at a Vanity Fair pre-BAFTAs party on January 31. This outfit is playing all the hits. The going-out top.
16.01.2024 - 19:55 / nypost.com
who won the Emmy Award for Best Actress in a Drama on Monday night, plans to make her Broadway debut next season.A source told The Post that Snook will come to New York with “The Picture of Dorian Gray” once it finishes its run in London, where she’s also its star. The one-woman show is scheduled to play across the pond from February to May.She’ll perform all 26 roles in the adaption of Oscar Wilde’s novel by Kip Williams, the artistic director of the Sydney Theatre Company, where the show premiered back in 2020.
Michael Cassel is producing.A spy who saw “Dorian” Down Under said the show, which then starred Eryn Jean Norvill, was “excellent” and “a tour de force.” The Sydneysider added: “I think Snook is up to the challenge.”We’ll know for sure once “Dorian” begins performances in the West End on Feb. 15.While the Australian actress — who also took home a Golden Globe and Critics Choice Award over the past 10 days for her shifty turn as Shiv Roy — will be making her Broadway bow, she’s no stranger to live theater.
In 2016, Snook acted opposite Ralph Fiennes in Henrik Ibsen’s “The Master Builder” at the Old Vic in London.And the 36-year-old actress won’t even need to buy a toothbrush for her stay in the five boroughs. The Brooklynite bought a $1.83 million apartment in Williamsburg last year.The cast of HBO’s “Succession,” which wrapped up its acclaimed four-season run last year, is all over the world’s stages lately.Jeremy Strong, who played Kendall Roy, is starring in “An Enemy of the People” with Michael Imperioli of “The Sopranos” this spring on Broadway.And theater veteran Brian Cox, who was thunderous on the HBO drama as Logan Roy, will soon appear in “Long Day’s Journey Into Night” in London’s West End with
.at a Vanity Fair pre-BAFTAs party on January 31. This outfit is playing all the hits. The going-out top.
He had it coming. He had it coming.
Joni Mitchell is hitting the Grammys stage for the first time to perform.
Rod Holcomb, an Emmy-winning ER director who also helmed Battlestar Galactica, The Six Million Dollar Man, China Beach and dozens of other shows and was a longtime Directors Guild negotiating committee menber, has died. He was 80.
Zack Sharf Digital News Director “Succession” Emmy winner Sarah Snook said on a recent episode of BBC Radio 4’s “Today” program that she was too “young and naive” to push back against a film producer who openly berated her for eating cake on set. It was one of two instanced of body shaming that Snook remembered during an interview with The Sunday Times published earlier this month.
Adam B. Vary Senior Entertainment Writer If there’s an Avengers of television directors, “The Last of Us” just assembled it.
Sarah Snook has said she was “too young and naive” to challenge a producer who chastized her several years ago on set for eating a piece of chocolate cake.
William Earl administrator SPOILER ALERT: This article discusses plot twists in the new movie “I.S.S.“ “I.S.S.” is a thriller set in outer space, but the creative team was filled with pioneers in their own right. “Blackfish” director Gabriela Cowperthwaite helmed the project, with Oscar winner Ariana DeBose suiting up for the lead role — both creatives playing in a new genre for the first time. The result is a fleet, pulpy film in which three American and three Russian astronauts are living and working together on an international space station.
When the Oscar shortlist of feature documentaries was announced in December, it was dominated by films that premiered at the Sundance Film Festival – films like Going to Mars: The Nikki Giovanni Project, The Eternal Memory, Beyond Utopia and A Still Small Voice.
Succession creator and showrunner Jesse Armstrong delivered an acceptance speech for the show’s Outstanding Drama win that matched the show’s arch tone, at least in part.
And Monday night’s third Emmy win for Succession goes to Sarah Snook.
The stars of Succession are dressed to impress at the 75th Primetime Emmy Awards!
Succession” star Sarah Snook won the Emmy on Monday night for outstanding actress in a drama series. The win was Snook’s first Emmy for playing Shiv Roy on the hit HBO series, which ended its run last May after four seasons. “Thanks to everyone who voted and for loving the show as much as we did as a cast making it and as a crew making it,” Snook began after accepting the award from Jodie Foster, who presented the category.
Tonight’s the night — finally.
Sarah Snook is opening up about her experience with body shamers in the industry.
Succession star Sarah Snook has revealed that she was once called a “nobody” by casting directors and that she was told to “lose weight” among other things.Speaking to The Sunday Times, Snook – now an Emmy and Golden Globe winner – reflected on her past in the acting industry and how she was mistreated by casting directors and producers, though she did not name them.One incident she cited happened on the set of a film she landed. According to Snook, she was told by the film’s casting directors that they did not want her in the film because she was “a nobody” but that “the director and the writer think you’re good for the role”.The role came with a price though, as Snook went on to tell The Sunday Times that she was instructed to undergo an overhaul to make her “marketable”.
Succession swept the drama categories at the 2024 Critics Choice Awards!
Michaela Zee Sarah Snook revealed that she was mistreated by both a casting director and film producer in the early part of her career. In a new interview with The Sunday Times, the “Succession” star said that after she landed a film role, the casting director told her, “We don’t really want you because you’re a nobody, but the director and the writer think you’re good for the role.
Michaela Zee Sarah Snook revealed that she was mistreated by both a casting agent and producer during the early part of her career. In a new interview with The Sunday Times, the “Succession” star said that after she landed a film role, a casting agent told her, “We don’t really want you because you’re a nobody, but the director and the writer think you’re good for the role.
Sarah Snook is on the crest of a wave, having just collected her second Golden Globe award for her role of Shiv in Succession, but the Australian star reveals that, as an actress starting out, she was treated very badly by both a casting agent and a producer.