Traitors cast Season 4: Meet the celebrities, including Donna Kelce
The Emmy Award-winning reality show The Traitors is coming back for a fourth -- and fifth! -- season, and although the dramatic game doesn't yet have a release date, it does have a cast. Peacock announced the cast for the fourth installment of the Alan Cumming-led murder mystery, and it is once again filled with the biggest names and personalities across reality television. Love Island, Survivor, Big Brother and the Real Housewives franchise are all featured this season, as is a former Bachelor and two Olympians.
This season's cast includes:
Dorinda Medley (Real Housewives of New York City)
Lisa Rinna (The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills)
Caroline Stanbury (The Real Housewives of Dubai)
Candiace Dillard Bassett (The Real Housewives of Potomac)
Porsha Williams (The Real Housewives of Atlanta)
Natalie Anderson (Survivor & The Amazing Race)
Yam Yam Arocho (Survivor)
Rob Cesternino (Survivor)
Monét X Change (RuPaul's Drag Race)
Kristen Kish (Top Chef),
Donna Kelce (mother of Jason and Travis Kelce)
Colton Underwood (The Bachelor)
lan Terry (Big Brother)
Tiffany Mitchell (Big Brother & The Challenge)
Eric Nam (Singer)
Maura Higgins (Love Island)
Rob Rausch (Love Island)
Michael Rapaport (Actor)
Rob Funches (Comedian)
Stephen Colletti (One Tree Hill & Laguna Beach)
Johnny Weir (Olympic Figure Skater)
Tara Lipinski (Olympic figure skater)
Mark Ballas (Dancing with the Stars)
Don't expect those to be the only names that make an appearance on the show, however, as seasons two and three have each featured some surprise additions and guests.
This article originally appeared on For The Win: Traitors cast Season 4: Celebrities including Donna Kelce
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San Francisco Chronicle
2 hours ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Sold-out musical about Luigi Mangione adds new S.F. date
San Francisco's sold-out musical about Luigi Mangione has extended its run due to popular demand. ' Luigi: The Musical,' inspired by the social media frenzy surrounding the 27-year-old suspect in the murder case of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, has added a July 13 performance at the Independent. The music venue on Divisadaro Street has a capacity of 500, roughly five times that of the Taylor Street Theater, where the show premieres Friday, June 13. All five of the production's originally announced June performances at the Taylor Street Theater, the former Exit on Taylor in the Tenderloin, sold out more than a month ago. 'Luigi: The Musical' was developed by Nova Bradford, Arielle Johnson, André Margatini and Caleb Zeringue, and is staged in the style of the Tony Award-winning Broadway musical 'Chicago.' The satirical show is set at Brooklyn's Metropolitan Detention Center and features Mangione alongside a fictional group of prison mates including Sean 'Diddy' Combs, whose sex trafficking and racketeering trial began last month, and fallen FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried. 'Luigi the character, as we've written him, is dead serious about his thoughts and goals,' Johnson previously told the Chronicle. 'There's something campy about the whole 'good guy with a gun' premise.' As Johnson and his colleagues prepared for the stage production's June 13 premiere, the real Mangione pleaded not guilty to four federal charges against him for the murder of Thompson in December. He is next set to appear in court June 26. During the appearance, a trial date may be set. Mangione spent his 27th birthday last month at the Metropolitan Detention Center, where he has been held without bail since Dec. 19. To mark the occasion, he sent a list of 27 things he's grateful for to various people who have been writing him letters while he has been locked up. The list has since gone viral on social media and features entries such as 'memes' and 'Latinas for Mangione,' both nods to the internet discourse around his arrest. Mangione also revealed that around 30,000 people donated more than $1 million to his legal fund, and expressed gratitude for the various books and letters that he has received.


San Francisco Chronicle
3 hours ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
San Francisco Jazz Festival makes bold debut with expanded format, big ambitions
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Boston Globe
3 hours ago
- Boston Globe
Harris Yulin, actor who perpetually played the bad guy, dies at 87
'I'm not always the bad guy,' he told The New York Times in 2000. 'It just seems to be what I'm known for.' Advertisement He wasn't just any bad guy. One reviewer characterized him as 'an eloquent growler.' Another wrote that 'his whiskeyed voice sounds just like that of John Huston.' Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up Honors followed. Mr. Yulin was nominated in 1996 for a prime time Emmy Award for playing a crime boss in the TV comedy series 'Frasier.' For his work in theater, he won the Lucille Lortel Award from the League of Off Broadway Theaters for his direction of Horton Foote's 'The Trip to Bountiful' in 2006. In the late 1990s he won Drama Desk nominations for acting on Broadway in 'The Diary of Anne Frank' and Arthur Miller's 'The Price.' Early in his career, in 1963, he was cast in 'Next Time I'll Sing for You,' starring James Earl Jones and Estelle Parsons at the off-Broadway Phoenix Theater. The play bombed, he recalled to the Times in 2000. Advertisement vYulin made his Broadway debut in 1980 starring in a revival of Lillian Hellman's 'Watch on the Rhine.' He also appeared in Broadway productions of Friedrich Dürrenmatt's 'The Visit' (1992) and Henrik Ibsen's 'Hedda Gabler' (2001). And his performance in 2010 as Willy Loman in Arthur Miller's 'Death of a Salesman,' at Dublin's Gate Theater, got rave reviews. Mr. Yulin's first major film was in the offbeat comedy 'End of the Road' (1970), as a fellow college teacher opposite Stacy Keach. He played Wyatt Earp in 'Doc' (1971); a corrupt Miami police detective in 'Scarface' (1983), alongside Al Pacino; an irate judge in 'Ghostbusters II' (1989); and a White House national security adviser in 'Clear and Present Danger' (1994), with Harrison Ford. Reviewing 'Doc' in 1971, Roger Ebert wrote that Mr. Yulin and Keach 'have such a quiet way of projecting the willingness to do violence that you realize, after a while, that most Western actors are overactors.' On television, beginning in the 1960s, Mr. Yulin appeared in shows like 'Ironside,' 'Kojak' and 'Little House on the Prairie.' In the following decades he took on roles in the 1985 miniseries 'Robert Kennedy and His Times' (playing McCarthy), 'Murphy Brown' and 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer.' More recently he was in 'The Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt' and 'Ozark.' 'Mr. Yulin's characters are quintessentially weary of this world, worn out by its ugliness and many disappointments,' Tara Ariano and Adam Sternbergh wrote in the book 'Hey! It's That Guy!' (2005), a who's who of character actors. 'No one knows better than those characters all the ways in which humanity and its various institutions can be corrupted and destroyed -- primarily because Yulin's characters have been tasked with destroying them.' Advertisement Mr. Yulin was born Harris Bart Goldberg on Nov. 5, 1937, in Los Angeles. Abandoned as an infant on the steps of an orphanage, he was adopted when he was 4 months old by Dr. Isaac Goldberg, a dentist, and his wife, Sylvia. (Yulin was a surname in Goldberg's family in Russia; Mr. Yulin adopted it for professional reasons.) He attended the University of Southern California without graduating and served in the U.S. Army for a year. He then embarked on a short-lived career as an artist in Italy. 'I tried to be a painter for a while in Florence, and I was extremely bad at it,' he told the Times in 2000. In 1962, after trifling with architecture as well, he moved to Tel Aviv, Israel, where friends urged him to try directing and acting. He did. At some point, through one of his father's patients, he was introduced to Jeff Corey, an actor and drama coach. Mr. Yulin married actress Gwen Welles in 1975; she died in 1993. In 2005, he married Lowman. His stepdaughter, actress Claire Lucido, died in 2021 at 30. His wife is his only immediate survivor. In addition to acting and directing, Mr. Yulin taught at the Juilliard School and the Graduate School of the Arts at Columbia University. He acknowledged his stature in the acting world in an interview with The Irish Times in 2010. 'I'm not that high-profile,' he said. 'I just do the next thing that comes along.' By most accounts, he did it well. Advertisement In the lead role in the American premiere of Athol Fugard's 'A Lesson From Aloes' in 1980, at the Yale Repertory Theater, playing an Afrikaner and comrade of a Black revolutionary (James Earl Jones), Mr. Yulin delivered 'a beautifully modulated, contemplative performance,' Mel Gussow wrote in the Times. And in reviewing 'The Price' in 1999, the Times' Ben Brantley said that Mr. Yulin 'seems to have been destined to play' Walter Franz, the son of a businessman who went bankrupt after the 1929 Stock Market crashed. 'The actor's natural self-important stateliness works beautifully,' he wrote, 'and you're always aware of the friction between the smooth surface and the roughness of angry confusion beneath.' Mr. Yulin never stopped working. At his death he was preparing for a role in the television series 'American Classic,' with Kevin Kline and Laura Linney. Its director, Michael Hoffman, said of him in a statement after his death, 'His marriage of immense technique with an always fresh sense of discovery gave his work an immediacy and vitality and purity I've experienced nowhere else.' This article originally appeared in