logo
Audra McDonald fires back at Patti LuPone's claim she's ‘not a friend' after Broadway rift

Audra McDonald fires back at Patti LuPone's claim she's ‘not a friend' after Broadway rift

New York Post3 days ago

Audra McDonald is setting the record straight on where she stands with Patti LuPone.
On Monday, the Broadway legend, 76, told The New Yorker that McDonald, 54, is 'not a friend.'
McDonald shared her point of view on LuPone's comment in a clip shared to CBS 'Sunday Mornings' Instagram on Thursday.
9 Audra McDonald response to Patti LuPone's comments.
CBS Sunday Morning/Instagram
9 Audra McDonald on CBS 'Sunday Mornings.'
CBS Sunday Morning/Instagram
'If there's a rift between us, I don't know what it is,' she stated. 'That's something you'd have to ask Patti about. You know, I haven't seen her in about 11 years just because we've been busy just with life. So I don't know what rift she's talking about, but you'd have to ask her.'
Many fans flocked to the comments section to praise McDonald for her response, with one follower sharing, 'Audra is a class act (had she chosen to be petty I wouldn't have been mad either.)'
Another social media user wrote, ''I don't know her' energy. our queen!' while a third chimed in, 'She certainly took the high road.'
9 Audra McDonald and Patti LuPone pose at the Drama League's 27th Annual All-Star Benefit Gala.
FilmMagic
During LuPone's interview, she told the outlet their rift is due to an incident that occurred years prior.
When asked to comment on McDonald's current role as Rose in 'Gypsy,' LuPone allegedly sat in silence before turning to the window, letting out a sigh and exclaiming, 'What a beautiful day.'
The 'Private Practice' alum is nominated for a Tony this year for her role as Mama Rose in 'Gypsy.' The nod makes McDonald the most nominated performer of all time, with 11 nominations total, while the 'Agatha All Along' star previously won a Tony for her part in the musical in 2008.
9 Audra McDonald and Patti Lupone during the celebration of John Mauceri's 200th concert with the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra.
Los Angeles Times via Getty Images
9 Patti LuPone, Michael Cerveris, Audra McDonald.
Aubrey Reuben
McDonald has already garnered six Tonys, while LuPone has taken home three.
The former friends have performed together over the years, both starring in the New York Philharmonic's concert version of 'Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street' in 2000.
Seven years later, they took the stage again to work on the LA Opera's production of 'Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny.'
9 Patti LuPone speaks onstage during the 36th Annual GLAAD Awards.
Getty Images for GLAAD
During LuPone's sit down, she also discussed another sore subject: her 'painful' relationship with ex Kevin Kline, 77.
The two were on and off for seven years in the 1970s, with the 'And Just Like That…' actress telling the New Yorker, 'I took an instant dislike to him.'
'He looked like Pinocchio to me,' continued LuPone. 'He had skinny legs and he was tall, and I didn't really see the handsomeness.'
9 Audra McDonald, Stephen Sondheim, Patti LuPone.
Freelance Photographer
One day, sparks flew in the back of a class when the pair began 'feeling each other up.'
LuPone exclaimed, 'He was a Lothario.'
During their relationship, the former flames starred in the 1975 Broadway musical 'The Robber Bridegroom.'
LuPone married Matthew Johnston in 1988. They later welcomed a son, Joshua Luke Johnston.
9 Audra McDonald during the opening night curtain call for the new revival of the musical 'Gypsy.'
WireImage
9 Audra McDonald portrays Rose during a performance of the Broadway musical 'Gypsy' in New York.
AP
In 1989, Kline ended up tying the knot with Phoebe Cates and welcoming children Owen and Greta.
'It was a painful relationship,' LuPone reflected. 'I was his girlfriend when he wanted me to be his girlfriend, but if there was somebody else he would break up with me and go out with that person. And I, for some reason, stuck it out — until I couldn't stick it out anymore.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Patti Lupone apologizes for ‘disrespectful' comments made about fellow Broadway actors during New Yorker interview
Patti Lupone apologizes for ‘disrespectful' comments made about fellow Broadway actors during New Yorker interview

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Patti Lupone apologizes for ‘disrespectful' comments made about fellow Broadway actors during New Yorker interview

Patti Lupone has issued an apology after making what she now describes as 'demeaning and disrespectful' comments about two fellow Broadway stars in an interview with the New Yorker last week. The 'Evita' star's apology comes after hundreds of performers from the Broadway and theater communities issued an open letter first published by Playbill and called for accountability in light of Lupone's 'deeply inappropriate and unacceptable public comments' about Broadway stars Kecia Lewis and Audra McDonald. In the interview, Lupone referred to Lewis as a 'b*tch' and said McDonald was 'not a friend,' prompting a wave of backlash against the notoriously thorny legend. Lupone had previously had public spats with both performers. 'I am deeply sorry for the words I used during The New Yorker interview, particularly about Kecia Lewis, which were demeaning and disrespectful,' Lupone wrote in a statement posted to her Instagram page Saturday. 'I regret my flippant and emotional responses during this interview, which were inappropriate, and I am devastated that my behavior has offended others and has run counter to what we hold dear in this community.' Lupone added that she hopes 'to have the chance to speak to' McDonald and Lewis personally to offer her 'sincere apologies.' The letter, which was issued to the American Theatre Wing and The Broadway League, also called upon the institutions to take action by not welcoming Lupone at 'industry events,' including the Tony Awards, which are presented by the two institutions. 'This language is not only degrading and misogynistic—it is a blatant act of racialized disrespect. It constitutes bullying. It constitutes harassment,' the letter stated. 'It is emblematic of the microaggressions and abuse that people in this industry have endured for far too long, too often without consequence.' The Tony Awards are set to take place June 8. In her apology on Saturday, Lupone wrote that she 'wholeheartedly' agreed with 'everything that was written' in the open letter. 'From middle school drama clubs to professional stages, theatre has always been about lifting each other up and welcoming those who feel they don't belong anywhere else,' Lupone wrote. 'I made a mistake, I take full responsibility for it, and I am committed to making this right. Our entire theatre community deserves better.' CNN has reached out to representatives for Lupone, Lewis and McDonald for comment. In the New Yorker interview, Lupone was asked about an incident that happened last year when Lewis posted a video to her Instagram page asking for an apology from Lupone after she had called 'Hell's Kitchen,' the stage production in which Lewis stars, 'too loud.' She said Lupone, who was at the time starring in 'The Roommate' in the theater next to 'Hell's Kitchen,' had requested that the latter's sound department make adjustments. In Lewis' video, she called herself and Lupone veterans in the industry and said Lupone's actions were 'offensive' and 'racially microaggressive.' When asked about the incident by the New Yorker, Lupone responded: 'Don't call yourself a vet, b*tch.' 'This is not unusual on Broadway. This happens all the time when walls are shared,' she added. Lupone also reacted to McDonald showing support for Lewis in the comments section of the video, telling the New Yorker she thought 'that's typical of Audra.' 'She's not a friend,' she said. McDonald was asked about Lupone's comments on 'CBS This Morning' on Thursday, but seemingly took the high road. 'If there's a rift between us, I don't know what it is,' she said. 'That's something that you'd have to ask Patti about.'

TV Ratings: ‘Squid Game' Rules, But Broadcast Series Make Strong Showing in Multiplatform Rankings
TV Ratings: ‘Squid Game' Rules, But Broadcast Series Make Strong Showing in Multiplatform Rankings

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

TV Ratings: ‘Squid Game' Rules, But Broadcast Series Make Strong Showing in Multiplatform Rankings

With streaming now the platform of choice for the largest share of TV viewers in the U.S., it would seem logical that a streaming show would top the ratings rather than a traditional network show. As it turns out, that's correct: Netflix's Squid Game is, by a sizable margin, the most-watched series of the 2024-25 season. But in Nielsen's multiplatform ratings, which measure viewing over five weeks and across all outlets, a number of broadcast series are still commanding large audiences. More from The Hollywood Reporter 'Squid Game' Final Season Trailer Restarts the Games After Failed Rebellion Streaming Ratings: 'White Lotus' Hits No. 1 Ahead of Season 3 Finale Streaming Is Now Just As Crowded With Ads As Old School TV Of the top 20 shows through March 15 (the most recent date for which the 35-day ratings are complete), eight originate on broadcast networks — six from CBS and two from ABC. All of them average at least 11.5 million viewers per episode across their network showings and streaming over five weeks. CBS' Tracker is the top network show and fourth overall with 17.6 million viewers via CBS and Paramount+. Squid Game, whose second season premiered in late December, racked up 27.1 million viewers in the 35-day window. Netflix's Adolescence (19 million) and Prime Video's Reacher (18.1 million) rank second and third, and two other network series, first-year breakouts Matlock (CBS) and High Potential (ABC), are tied for fifth overall at 16.1 million viewers. This season is the first in which Nielsen has released multiplatform data showing how outlets compare. In the broadcast landscape alone, CBS leads the pack (as it does in linear ratings) with 9.1 million viewers in primetime. NBC is second at 7.2 million viewers, followed by ABC (6.9 million) and Fox (4.3 million). ABC has the biggest gain from Nielsen's linear ratings (which are measured over seven days), rising by 61 percent with streaming and the longer window. CBS improves by 59 percent with the longer multiplatform measure, while NBC grows by 41 percent and Fox, whose shows stream on Hulu but which doesn't have its own platform, adds 12 percent. The top 20 shows (including ties) for all platforms and just on broadcast in Nielsen's 35-day multiplatform ratings are below. Sports and specials are excluded. Best of The Hollywood Reporter 22 of the Most Shocking Character Deaths in Television History A 'Star Wars' Timeline: All the Movies and TV Shows in the Franchise 'Yellowstone' and the Sprawling Dutton Family Tree, Explained

Sydney Sweeney's New Soap Collab Will Be Made With 'Her Actual Bathwater'
Sydney Sweeney's New Soap Collab Will Be Made With 'Her Actual Bathwater'

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Sydney Sweeney's New Soap Collab Will Be Made With 'Her Actual Bathwater'

Men like Sydney Sweeney. How much do they like her? Well, men's personal hygiene company Dr. Squatch is making a new soap with a secret ingredient: Sydney Sweeney's actual bathwater. For real. 'You kept asking about my bathwater after the @drsquatch ad … so we kept it,' Sweeney (Euphoria, The White Lotus season one) posted to her Instagram account on Thursday. Called 'Sydney's Bathwater Bliss,' the bricc (what Dr. Squatch calls its soap bars) is a 'very real, very limited-edition soap made with my actual bathwater,' Sweeney wrote. More from The Hollywood Reporter Sydney Sweeney, Jennifer Lawrence and Robert Pattinson, Michelle Yeoh Films Sell Wide at Cannes Sydney Sweeney Teases "Unhinged" 'Euphoria' Season 3 Sydney Sweeney, Halsey Get Violent While Hunting Down a Rare Artifact in 'Americana' Trailer Why do this? Well, you know why: because men are gross. So now they can cleanse themselves — well, their skin at least — with saponified oils (of olive, sustainable palm and coconut), shea butter, natural fragrance, Sydney's bath water, sand, mica, kaolin clay and sea salt. God knows what else they'll do with it: Dr. Squatch called Sweeney's bathwater 'one of nature's finest aphrodisiacs.' Don't try to check us on that 'men are gross' thing. First of all, I'm a man and I'm gross. But more relevant here are the multiple stalker fan letters to Dr. Squatch asking for this exact product — and definitely asking for worse things. Here's a relatively tame one: Unfortunately, there's a lot more where that came from; swipe right on the post. Clearly, the personal-care company (and Sweeney, whom Dr. Squatch calls a 'legend' for this) are leaning in. Days ago, the collab was teased by a Dr. Squatch post that read: 'Wanna take a shower with Sydney Sweeney?' Well, come June 6, you can. Sort of. The medium grit bar soap has 'refreshing notes of pine, Douglas fir and earthy moss,' per the manufacturer. Naturally, Dr. Squatch named the scent 'morning wood.' Sydney's Bathwater Bliss is 'a perfect combination of the two best places on the planet: The outdoors and Sydney Sweeney's bathtub,' the company continued. It appears that 100 creeps lucky winners will get a bricc made with Sweeney's actual bathwater. (To win one, you have to be '18+.' This bath soap couldn't get pornier.) The rest of you can buy a bar next week for $8. The Hollywood Reporter has reached out to Dr. Squatch and Sweeney's reps for more info. Best of The Hollywood Reporter From 'Lady in the Lake' to 'It Ends With Us': 29 New and Upcoming Book Adaptations in 2024 Meet the Superstars Who Glam Up Hollywood's A-List Rosie O'Donnell on Ellen, Madonna, Trump and 40 Years in the Queer Spotlight

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