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Stranger Things Star Gaten Matarazzo To Lead Rent Musical To West End

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EXCLUSIVE: Gaten Matarazzo, who excelled as fast-talking Dustin Henderson on smash-hit Netflix sci-fi horror drama Stranger Things, will make his London stage debut in an exciting revival of Jonathan Larson’s landmark musical Rent, which will premiere at the West End in the fall, Deadline can reveal.

Matarazzo — who is a self-described “Rent-head,” according to Chris Harper, who’s producing with Sonia Friedman — will begin rehearsing in early August with director Luke Sheppard, who recently won an Olivier for his direction of Paddington: The Musical.

Rent will begin performances at the Duke of York’s Theatre Sept. 26 with an official opening night Oct. 8. Tickets are set to go on sale at noon U.K. time Tuesday.   

The production that Harper and Friedman (who are teaming up for the first time) are respecting at the Duke of York’s is a version of the one that Sheppard helmed at the 120-seat Hope Mill Theatre in Manchester six years ago. Its run was interrupted by the pandemic, though Harper managed to catch it before theaters shut down. The show was filmed, and people paid to watch a video of it; I was one of them. (I’m lucky enough to have seen the original Rent at New York Theatre Workshop and watched it night after night when it was in previews at the Nederlander Theatre on Broadway.)

Harper and Friedman are just as passionate about it. 

Billboard for Rent. (Courtesy Chris Harper and Sonia Friedman)

Harper — who produced the revival of Angels in America, Company and several other shows with Marianne Elliott — also saw the original Broadway production when it was in previews. He saw Sheppard’s production at Hope Mill just before COVID rules closed theaters. 

Harper believes that the Hope Mill production is the version “that London should have.”

However, everything slowed down because of COVID, “and it’s taken us six years of chipping away to get this version of the show to London,” noting that there’s a complicated set of rights, plus Larson’s estate wanted to be sure that this was the right team. “And in that six years since I saw it and Sonia saw it, Luke Sheppard has become a superstar director.”

The & Juliet show hadn’t happened, and Sheppard hadn’t won an Olivier award for best direction of a musical for Paddington, which is playing to packed houses at the Savoy Theatre and will likely transfer to Broadway next year.

Harper noted that the estate “wanted to feel that the next version of Rent that was in the West End was one that we all really could be proud of.”

In a way, it’s a more apt time to bring Rent to London because of the state the world’s in and, as in the show, young artists are struggling as the U.K.’s Art Council and local borough councils are slashing budgets, making it more difficult than ever for young people to break through into the theatrical arts and music.

Chris Harper. (Courtesy Chris Harper Productions)

Friedman feels that “this younger generation also finds a new resonance because the conditions that underpinned the original — even though, of course, we don’t have the catastrophe of HIV and AIDS — they’re being priced out of the city, they’re struggling to live, struggling to know how to survive. You’ve got chaos politically, and it feels like a very urgent time for the young generation with their mental health, with social media. And this piece, even though it’s set then [in the 1990s], I think it’s going to just feel so powerful and alive and urgent now.”

Also, Harper argues that what Sheppard did so “brilliantly” was to cast it in a very youthful way, “and it really was kids talking to that young generation, and we want to try and retain that youthful energy as much as possible.” 

Friedman observed that when she saw it at Hope Mill she admired how Sheppard and his creative team put on a show that was “stripped back and bare [to] just let the story and the performances do the work, and I felt I’d seen Rent for the first time.”

She made a point, which I agree with, and that’s that ”one or two” previous productions of Rent have tried “to put a top spin on it and it doesn’t need it. It’s a work of art. It’s a work of its time, and it’s also, like all great classics, timeless.” It’s always been a dream of hers to do Rent. “And so when Chris and I both were going for it, we said, ‘Let’s do it together,’” she explains.

Sonia Friedman. (Photo by Rankin)

The coup thus far is getting Matarazzo to play Mark. It’s such an inspired idea to cast him because he’s a creature of the stage, having made his Broadway debut in Priscilla: Queen of the Desert, followed by a stint in Les Miserables, then a role in Dear Evan Hansen and, more recently, in the successful run of Sweeney Todd with Josh Groban and Annaleigh Ashford.

“Well, we’re over the moon,“ Harper says of Matarazzo’s casting.

Friedman, who produced Stranger Things: The First Shadow with Netflix, says that she’s well aware what that demographic is “and how excited they are going to be about seeing Gaten on stage. And to introduce them to something like Rent over here in the UK is just mind-blowingly exciting. He’s going to bring in a whole new audience, as our play did, and this feels really special.”

Harper reveals that he and Matarazzo had been talking about doing a play in London and “actually through that conversation he said how much he loved Rent. And I mean, he’s a real Rent-head; he knows the show back to front and it’s a musical he’s deeply, deeply passionate about. And then he and Luke met each other and completely fell in love and he’s so excited to do it. He literally knows the show in an encyclopedic way. He loves it, and he’s a very sweet young man, and he can’t wait. He’s desperate to start.”

This production of Rent will be produced by Chris Harper Productions, Sonia Friedman Productions, Winkler & Smalberg and Julie Larson, in association with the Hope Mill Theatre. (The original was produced on Broadway by Jeffrey Seller, Kevin McCollum, Allan S. Gordon and the New York Theatre Workshop.)

Friedman says that “we’ll hold them [the original producing team] close to us because as the original producers, it’s their legacy. I think we’re very aware and very conscious of the responsibility that we hold to, obviously, the Larson family and everybody who was there at the beginning. And I think because we were also around then, I think we’re aware of the importance of getting this right and we’re very, very, grateful to the Larson family and the estate for giving us this opportunity. And obviously, Kevin and Jeffrey were there at the very beginning and they’ll be with us, I hope, cheering us along.”

I well remember seeing Rent at NYTW and meeting the original company to do a newspaper feature.  I have a memory of the company performing “Seasons of Love” from the show under the Brooklyn Bridge — one of the most extraordinary times. I saw three previews of Rent back to back at the Nederlander. The Hope Mill production I saw on video comes close to capturing some of that same raw energy I felt seeing the original in the nineties.

Both Friedman and Harper remind me that the version I saw on my laptop from Hope Mill was socially distanced. “They weren’t allowed to touch. They weren’t allowed to kiss. They weren’t even allowed to sing in each other’s directions,” Harper points out.

Even so, it was moving and had fire in its belly.

The idea for the Duke of York’s is to make it “as intimate as possible, in the realms of commercial theater, as it were,” Friedman says.

And what about ticket prices? Harper says there will be 10,000 tickets priced at the U.K. equivalent of $46 dollars or under. 

'Stranger Things' Season 5 Character Posters

Gaten Matarazzo as Dustin Henderson. (Netflix)

Netflix

For this particular audience, Friedman adds, “We’ve got to be mindful of accessibility and, at the same time, mindful of the fact that we need to break even. So we will be constantly making sure that people can get in for the price that means that they can see it, they can afford it and that we can afford to run it.”

The show will start as a limited run “and we’ll see” what happens, Friedman says.

Both Harper and Friedman refuse to discuss the show’s life after the West End. My guess is that if this production takes off as they hope, then the sky’s the limit for it. It’ll certainly be headed, at some point, over to New York City.

The creative team for the Duke of York’s is essentially the same as it was up at Hope Mill Theatre. Choreography by Tom Jackson Greaves; set design by David Woodhead; costume design by Gabriella Slade; lighting design by Howard Hudson; audio production and sound design by Paul Gatehouse; video design and cinematography by George Reeve and Nathan Amzi; makeup and hair design by Jackie Saundercock; U.K. casting by Pearson Casting and U.S. casting by Jim Carnahan. The musical supervisor is Bill Sherman, and the musical director and associate musical supervisor is Katy Richardson. The intimacy director is Asha Jennings-Grant, the associate director is Priya Patel Appleby and the dialect coach is Joel Trill.

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‘In The City’ Premiere Episode Addresses ‘Summer House’ Scandal As The Bravoverse Expands

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SPOILER ALERT: This post contains details about the Summer House Season 10 finale and the In the City Season 1 premiere.

Bravo extended the Summer House universe with one of the most seamless transitions into a spinoff series since The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills and Vanderpump Rules crossover.

Summer House ended its tenth season with Kyle Cooke and Amanda Batula addressing their marital woes and agreeing to separate for a couple of weeks to reassess their marriage.

As Amanda and Kyle drove out of their Hamptons vacation house and into the city, the transition was seamless and cinematic. In the City was supposed to be a completely different show when the cast filmed it last fall. However, earlier this year, a scandal broke out, derailed the series, and forced production to address it in the premiere episode.

It was not a secret that Kyle and Amanda were not on good terms in their marriage, and In the City was going to continue to chronicle how the estranged couple handled their differences. Things quickly evolved when Amanda and Summer House co-star Westling Wilson confirmed their relationship, to the surprise of Amanda’s husband, Kyle, and the rest of the cast.

To bridge the gap between when In the City takes place (Fall 2025) and the present time, Bravo filmed a scene between Amanda and Kyle addressing their current status.

In an emotional heart-to-heart, Amanda tells Kyle, “I gave our relationship everything I had because I wanted the relationship to work so badly, and the idea of not existing with you in my life was so impossible for me to wrap my head around. It’s what made it so hard to call it quits, which is why it got so messy, because I was afraid that once we ended things, we would just be out of each other’s lives forever, and I couldn’t handle that.”

Kyle said that he could “pinpoint” instances during the summer and fall where he realized that Amanda “wasn’t just one foot out” of the marriage but “fully out the door.” The graphic designer said she “was tired” and “had nothing left in me to fight” but said she “was still trying to give it everything I had” to save the marriage.

Things get intense when Kyle asks, “Can you honestly say, though, that, right through Thanksgiving, for that matter, even if it was an emotional affair with West…”

“Nothing was happening!” Amanda claps back with tears in her eyes, adding, “I was so committed to you throughout the whole thing, and all I wanted was to make it work and for you to question my faithfulness in any capacity — really hurts because that’s not the type of person that I am.”

Amanda throws out that Kyle cheated on her while they were married, and there’s a video to prove it.

“I know you’re not a bad person,” Kyle says. “I think you were reckless and thoughtless, if I’m being honest. But in all of this, I’m still trying to be a good friend to you.”

Kyle adds that he is not being nice to Amanda during this whole situation because he hopes to “rekindle things,” but because he still cares for her.

“I care about you in the same way. We love each other because there’s a version of each of us that we both fell in love with for a reason,” Amanda says.

Kyle then delivers a hard blow, saying, “Just makes me so upset. Someone else gets the version that I fell in love with.”

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‘Beaches’ Sets Early Broadway Closing Date After Tony Award Nominations Shutout

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The ebb tide is nigh for Broadway‘s Beaches. The musical based on the 1988 Garry Marshall movie has set an early closing date after getting blanked at the Tony Awards nominations a couple of weeks ago.

The last day at this beach will be May 24. The show starring Jessica Vosk and Kelli Barrett had been set to run through September 6 at the Majestic Theatre.

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Beaches had struggled to find an audience, posting a unsustainable 44% of capacity this past week and grossing just $441,484. Critics were unkind in reviewing the musical, which hit the boards on April 22 after previewing from March 27. The show, however, has a national tour planned for next year.

RELATED: Tony Awards Snubs & Surprises: Screen Star Shut-Out With No Noms For Adrien Brody, Keanu Reeves, Lea Michele, Jon Bernthal, Ayo Edebiri, Jean Smart, Patrick Ball, Cedric The Entertainer, Don Cheadle & Taraji P. Henson, Among Others

“It has been my great joy to originate a role for the very first time on Broadway with Cee Cee Bloom, who I adore for her grit, her great humor and her huge heart,” Vosk said in a statement. ‘To continue the legacy of a character first made famous by my idol Bette Midler is something I’m not sure I’ll ever fully process.”

Added producer Jennifer Maloney-Prezioso in a statement: “Bringing a new musical to Broadway is always an enormous undertaking, and we are deeply proud of this company who created a production filled with heart, humanity, humor, and emotional truth. … We are profoundly grateful to everyone who helped bring Beaches to life at the Majestic Theatre.”

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Montreal Fans Trigger Earthquakes With Celebration Of NHL Game 7 Win

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The Montreal Canadiens’ 3-2 overtime win on Monday against the Buffalo Sabres literally made the Earth move.

Might seem smalltime to LA residents, but Natural Resources Canada seismographs registered tremors of 0.5 on on the Richter scale during both the May 16 at-home NHL playoff in the Canadian metropolis and similar shakes during the away game on May 18. According to sensors at Collège Jean-de-Brébeuf and McQuill University, the multiple small earthquakes and seismic activity occurred during primetime ET goals scored by the Original Six team in their Stanley Cup second round down-to-the-wire battle with the formidable Sabres.

Both institutions are fairly close to the Canadiens’ Bell Centre home in downtown Montreal. The legendary arena had 21,000 fans inside and 20,000 fans outside on both nights — and they weren’t sitting on their hands, if you know what I mean?

In moves familiar to Los Angeles residents, Habs supporters commonly riot if their team wins or loses. Like the City of Angels, Montreal sits on a  significant fault line. In the case of the ancient city (by North American standards), it is the Western Quebec Seismic Zone.

And it can shake and stir.

Last night, even with the Canadiens winning Game 7 in the 3-3 tied series over the border in Buffalo, seasoned Montreal cops were deployed in force around the Bell Centre and other watch parties.

The first two goals by Montreal saw a huge reaction by hometown hockey fans with strong seismic reactions. When Canadiens forward Alex Newhook scored the winning goal less than 10 minutes into OT, the célébration by the thousands of fans caused those sensitive sensors to peak again.

After the game ended, riot police moved in to contain some trash can tossing and fireworks setting fans and chemical gas was unleashed. The Montreal Gazette’s Harry North was on the streets when the celebration (and police reaction) of the Canadiens to the Eastern Conference finals went down.

Heading into the next round against the Carolina Hurricanes with Game 1 on May 21 in Raleigh, NC, the Canadiens are far from the only team to cause a quake or two.

The 60,400-strong fan jamboree in the May 2025 Premier League title win by Liverpool over Tottenham Hotspurs generated at 1.74 reading when Alexis Mac Allister put The Reds ahead 2-1. Of course, as many a metal and pop fan can tell you, that’s weak sauce. Very weak compared to the 2.3 seismic activity Taylor Swift devotees created in at the ‘Shake It Off’ star’s Seattle shows on July 2023 her Eras tour stop. That could be Emerald City fans — as several Seahawks games have registered such shakes as well.

BTW – the only team from the Great North still in this year’s Stanley Cup playoffs, the Canadiens have not won the iconic trophy since 1993. The best of seven games Eastern Conference series will be shown on TNT and truTV.

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