
Fina Strazza's 2025 Tony Awards Getting Ready Diary With Cosmo
But theater insiders have had their eyes on her for a while. The provocative, modern coming-of-age play has racked up praise across the board—earning seven Tony nominations, along with nods from the Drama Desk, Outer Critics Circle, and Drama League Awards. And not that we're keeping count (we are), but Fina also picked up a Dorian Theater Award win for Outstanding Featured Performance in a Broadway Play.
Broadway is buzzing about Fina, but so is the silver screen. Most recently, she made waves as Tiffany Falconer in Fear Street: Prom Queen, a chilling addition to the cult-favorite horror franchise on Netflix. She also led Amazon Prime's time-traveling teen saga Paper Girls as KJ Brandman, instantly becoming a fan favorite.
If it seems like she was born to be on stage, it's because she practically was. Fina made her Broadway debut at the age of 8, stepping into the iconic title role in Matilda the Musical. Whether she's battling monsters, time-hopping through alternate realities, or tearing up the stage with raw, emotional firepower, one thing is clear: Fina Strazza isn't just one to watch—she's one to remember.
We caught up with the actor as she got ready at the Mandarin Oriental for her first-ever Tony Awards.
It's a lot. But before I answer that, though, I'd like to first confirm with everyone in this room that I have indeed remained grounded. *laughs* I was just having this conversation with my mom the other day. How I feel like I'm in this dream world right now where I'm not in charge of what's happening to me and everything is so much bigger than me. It's almost like I can't possibly even claim these fortunes in a way. You know?
I am, I am. *laughs* I mean, it's not like I don't think I deserve them or something. It just feels like I've been given these gifts, and I don't take that for granted. Everything I'm getting to do is so fun. It's like being on a playground. If you're on a playground, you don't act highfalutin and better than everyone else.
I'm just playing! All the time. And I love it.
Well, it was a little delayed, because I was trying to watch the broadcast, but something was going on with my WiFi. And my computer kept stalling. My category hadn't even come up on my screen yet, but my phone just started blowing up. I got a ton of calls all at once. I picked up my mom's call and she yelled that I was nominated. It immediately felt like the world rushed past me. All in one second. I just kept repeating, 'Oh my god, oh my god, oh my god.' Nothing else was coming to mind and nothing else would come out of my mouth. That's just kind of where I was for the rest of the day.
None! I haven't had the time. Well, Eureka Day and English closed before my show opened so I didn't get to see either of those. I know that Purpose has a Sunday evening show, which I've been meaning to catch. But I've been able to get to know some of my fellow nominees a little bit through all the Tonys press, and everyone is so grounded and welcoming. Tala and Sanaz invited me over to teach me how to do a proper curly hair routine and get chicken and rice bowls uptown.
I saw Oh, Mary! and I am obsessed. Loved it. So funny, so fun. And I saw Maybe Happy Ending when it was in a workshop years ago. I'm cheering them on. Not that I have favorites or anything, but I have friends in that show and I'd love to see them win something.
I first read this play when I was 17 for a workshop of it with Sadie [Sink] and the director Donna Taymor and the playwright Kimberly Belflower. I remember walking out of that presentation and feeling such electricity leaving the room. The performance was still vibrating in my body. The way Kimberly writes is so authentic and real, and it sets this blazing fire throughout the whole show that just doesn't go out until the blackout at the end. I felt how special it was in my bones. It was a feeling that stuck with me for two years, because I didn't hear anything after doing the reading.
So for two years, I thought about that show. Every single day. I would ask my team for constant updates. 'Is there anything new with John Proctor? Anything happening with John Proctor?' And the thing is, I've done tons of readings before so have kind of learned to not get attached to them. Especially as a child, because I'd grow out of the role before it got to production. But there was something about this show where I couldn't see a world in which I wasn't in it. I had to be in it. I can't explain it. Because I don't think Beth and I are super similar, but I do feel a kinship with her. There's a certain energy, you know? We understand each other.
No, no, no. *laughs* Tiffany and I are not connected. She was like playing my opposite, which was fun in a different way. I felt very free with Tiffany because I was able to be as absurd as I wanted. She's a whole different beast.
I feel like so often when you watch shows or any kind of media with teenagers, specifically high schoolers, whoever is the smartest one is usually the most unlikable. And it's like, why are these intelligent girls always these unlikable human beings? That's not the case in real life. At least I don't think so. I love that about this show. Beth is the person in the room with all the answers, but she also has the most questions. She's often the smartest person in the room, but she is so open to new ideas. She doesn't ever feel like she is done learning. She's intelligent but also very tenderhearted. I think that's very admirable.
Yes. We were just talking about this last night! We had this kind of pre Tony Awards seance and stayed in the theater very late last night to share our gratitude with one another and talk about the show. Our entire cast, including our understudies, consists of 15 people. Do you know how rare it is to find a group of 15 people where nobody is an issue and no one has a problem with anyone else? We joke that it's pretty boring sometimes because there's no one to gossip about, but it's really just a very supportive, loving environment where we all have a lot of respect for each other's tracks, which is so important in a show with such emotional weight. It can be very easy to walk off stage and keep yourself in that headspace. If we didn't have someone to lean on, it would be really hard. But luckily that's not the case. We have each other. And the second I walk off stage, I know there's someone there who I can laugh with. We'll be crying on stage one minute and then giggling about someone in the audience who had a weird laugh the next. I feel very lucky that we all enjoy one another. And the head of our social media, Austin Spero, is so great at capturing that. He's also open to any ideas we have. I love that he collaborates with us.
I still feel like I'm waiting for it to feel like I'm actually in the show. It all still feels so unreal in a way. I'm kind of waiting for it to kick in, which has me worried that I'm gonna leave the show still in this dream world. I want to make sure I lock in before it's over and feel truly grounded. Because we really have such a cool job. My costar Amalia Yoo reminded me of that the other night. She was washing her face and turned to me with her makeup still smudged on her face and was like, 'Our job is really, really cool.' And I was like, 'Yeah. It really is.'
I'm wearing Michael Fausto. He's a New York designer, which I love because I'm a born and raised New Yorker. I told my stylist, Sarah Slutsky, that I've always wanted to wear a ballgown. Tonight felt like the one night where I could get away with it without anyone thinking, Who does she think she is? I told Sarah I wanted to try and nod to the show in some way as well. So there is this slight Puritan aspect to the look where it feels like it could potentially be something in the realm of 1666. There's something a little bit vintage about it. It feels like an elevated version of what the girls wear at the end of the show.
I wanted the glam to be like this [Fina feigns an innocent doe-eyed expression caught between surprise and delight] *laughs* I don't know how to put that into words. But my hairstylist Corey Tuttle and makeup artist Amanda Thesen have figured it out.
We have the entire family in the room. My boyfriend and my mom and my dad and my sister are all coming. My mom is my official plus-one. Everyone else bought tickets. I haven't seen what my mom is wearing yet, but no one is coordinating. My boyfriend looks like a penguin though!
I'm excited to see Jonathan Groff again. I've really enjoyed talking to him through the season at all of our different events. I think Lizzy McAlpine might be at some parties later tonight, and I'm excited to see her again.
I've known Sadie for a long time because I was in Matilda with her brother when I was younger. She and her brother both have this incredible nonchalance about them, which helps me find my center. She's very like, 'Whatever happens, happens.'
Fated. It all feels like fate.
The Tony went to Kara Young for 'Purpose' in what ultimately felt like a wide-open category. Congratulations to Kara, Fina, and all the nominees!
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NBC Sports
6 hours ago
- NBC Sports
Megha Ganne caps dramatic U.S. Women's Amateur semis with comeback performance
BANDON, Ore. – Megha Ganne loves performing. In grade school, she starred in over a dozen plays and musicals. Her most memorable roles included the Queen of Hearts in 'Alice in Wonderland' and Pinocchio in 'Shrek The Musical.' 'That was a formative part of my childhood,' Ganne said, 'but I haven't done one since freshman year of high school.' While competitive golf has put her acting ambitions on hold in recent years, it hasn't prevented her from producing great theatre on the course. Ganne's incredible comeback Saturday at Bandon Dunes was Tony-worthy. Four down with seven holes to play in her U.S. Women's Amateur semifinal match against Australia's Ella Scaysbrook, Ganne, a rising senior at Stanford, rallied to win in 19 holes to advance to her first championship match, where she will face Michigan State graduate Brooke Biermann in Sunday's 36-hole final. Biermann also needed one hole of overtime to defeat Kansas' Lyla Louderbaugh, which marked only the third time that both semifinals of this championship went to extras. The last occasion was 2018, 118 years after the first, the 1900 U.S. Women's Amateur at Shinnecock. Ganne isn't shy to admit her hopes had dwindled once Scaysbrook drained a 40-foot birdie putt at the par-4 11th hole to go 4 up. But she then tapped into her memory bank, specifically the 2019 U.S. Women's Amateur, the only other time she'd advanced to the semifinals. Ganne was 15 years old, the youngest in the match-play field by four years, and facing then-Stanford senior Albane Valenzuela, who jumped out to an early 3-up lead on Ganne. Though she lost that day, Ganne fought back to extend the match to 19 holes. Since then, Ganne, now a seven-time U.S. Women's Amateur competitor, has dug out of similar holes and won. Ganne's message to herself while walking to the 12th tee: 'There is no reason you should think bad of yourself right now. If you told yourself at 15 this is where you would be, you would be pretty proud of yourself. You're exactly the type of person that could make this happen right now. Let's just go do it.' Scaysbrook certainly played a role in the ensuing drama. She left her second shot in a bunker at the par-3 12th and conceded that hole. Then she missed a 4-footer for birdie that lost her the par-5 13th. 'That was the first putt I've seen her miss all day,' Ganne said. Two holes later, Scaysbrook's chip at the par-3 15th took an unfortunate bounce and rolled into the sand, causing the Aussie to concede another hole. Ganne tied it up on the par-4 17th, where Scaysbrook fanned her approach off the side of the cliff. Both competitors traded bogeys at the par-5 closing hole to send the match to the par-4 10th again. Brooke Biermann watches her tee shot at the 18th hole during the semifinals of the 2025 U.S. Women's Amateur at Bandon Dunes Golf Resort in Bandon, Ore. on Saturday, Aug. 9, 2025. (Darren Carroll/USGA) Darren Carroll/USGA Museum Up ahead, Biermann and Louderbaugh were putting the finishing touches on their instant classic. Biermann led 3 up with four holes to play before Louderbaugh made par from the carry bunker at the short, par-4 16th, and then rolled in birdie putts of 15 and 25 feet, respectively, on the last two holes. But Louderbaugh's second shot into the shallow 10th green went long, and after she failed to make her par, she conceded the match. 'Coming down the stretch, she threw everything she had, which was great golf, and with that, you just have to stay calm,' said Biermann, who has now played three matches that have surpassed 18 holes. Biermann's extended run comes after she'd failed to make the cut in her five previous USGA championships. 'I told my dad, I just need to get over that hurdle, and the hurdle was the cut,' Biermann said. 'I know myself. I've played in several match play events, and I've gotten to the semifinals multiple times (most recently at the Women's Western Amateur last month). I love match play. Like that's where the fun begins. So, I believe that I could do this.' Once the first match wrapped, that paved the way for Ganne to eliminate Scaysbrook, who sailed her approach even longer than Louderbaugh on No. 10. Ganne didn't even have to stroke her birdie putt before the curtain fell on Scaysbrook. 'All you need to do is just go hit good shots and something will happen for you if it's meant to be,' Ganne said. 'Today was meant to be.' All that's left to play out now is Sunday's final act: History for Ganne, or tragedy?


Cosmopolitan
11 hours ago
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7 beauty lessons we can learn from Pamela Anderson – From makeup-free confidence to the best bob hairstyles
There's no debating it: Pamela Anderson is an icon. If you somehow don't already know, here's the potted history: the model, actress, activist and entrepreneur rose to fame in the 1990s and 200s for roles (among many others) in lifeguarding classic TV show Baywatch as well as the camp, cult, superhero movie Barb Wire. Throughout the 2010s, she became a public spokesperson for animal rights, and has enjoyed a jubilant second act throughout the 2020s: appearing on Broadway as Chicago's Roxy Heart, starring in a Jacquemus campaign, and heading up films like the artsy The Last Showgirl (for which she gained a Golden Globe nomination) and The Naked Gun. Throughout the 2020s, she's also sparked major conversations regarding beauty: namely for her decision to depart from the high glam looks synonymous with her early career, and often reject makeup altogether. Emerging as a new kind of beauty legend, she favours trend-setting bobs, pared-back or non-existent makeup, and unfiltered confidence. You go girl! Below, we count down the top beauty lessons to learn from the Pamela Anderson. You'll have noticed that Pamela often goes bare-faced to events, embracing a more paired-back look for fashion week and awards shows. She's even graced magazine covers with a completely natural look. Speaking of her decision to take a more fresh-faced approach to beauty, Pamela has explained that this is tied to the death of her long-time makeup artist, Alexis Vogel, who passed away from breast cancer in 2019. "She was the best," she told Elle. "And since then, I just felt, without Alexis, it's just better for me not to wear makeup." Despite this tragic reason for changing her look, foregoing makeup has allowed Pamela to redefine makeup on her own terms. She's also co-founded her own skincare brand, Sonsie and, on the brand's site, Pamela explains: "To me, true beauty is about celebrating authenticity. I want to look like myself, feel like myself, and that means taking care of myself on my terms." Amen! In recent years, Pamela has been outspoken about her desire to provoke conversations about beauty standards and ageing, encouraging women to focus on confidence as an expression of beauty, and partnering with the Dove Self Esteem Project. Realising the public reaction to her decision to not wear makeup, she has explained that she has made the decision to push the envelope surrounding beauty norms. "I am much more comfortable in my own skin, but I also am in an industry that really focuses on beauty. And I thought, 'I'm going to challenge beauty,'" she told Speaking with Harper's Bazaar UK, she has explained that she has made a concerted effort to stop comparing herself to others. "I never see somebody and think, 'I want to look like that.' I just want to see who I am," she said. "It's freedom to know you can walk on a red carpet without a stitch of make-up on. I mean, why can't I? Men do it all the time." For Pamela, it's also key to discuss the pressure placed on women to look youthful at all times, and find ways to experiment with beauty in new ways. "We're not trying to chase youth," she said, speaking on the podcast How To Fail With Elizabeth Day. "That's just been fed to us, to look as young as we possibly can, as long as we can." "I have my own insecurities and things I catch myself [doing], but I think that's the challenge," she added. "To embrace those parts of yourself, even the ones you don't necessarily like a lot." However, she notes that her decision to embrace her natural look was met with major scepticism. Specifically, relating to the first time she notably attended Paris Fashion Week in 2023 without wearing makeup, she recalled asking: "I said is anyone going to fall over backwards if I'm not wearing makeup?' For the Met Gala earlier this year, Pamela gagged us all with a super short bob complete with a micro fringe while wearing a Tory Burch silver sleeved gown. At the time, we noted that the dress and hair look recalled Zendaya's 2018 Met Gala look, which drew inspiration from the patron saint of France, Joan of Arc, and it seems like we may have been right! "I'm possibly doing something on Joan of Arc, but I didn't realise I was actually kind of morphing into her, with the hair and everything," she said to Harpers Bazaar UK, of her Met Gala look and bob. "That's what's fun about these evenings – they're like little movies. You can just create one in your head." While not all of us are channelling Joan of Arc, micro fringes have been trending this summer, and Pam proves just how great this 'do can look... Another trending hairstyle? The bob. In fact, Cosmopolitan's US edition has dubbed 2025 "the year of the bob". Part of the bob's ubiquity is no doubt due to its versatility, there's so many different ways of styling the hair do, as proven by Pamela herself. As well as unveiling a micro bob at The Met, she recently debuted a tousled French bob on a magazine cover. Handily summing up the look's appeal, Samantha Cusick, Contributing Cosmopolitan expert and professional hairstylist, previously told Cosmopolitan UK that the look is: "That effortlessly cool, jaw-skimming cut that just screams Parisian chic. It's short, sharp and always looks like you've made zero effort (in the best way)." Just because Pamela keeps her makeup lowkey doesn't mean she doesn't experiment! You'll have noticed that she hops on trending hair and beauty looks, such as her aforementioned bob experiments, as well as skinny brows and *drum roll*..."ghost lashes". This lowkey lash look is all about barely-there definition, a slight elevation of lashes via a lash curler or a tiny lick of (preferably clear) mascara. We've clocked that Pam has been trying her hand at the look, and it's a reminder that it can be fun to dip in and out of trends as a way of switching things up. While Pamela has become synonymous with no-makeup, she deviated from this stance for the 2024 Met Gala. The actress explained that she was aiming for a look that was: "kind of romantic and approachable – but still 'done'," in an interview with Vogue. I feel like there's always been this very elegant woman inside of me. And I feel like [the Met Gala] is actually the time I get to be that woman," she elaborated. "We wanted to explore the next incarnation of natural — an elevation of natural — and to show how you can wear a full face of make-up but in a very fresh and beautiful way," the legendary makeup artist Pat McGrath, who was behind Pamela's beauty look for the evening, also told the outlet. So, there you have it! Whether you want to keep it pared-back or more experimental, the major teaching from Pamela's approach is that beauty should always be an expression of you. Megan Wallace (they/them) is Cosmopolitan UK's Former Sex and Relationships Editor covering sexual pleasure, sex toys, LGBTQIA+ identity, dating and romance. They have covered sexuality and relationships for over five years and are the founder of the PULP zine, which publishes essays on culture and sex. In their spare time, they can be found exploring the London kink scene and planning dates on Feeld.


New York Post
11 hours ago
- New York Post
‘Hamilton' shook Broadway 10 years ago in a way it hasn't been since
I knew 'Hamilton' was different when, during the first week of previews 10 years ago, Hennessy threw them a party. Not the usual pinot grigio and martinis affair at Angus. No, this hot show was being feted by the French cognac brand beloved by rappers. The atypically luxe early bash for a new Broadway musical with no big names was at URBO, which used to be on West 42nd Street. Creator and star Lin-Manuel Miranda was there with cast members including Leslie Odom, Jr., Renée Elise Goldsberry, Anthony Ramos and Daveed Diggs — dancing and sipping curated cocktails. 4 Ten years ago, 'Hamilton' celebrated its first week on Broadway with a party thrown by Hennessy cognac. Alamy Stock Photo I thought of that infectious mood Wednesday when the hit hip-hop musical about founding father and New York Post creator Alexander Hamilton celebrated its 10th anniversary at the Richard Rodgers Theatre with a reunion followed by a high-energy gathering on 46th Street. QuestLove DJ'd from the balcony. That Hennessy soiree in July 2015 was like being at a Hollywood movie premiere, only none of these people were famous yet. The show hadn't even opened. The Diamond-certified album was still two months away. However, Henny knew history was happenin' in Manhattan. (So did The Post, by the way. We sponsored its off-Broadway run downtown at the Public). That glam night kicked off a year of beaming revelry around town that would make a royal coronation blush. 'Hamilton' soon went on to take over the city and the country. 4 'Hamilton' partied for its 10th anniversary on August the actors, like the original young cast of 'Saturday Night Live' 40 years earlier, became overnight sensations. It was an unbelievably exciting time to be in New York — thanks, in no small part, to Broadway and that musical. Last week's first-decade festivities brought me back to opening night in 2015 when Eliza actress Phillipa Soo stood by Peter Dinklage and Sarah Jessica Parker at Pier 60 as a special fireworks display blazed over the Hudson set to the show's music and ending with 'New York, New York.' ('The Outsiders' and 'Maybe Happy Ending' didn't get one of those.) Or the time Miranda jumped on a stool at the Glass House Tavern on 47th Street the evening his show won the Pulitzer, and bought the whole bar a round of drinks. And that June, when crowds were finally booted from the show's Tonys night victory rager at Tavern on the Green around 7 a.m. when the sun came up. 4 The show electrified New York during its first year. AP Their egalitarian 'Ham4Ham' concerts that here held regularly outside the theater, where lottery winners could get $10 tickets and everybody enjoyed a free show, turned into an event that spilled onto the street. 'Hamilton,' in its lyrics and its onstage and offstage spirit, exemplified NYC at its best: 'The greatest city in the world' where everybody knows 'how lucky we are to be alive right now.' A show about New York, made in New York by New Yorkers. At the moment it exploded, Miranda's musical was — like John's of Bleecker Street or the High Line or the US Open — a point of enormous local pride. Everybody was in a clamor to see it. Disney shelled out $75 million for a video of the stage production. How lucky we were to have a must-see show that enlivened the entire city, whether they could get in or not, instead of today's stuffy plays starring exhausted celebs for the deep-pocketed few. 4 Disney purchased the rights to air 'Hamilton' for $75 million. Christopher Sadowski And no musical, try though they might, has been able to capture the popular imagination in the same way since. 'Hamilton' is still packing 'em in and will for a long time. But Broadway could sure use another one. How much longer do we have to 'wait for it'?