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Ben Platt Announces Young Dog's Death, Says Beloved Pet Died 'Way Too Early'
Ben Platt Announces Young Dog's Death, Says Beloved Pet Died 'Way Too Early'

Yahoo

time12-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Ben Platt Announces Young Dog's Death, Says Beloved Pet Died 'Way Too Early'

Ben Platt shared that his 4-year-old dog George died "way too early" in a May 10 Instagram post The Broadway star called his dog his "first baby" The actor received an outpouring of love from his famous friends in response, including comments from Rachel Zegler and Josh GadBen Platt is mourning the death of his dog George long before he expected. The Dear Evan Hansen star shared a heartfelt tribute to the late pup in a May 10 Instagram post, writing, "We had to say goodbye to George way too early yesterday." The 31-year-old actor, who is married to fellow Broadway performer Noah Galvin, shared that George, also known as Georgie, was named after the artist Georges Seurat — the subject of the Steven Sondheim musical Sunday in the Park with George, "because he was born with tiny pointillistic dots on his nose." Calling George his "first baby," Platt shared that the couple only had the dog for four years, while not detailing what led to the pet's early death. "George saved me a million times and he brought unbridled joy to every single person he encountered," Platt wrote. "He was the happiest and most loving boy I could ever imagine. He loved people more than anything, especially babies and children. I guess he was an angel, too perfect and special to be here for long." As the actor grieves George's death, he shared that waking up without his dog "feels surreal and awful." "We will love you forever and ever, Georgie, you created our first little family," Platt concluded his post. "Thank you for making us so happy. 💔🪽" Platt received an outpouring of love from his celebrity pals in the comments, including his Pitch Perfect costar Brittany Snow, who wrote, "A perfect boy. Sending love 🥹" Platt's longtime bestie Beanie Feldstein commented, "the softest, sweetest to ever exist 🩵." Fellow theater star Josh Gad wrote, "One of the hardest things I've ever been through. I'm so sorry, Ben. Having just done it, I know this pain. Love you." Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Snow White star Rachel Zegler, who has collaborated with Platt several times, wrote, "My heart. Babe. I'm so sorry. I love you." Platt first shared a photo of George on Instagram in January 2021. The pup has been a regular staple on his social media since. Read the original article on People

Back on Broadway, Bernadette Peters misses her friend Stephen Sondheim: ‘I've had dreams about him'
Back on Broadway, Bernadette Peters misses her friend Stephen Sondheim: ‘I've had dreams about him'

New York Post

time03-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • New York Post

Back on Broadway, Bernadette Peters misses her friend Stephen Sondheim: ‘I've had dreams about him'

Not a day goes by that Bernadette Peters doesn't miss her old friend Stephen Sondheim. 'I do think of him every day,' she told me over lunch at Cafe Luxembourg. 'I'm singing his music, you know. And I've had dreams about him. He should be here. He should be here.' Peters is back on Broadway this season after seven years away, alongside Lea Salonga and 15 others in a wonderful revue of the late composer's work called 'Old Friends.' 5 Bernadette Peters is back on Broadway in 'Old Friends.' Getty Images Advertisement The audience at the Samuel J. Friedman Theatre is especially rapt and weepy whenever the beloved actress takes the stage, because she played such a vital role in bringing these timeless songs to life. Peters, 77, originated some of the great Sondheim parts: the rapping Witch in 1986's 'Into the Woods' and model Dot in 1984's 'Sunday in the Park with George.' Later, the New York native starred in revivals of his 'A Little Night Music' and 'Follies.' But the collaboration — some have called her his 'muse' — all started with the out-there George Seurat musical 'Sunday.' Advertisement 5 The actress originated roles in Sondheim shows such as 'Sunday in the Park with George,' which she recreates in 'Old Friends.' AP 'When I first met him, he made me nervous,' Peters said of Sondheim, who'd already delivered notoriously tricky shows such as 'Sweeney Todd' and 'Company.' 'The first song I got was the first song, 'Sunday in the Park with George,' with all those words. And I was nervous like crazy.' The jitters soon went away, though. 'He was very kind to performers,' she said. Advertisement Peters' favorite memories of Sondheim, who died in 2021, were when he'd come back to her dressing room and give notes. 'I was lucky that the writer was there for me to talk to and ask questions. 'What did you mean when you wrote that?' It's a great gift.' 5 Peters played Dot in 'Sunday' in 1984. Everett Collection / Everett Collection And the experience, which got her and her friend and co-star Mandy Patinkin Tony nominations, proved life-changing. Advertisement 'That show was so remarkable and it opened me up so much that I thought, well, I'll just do any show that [Sondheim and James Lapine] write that comes along. I'll say 'yes,' no matter what. And he called me for 'Into the Woods,' so I went and I did that.' Now, Peters is in 'Old Friends,' which began as a gala put on by producer Cameron Mackintosh in London. Its success led to a four-month run in the West End, before heading to Los Angeles and finally to Broadway. In the show, the actress croons heart-wrenching numbers she's known for, like 'Losing My Mind' and 'Send in the Clowns.' 'As I get older all the lyrics really seem to have a lot more meaning for me,' she said. 5 While Bernadette Peters is known for playing the Witch in 'Into the Woods,' in 'Old Friends' she plays Little Red Riding Hood. Everett Collection / Everett Collection But Peters has also thrown us some Sondheim curveballs. For 'Into the Woods,' the fairytale musical which has evolved into a cherished classic, Peters doesn't sing 'Children Will Listen' as the Witch — she becomes young Little Red Riding Hood instead. Her tune 'I Know Things Now' is about being chased by the Big Bad Wolf. 'I went, 'What have I done?! I'm singing a song a child sings, and now I'm an adult talking about . . . is this like a MeToo movement song?!',' she said. 'So I figured out how to do it.' Advertisement In an, erm, less innocent moment, Peters hilariously takes on Mazeppa, the 'bump it with a trumpet' stripper from 'Gypsy,' in 'You Got To Get A Gimmick.' Actually, the actress plays the brass instrument so well that some of her friends thought the music was piped in. 'So, I've gotta be a little sloppy with it,' she said. 5 In addition to 'Old Friends,' Peters will appear in the new Jesse Eisenberg film and is touring her concert around the world. Matthew Murphy Advertisement Peters has a busy summer ahead. 'Old Friends' runs through June 15. Go see it. Also a film star, having played opposite Steve Martin in 'The Jerk,' she met up with me the same week she did a day of shooting for 'A Real Pain' Oscar nominee Jesse Eisenberg's upcoming musical-comedy movie for A24, which also features Julianne Moore and Paul Giamatti. She's an activist, too. Her long-running animal adoption charity event, Broadway Barks, takes place in Shubert Alley on July 12. And then she packs her bags and tours her concert all around the country before heading to Australia in the fall. Advertisement Peters is the picture of a dependable showbiz workaholic, and arrives at the theater every day almost four hours before curtain. 'I have to practice my trumpet,' she said.

Remembering Jacques Cartier who set Hartford Stage up to becoming a top regional theater in U.S.
Remembering Jacques Cartier who set Hartford Stage up to becoming a top regional theater in U.S.

Yahoo

time29-01-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Remembering Jacques Cartier who set Hartford Stage up to becoming a top regional theater in U.S.

Jacques Cartier, who founded Hartford Stage and was its artistic director for the first five years of its existence, has died at the age of 94. The theater has now been around for over 60 years, moved to its current location nearly 50 years ago and has done hundreds of productions since he left in 1970, but Hartford Stage still carries Cartier's imprint and honors his original vision. In 1963, Cartier announced his intentions to bring a professional theater company with a repertory troupe of actors who would live in the area to Hartford. The original Hartford Stage building was a former food warehouse on Kinsley Street in downtown Hartford. Cartier, who was born in Missouri and spent much of his childhood in California, first came to Connecticut to get his Master of Fine Arts from the Yale School of Drama. He had no particular attachment to Hartford when he went searching for a suitable city in which to create a professional theater company with a resident acting troupe. Cartier convinced some of his former Yale classmates to join him, including actor/director Paul Weidman. The acting company included future stars of stage and screen such as Charles Kimbrough ('Murphy Brown,' the original Broadway productions of the Sondheim musicals 'Company' and 'Sunday in the Park with George'), Katherine Helmond ('Soap,' 'Who's the Boss?,' the movie 'Brazil') and Roy London (who became a famous acting teacher). When Cartier conceived of creating a professional theater company in Hartford, his dream was shared by arts leaders in dozens of other cities around the country. Regional theaters had existed for most of the 20th century — the Cleveland Playhouse was founded in 1915 — but in the 1950s and '60s, it became a major arts movement, displacing or overshadowing many of the summer stock theaters and 'little theaters' that had been the main generators of live local theater until then. Regional theaters were intended as cultural institutions that directly served the communities they were in. In the 1977 book 'Regional Theater: The Revolutionary Stage' by Joseph Wesley Zeigler, Hartford Stage Company was described as 'another theater created by an outsider (though with neither the flair nor the chutzpah that characterized the Long Wharf). … Demographically, Hartford looked as good as any other city and so (Cartier) set out to create his theater there. He raised more than $100,000 privately (a healthy portion of it coming from the insurance magnates for which Hartford is famous). He found an abandoned supermarket in downtown Hartford, had it converted to a 225-seat theater with a thrust stage and opened in the spring of 1964.' In Connecticut, the American Shakespeare Festival Theatre was founded in 1955, Goodspeed Musicals (which specializes in American musical theater) was founded in 1963, the Long Wharf Theatre in 1965, the Yale Repertory Theatre in 1966, the National Theatre of the Deaf in 1967 and the Hartman Theater in Stamford (which only lasted until 1987) in 1975. A national organization designed to unite and support regional theaters, Theatre Communications Group, has been around since 1961. Cartier directed many of the earliest productions at Hartford Stage. From the start, the theater offered a subscription that alternated classics and contemporary plays. The first season opened with Shakespeare's 'Othello' and also featured the 17th-century Restoration comedy 'The Country Wife' by William Wicherly. Both were directed by Cartier. The season also included recent works like Fay & Michael Kanin's 1959 stage adaptation of the Akira Kurosawa film 'Rashomon' (based on stories by Ryūnosuke Akutagawa) and Harold Pinter's 1960 drama 'The Caretaker.' Those were both directed by Joel Oliansky, who later became a Hollywood screenwriter ('Bird') and film director ('The Competition'). For Hartford Stage's second season, Cartier directed a new play written by Oliansky, 'Putting on the Agony.' Cartier also directed Arthur Miller's 'Death of a Salesman,' Shakespeare's 'The Tempest,' John Osborne's 'The Entertainer' and Chekhov's 'Uncle Vanya' that season. In 1966, Cartier used Hartford Stage to do something that he believed had never been done in American theater: Two completely different productions of the same play with different directors, actors and designers alternating performances in the same space. The play was Samuel Beckett's 'Endgame,' and Cartier directed one version while Weidner (who also directed Beckett's 'Act Without Words' as a companion piece) did the other. While alternating different actors in a play is fairly common, doing entirely different productions of the same script simultaneously is not. Longtime Hartford Courant arts critic T.H. Parker wrote that 'the chance to compare two productions of one play is unique, and one should see both versions.' His final season at Hartford Stage may have been Cartier's most ambitious. He directed his new adaptation of Molière's 17th-century French comedy 'The Miser' set in 19th century America and retitled 'Skinflint Out West,' as well as Arthur Miller's 'A View from the Bridge,' Noel Coward's light comedy 'Hay Fever' and Max Frisch's absurdist political metaphor 'The Firebugs.' Other shows that season were 'Antigone' by Sophocles, 'The Hostage' by Brendan Behan and the Bertolt Brecht/Kurt Weill musical 'The Threepenny Opera.' Hartford Stage produced four shows in its inaugural season, nine during the 1964-65 season, eight each in the 1965-66 and 1966-67 seasons and seven in 1967-68. It then settled into the six-show season it has generally held to ever since. Cartier directed two of the shows in the first season then four or five shows in each of the following four seasons. Hartford Stage had 800 subscribers by the end of its first season. When Cartier left the theater five years later, it had well over 3,000 subscribers and had set a reasonable goal to hit 5,000 within a few more seasons. It was Weidner who became artistic director when Cartier left Hartford Stage (referred to locally then as just 'The Stage Company') only five years after he founded it. One apparent reason for Cartier's departure was that the theater was so small — just 225 seats — that its limitations affected budgets, growth and artistic decisions. Despite selling out many of its performances, the company faced a sizable deficit every year Cartier was in charge, one of the more anxiety-building elements of the new company's growing pains. In the mid-1970s, Weidner — who is also credited with expanding the programming to include new and experimental works — spurred the move to the 489-seat 50 Church Street space that Hartford Stage still occupies today. The new space maintained the thrust stage design that Cartier had pioneered in the original Kinsley Street location. Weidner died in New York in 2018. Cartier returned to Hartford Stage just once after those first five seasons, to direct a 1971 production of 'A Long Day's Journey Into Night' by Eugene O'Neill, who had set that drama at his family's summer cottage in New London. Besides that one show, Cartier wasn't involved with Hartford Stage for the rest of his career. That's not uncommon for artistic directors who have usually moved on to other theaters (in Cartier's case it was Center Stage in Maryland) or to busy freelancing careers. Returning to theaters they used to run can be disruptive for the leaders who succeeded them. Cartier did show up for panel discussions with other former or current Hartford Stage artistic directors when the theater marked its 40th and 50th anniversaries. Cartier died near the end of December but his news of his death became public recently when his family released an obituary. 'It is with a heavy heart that we announce the passing of Mr. Cartier,' said Melia Bensussen, who in 2019 became the sixth artistic director of Hartford Stage, in a statement released Monday. 'Cartier's vision and legacy for producing award-winning, top-notch theater in Connecticut lives on. 'Jacques Cartier, a born storyteller, lived a storied life, from hosting various entertainment acts in his time in the Army to teaching literature before launching his successful career in the theater,' she added. 'There is much to be learned and admired from Mr. Cartier's long and rich life, particularly his dedication to live theater, and we are honored to continue his legacy.'

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