Bad Bunny, is that you?!
13.03.2020 - 01:47 / deadline.com
By Greg Evans
Associate Editor/Broadway Critic
Actors’ Equity, the union representing actors and stage managers, told members today that Broadway’s month-long shutdown is “uncharted territory,” and that discussions with employers about salary payments and employment contracts are ongoing.
“With today’s news regarding theaters on Broadway and beyond going dark, we have entered uncharted territory,” Equity writes in a string of seven tweets (read it below). “We know that this is an uncomfortable
Bad Bunny, is that you?!
Let me preface this by saying the story I’m about to tell is not the smartest thing I’ve ever done.
By Nellie Andreeva
Last week on RuPaul's Drag Race, the queens threw a ball. The category was ...
Fashion forward! Geri Halliwell, also known as Ginger Spice, revealed that she was the brains behind her iconic Union Jack dress from the ‘90s.
Geri Halliwell is explaining the history of her most iconic look.
By Dominic Patten, Patrick Hipes
By David Robb
Although Lala Kent has been doing her best to remain positive throughout the coronavirus outbreak on Instagram, it looks like the Vanderpump Rules cast member has decided to go dark on social media for the time being. On March 16, she posted a solid black square to her grid to share her plans with her followers and briefly open up about the current circumstances. Lala has not been diagnosed with COVID-19, but she does plan to practice social distancing.
In today’s film news roundup, a disaster fund for SAG-AFTRA members is launched, the Doc10 festival is postponed and the Miami Film Festival plans to present awards, even though the event was called off in the middle of the festival with 27 films still to screen.
Fans of Bill Maher’s “Real Time” won’t be seeing his HBO show for awhile, with Maher telling viewers that this will be his final show for awhile due to the encroaching coronavirus pandemic.
Party on! Rebel Wilson celebrated her 40th birthday at Mammoth Film Festival’s 3rd annual celebrity bowling tournament, presented by Path Water and Kodak.
As winter gives way to spring, the entertainment industry usually is putting the finishing touches on its upcoming slate of concert tours and movie releases.
New York City’s greatest tourist attraction, the bright lights of Broadway, will go dark for four to six weeks due to the ongoing coronavirus outbreak. This season’s Tony contending shows like Moulin Rouge, Girl From The North Country and SIX, which was due to have its opening performance this evening, will officially close starting tonight, March 12, at 5 pm. As of now, performances are set to commence on April 13, 2020.
U.S. equities markets opened Thursday with the worst declines since the start of the coronavirus-fueled sell off as global markets quaked in response to the European travel ban announced by President Donald Trump and the NBA’s dramatic decision to suspend the current basketball season, among other ominous signs of the pandemic up-ending everyday life.
Gov. Andrew Cuomo spoke about the COVID-19 pandemic and its implications for New York City at a press conference on Thursday.