. The fixtures – Crown Pendant 1, Pendant 2, Pendant 3 and Flush Mount – balance expressive geometry with pragmatic function, casting a soft upward glow and a concentrated beam below. This duality reflects Staples's intent to give light a tangible shape, capturing not just illumination but its movement through space. Each piece is meticulously handcrafted by master glass artisans in the Pacific Northwest, using a multi-phase process that emphasizes precision and restraint. The result is a collection that resists easy categorization, bridging eras and aesthetics. Available through Blue Green Works'official site, SCP in London and Triode in Paris, the 'Crown' collection stands as a testament to the studio's commitment to American craft and contemporary iconography.

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