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Dramatists Play Service Announces Publication of Alex Edelman's Just for Us
Dramatists Play Service Announces Publication of Alex Edelman's Just for Us

Yahoo

time03-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Dramatists Play Service Announces Publication of Alex Edelman's Just for Us

NEW YORK, April 3, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Dramatists Play Service, the iconic play imprint of Broadway Licensing Global, proudly announces the official publication of Just for Us, the acclaimed solo play by writer-performer Alex Edelman. After premiering Off-Broadway to critical acclaim, Just for Us enjoyed multiple extended runs before transferring triumphantly to Broadway. Edelman's performance was captured in an HBO Original comedy special, which aired on Max in April 2024 and subsequently earned him a 2024 Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing for a Variety Special. In recognition of his singular live stage achievement, Edelman was also honored with a Special Tony Award in 2024. Renowned journalist and novelist Taffy Brodesser-Akner contributes an insightful foreword to the publication, contextualizing Edelman's work within the broader cultural conversation and highlighting the play's unique blend of humor, identity, and social commentary. "When I saw Just for Us, I had no idea what to expect, and I was blown away by the story, and Edelman's storytelling," says Ted Chapin, Chief Executive Officer of BLG. "It is a bold and daring event he depicts, finding humor and power in some very unexpected places. Having the show with DPS allows more people to find and enjoy the unique contemporary voice of Just for Us." Critics have lauded Just for Us for its seamless blend of humor and incisive social commentary. The New York Times hails it as "deeply moving and wildly funny," while The Guardian recognizes it as one of the "must-see solo performances" of the decade. "Alex Edelman's Just for Us is a masterclass in solo storytelling—sharp, timely, and deeply personal," continues Dan Markley, Chief Operating Officer of BLG. "To echo Ted, we're thrilled to bring this remarkable work to a wider audience through DPS." Founded in 1936, DPS represents many of the most celebrated works in American theatre and beyond. The DPS catalog features playwrights such as Arthur Miller, Lynn Nottage, and Tennessee Williams. Other acclaimed solo works in the DPS catalog include Latin History for Morons by John Leguizamo, Every Brilliant Thing by Duncan Macmillan with Jonny Donahoe, I Am My Own Wife by Doug Wright, and Becoming Dr. Ruth by Mark St. Germain. For more information or to purchase Just for Us, visit: ABOUT BROADWAY LICENSING GLOBAL Broadway Licensing Global and its family of imprints (Broadway Licensing, Dramatists Play Service, Playscripts, Stageworks, and Broadway on Demand) is a global leader in theatrical licensing and distribution. Representing an astonishing 40 Tony Awards® and 49 Pulitzer Prize-winning works, BLG titles epitomize the greatest collection of iconic authors, composers, lyricists, and underlying rights holders across the globe, including Katori Hall, Stephen King, Michael Korie, John Leguizamo, Alan Menken, Arthur Miller, Lynn Nottage, PigPen Theatre Co., Tom Stoppard, Paula Vogel, Tennessee Williams, Doug Wright, Don Zolidis, and Harry Potter Theatrical Productions. MEDIA CONTACT & ASSETS For Broadway Licensing Global:Hannah Thulin | Account Director, Interdependence | broadwaylicensinggroup@ View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Broadway Licensing Global

A Jewish Comedian Walks Into a Theater in Minnesota
A Jewish Comedian Walks Into a Theater in Minnesota

New York Times

time29-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • New York Times

A Jewish Comedian Walks Into a Theater in Minnesota

In his HBO special, 'Just for Us,' the comedian Alex Edelman explores his Jewish identity and whiteness in an unusual way: attending a neo-Nazi meeting in Queens. Before the 2024 presidential election, he traveled to Michigan to watch a stranger perform his comedy special in a theater performance. In this episode, Edelman joins the Opinion editor Susannah Meadows to reflect on that experience, what 'Just for Us' means after Donald Trump's return to office and why hard conversations — even with extremists — matter now more than ever. Below is an excerpt from this episode of 'The Opinions.' We recommend listening to it in its original form for the full effect. You can do so using the player above or on the NYT Audio app, Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, YouTube, iHeartRadio or wherever you get your podcasts. The transcript has been lightly edited for length and clarity. Susannah Meadows: You had to watch the person or persona that you created, and I'm curious how it felt to be confronted with that person you made, and did you like him? Alex Edelman: Um, yes. Meadows: Oh, that's nice. Edelman: But I kind of like that there are things about it that feel really, really true and vulnerable to me. But there are also some things that I sort of hide the ball on. I think it's like a sketchy abstract picture of myself, as opposed to a photo. And watching somebody else inhabit that made it seem that way, too. Meadows: You obviously feel a lot of ownership over it, and the show is out of your control. How did you deal with that? Edelman: In principle, completely fine. You know, why take this so seriously? Who gives a [expletive]? Sorry, can I curse at The New York Times? Like, who cares? Because ultimately, I'm not going to be doing it, and it exists on HBO, and I'm very proud of the HBO version. But ultimately, I had such a wonderful time performing it and just getting advice from people, so I thought, if someone else can have that experience, how tender, how wonderful. And then you go and see it, and it feels different, and then you're like, 'Oh, OK!' Meadows: Forget it! Edelman: Well, that's not the decision I would have made. You know, that's not what I would have done. But ultimately, even after seeing it, I did feel like, I like that someone else can do it. I like that people can go see it and experience it live. Also, the show is not about antisemitism. The show is about assimilation. The show is about someone who feels a certain way and is at odds with the world that they exist in. And so, I'd be really interested in seeing a non-Jewish, nonwhite, nonmale performer do a version of that. Meadows: I'm curious. Why? Edelman: Because Norman Lear, who I completely worshiped, liked to say that I'm just another version of you. And Norman created all these shows, 'All in the Family,' 'Sanford and Son' and 'Maude,' 'Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman.' And a bunch of shows where it wasn't just about Norman Lear, these shows — they were fully inhabited with this humanity. And Nathan Englander likes to say that when people are told, 'Write what you know,' sometimes they go, 'Oh, if I'm a farmer, I should write about being a farmer. If I'm from a poor background, I should write about being from that specific poor background.' But what he means is if you know shame, write shame. If you know ambition, write ambition. If you know what it feels like to be informed by a world that you come from, but also longing to completely fit in with the greater world at large, write about that. So I'm curious to see someone who's coming at that specific angle of wanting to belong, but coming from a place where that may not be the easiest thing, I'm wondering if the story still works for them, if the filter of it is through something other than their Judaism. Meadows: So you mentioned in another interview that the show is the best, truest expression of yourself. So what did you find out watching yourself? Edelman: I'm so annoying. I'm so annoying, and so Jewish. Can someone tone down the Jewish for this time period that we live in? Gosh. I mean, in 2025, to be this Jewish seems almost irresponsible. (Susannah laughs) I mean, no — I think, watching it, I do think certain things come through. The things that I love come through. The love of my family and my identity, and weirdly, there's something patriotic about it. Which is the idea — not to spoil anything for anyone who hasn't seen the show — the idea that, not that these people can be reached, the white nationalists in the room, but the idea that you'd want to is very, I think, weirdly patriotic. Also, the neediness of someone who wants to connect with everyone is —— Meadows: That's you. Edelman: Yeah, that's me, thank you, Susannah. Meadows: You're welcome. Edelman: But seeing that —— Meadows: But that idea of being not — I'm not saying the neediness, necessarily, it's just the interest in hearing other people. Edelman: Sure. Meadows: Isn't that the core of the show? Edelman: Oh, a thousand percent. And also, I do think — not to be earnest here — I do think that wanting that right now feels interesting in a different way, like the aspects of the show that appeal to people. Meadows: Do you think that has changed, post-Trump? Edelman: Yeah. Meadows: Talk about the show before Trump and then how the show is received after. Edelman: Well, while I was in Minnesota, I did some door-to-door work for this candidate in Minnesota who was running in a pretty competitive seat that I really like, and the mood was — I sort of knew which way the election was going to shake out. So I guess I was sort of curious how the show would play that close to the election, like a sort of love letter to civility or something. Ultimately, there's a little bit of wish fulfillment in the show, which is that we can all speak civilly to each other and offer each other both empathy and accountability, even in the most extreme environment. Even in a room full of white nationalists with some neo-Nazi views. Meadows: When you were performing it on Broadway in 2023, I feel like you were kind of against the tide when you were first doing it. Edelman: I feel like there was a moment for that opinion, and I wonder how that opinion holds up now in terms of loving civility and the rule of discourse, and favoring conversation that is productive over conversation where you are the party that is right. I wonder if that still holds the same currency that it did when I was doing it on Broadway or during a Biden administration. Meadows: Is it harder to make the argument that you do with your show that we really need to be talking to each other? Edelman: No. Meadows: Or is it more relevant? Edelman: I don't know that it's more relevant. The truth is, I think, in principle, people quite like the idea that they can have productive, civil conversations with people who have fundamental differences from them. But as soon as you introduce Democrat and Republican, those things start to break down. People start to say, 'Well, yes, but in this case, they're not civil, or in this case, they wouldn't actually listen to me, or in this case, there isn't actually civility.' I did the show on Broadway in August of 2023, but then its tour was post-Oct. 7, while there was this major conflict in Gaza and the atmosphere around discourse and Jewish identity changed drastically. And so, that was different. Meadows: Tell me how it changed, and how you felt that as you were performing it. Edelman: It became more charged, and I always said something at the beginning of the show, which isn't in the play and isn't in the special, because the special was filmed beforehand. But I said, 'When I was in high school, I went to see John Updike, a famous novelist, give a talk. And John Updike said, 'If you are lucky, at some point in your life the work that you create might find itself in conversation with the times in which you live.'' And then I would pause and go, 'Well, call me Mr. Lucky!' I believe that a show should be conversant with the moment it's in, and not beholden to it. And I think that holds true with the time that we're in now. I truly believe that, I think this is a bipartisan thing to say, ignoring a conversation that you could be having by going, 'No, I'm sorry, it's not up for conversation' — it doesn't make those things go away. And so, I think being cleareyed about what other people feel and what they're saying and what they believe is really crucial. I'm not saying that everyone has the energy to do that, or the time. Some people need to make sure that Shake Shack is open. Not everyone can be online fighting all the time in pursuit of a more bipartisan truth. But I do think it's important to have those conversations.

Who Is Alex Edelman? Meet the Comedian Who Sparked Dating Rumors With Jessica Alba
Who Is Alex Edelman? Meet the Comedian Who Sparked Dating Rumors With Jessica Alba

Yahoo

time06-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Who Is Alex Edelman? Meet the Comedian Who Sparked Dating Rumors With Jessica Alba

While the Oscars red carpet arrivals are the talk of the evening, finding out which celebrities left the Vanity Fair Oscars afterparty together is the chatter for the morning after. Actress Jessica Alba sparked dating rumors with comedian Alex Edelman after they were photographed leaving the party together, with his suit jacket wrapped around her shoulders. Daily Mail shared photos of Jessica and Alex on March 4, 2025, almost one month after the Fantastic Four actress filed for divorce from estranged husband Cash Warren after 16 years of marriage. Life & Style gathers information about Alex following his head-turning late night with Jessica. After growing up in Massachusetts in a Jewish household, Alex moved to New York to study English at New York University. Alex continued his career in comedy after graduating in 2012 and took his talent abroad when he performed his first show in the U.K. later that year. The performer made his big break in 2014 during the premiere of his 30-minute show Millennial. Alex won an Edinburgh Comedy Award for Best Newcomer following the project's success later that year. In 2015, Alex released a follow-up show called Everything Handed to You, which he previously said 'is basically like Millennial 2.' 'There wasn't a ton of explicit stuff about millennials. I made it a lot more intricate because I just wanted to try, but it's never changed: I think people follow someone they know can do consistently good stuff. Young people, old people …,' Alex told AV Club at the time. In 2022, Alex's first off-Broadway show, Just for Us, debuted and gained rave reviews. The play made it to Broadway the following year and landed its own special on HBO. Alex won his first Emmy award in 2024 for HBO's Just for Us in the category for Outstanding Writing for a Variety Special. When Alex learned he was nominated for the award, he shared a thoughtful message thanking his loved ones, collaborators and fans for contributing to his rising success. 'To @hbo and @streamonmax? I could not appreciate all the faith and support you put behind this more. And thanks for The Larry Sanders Show. It rules,' he wrote via Instagram in July 2024. 'I also want to acknowledge my closest friend and longtime collaborator Adam Brace, who passed a few weeks before our show started on Broadway. He'd be thrilled and probably a little bit cider-drinking about this. I miss him every day and thought of him all morning.' Peacock subscribers can expect to see more of Alex after he landed a role in a new project that is a 'mockumentary' of the hit series The Office. Alex is also the series writer alongside Gbemisola Ikumelo and Eric Rahill. Days before Alex left the Vanity Fair Oscars afterparty with Jessica, he was spotted chatting with Kaia Gerber. Daily Mail shared photos of the pair chatting after her performance in the play Evanston Salt Costs Climbing at Rogue Machine Theatre in Los Angeles. The link-up caught the attention of eagle-eyed fans who wondered if Kaia and Outer Banks actor Lewis Pullman were still spending time together. 'Lewis is someone she's known peripherally through the Malibu circle for years, he's a quality guy with a celebrity pedigree so he's someone her parents feel good about,' a source exclusively told Life & Style in a story published on February 17, 2025, noting that Kaia 'isn't going to race into anything, but she does seem to be excited about him.'

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