Tag: Entertainment-HollywoodReporter

  • The New Xbox CEO Just Dropped Game Pass Prices

    The New Xbox CEO Just Dropped Game Pass Prices

    The new Xbox CEO is listening — on this one, at least.

    Asha Sharma has dropped the price for Game Pass Ultimate from $29.99 to $22.99 a month. PC Game Pass will drop from $16.49 to $13.99 a month.

    It comes with a catch: Starting this year, future Call of Duty titles won’t join Game Pass Ultimate or PC Game Pass at launch. Instead, they will be added to both plans during the following holiday season, or generally speaking, one year later. Existing Call of Duty titles already in the library will continue to be available, Xbox said on Tuesday.

    The annual Call of Duty launches have been major drivers of Game Pass signups and retention.

    “Our players cover a wide breadth of geographies, preferences, and tastes, so while there isn’t a single model that’s best for everyone, this change responds to a lot of feedback we’ve gotten so far,” the price update announcement — via a blog post — reads. “We’ll continue to listen and learn. Thank you for being a part of the Xbox community.”

    You’re welcome, Asha.

    Xbox Game Pass Ultimate gives subscribers access to hundreds of games on console and PC, including major day one releases (like Call of Duty used to be). A membership also allows for online console multiplayer, and there are (some) in-game benefits.

    Xbox raised the Game Pass prices in October, ahead of the launch of its handheld devices. The handheld consoles (PCs, really) came at a higher price point than expected. Xbox Series X/S console prices climbed before that. The Xbox ROG Ally (white, basic) and the Xbox ROG Ally X (black, better) were released on Oct. 16, 2025.

    The Xbox Series X (black, better) starts at $649.99 and goes up to $799.99. The Series S (white, basic) starts at $399.99 and goes up to $449.99.

    More to come.

  • Pip Wedge, U.K. and Canadian TV Pioneer, Dies at 97

    Pip Wedge, a broadcast pioneer who helped shape the British and Canadian private TV businesses when first getting off the ground, has died. He was 97.

    Wedge passed away peacefully and unexpectedly on April 15 in Toronto from natural causes after feeling unwell and taking a nap from which he never woke, his wife, Lis Wedge, confirmed to The Hollywood Reporter. “After nearly 61 years of marriage, I am missing him tremendously,” she said in a statement.

    Born on Dec. 2, 1928 in Forest Hill, in southeast London, U.K., Wedge was named Philip by his parents so that they might call him Pip, after the Charles Dickens character in the classic Great Expectations novel. Following high school studies during the turbulent Second World War, Wedge in May 1946 took a job as a clerk and switchboard operator at a London advertising agency, before joining the UK Navy as a telegraph operator.

    It was while Wedge monitored the airwaves around Glasgow Harbor aboard a navy ship that he also listened to the American Forces Network radio station as American artists like Doris Day, Jo Stafford and Johnny Ray performed on air. That pop musical interest eventually had Wedge catching the attention of veteran British musician, broadcaster and Musical Express writer Steve Race.

    In a 1994 profile in Playback Magazine, Wedge recalled summoning his courage to approach Race, whom he did meet with and came away with a handful of the musician’s LPs in his arms. When it came time to return the records a few months later, this time Wedge came away with a job offer after offering some useful writing advice during their conversation.

    “During our second meeting, Steve was writing his Musical Express column, so I looked over his shoulder, made some comments, which he put into the article. We really got on,” Wedge recounted. In June 1950, Wedge began writing concert reviews at the Musical Express for Race, and in June 1952, he became a reporter and eventually an assistant editor.

    By 1955, however, Wedge heard from Race he was part of a license application to launch Associated-Rediffusion, Britain’s commercial TV station to compete against the BBC public broadcaster. So Wedge joined the TV station, helping set up their music department and then moving into light entertainment. That included producing in the rough and tumble world of early TV quiz shows like Double Your Money and Take Your Pick.

    In spring 1962, Wedge felt a need to exit quiz show production in the U.K.: “I plateaued and had little hope of breaking through,” he recalled in the 1994 profile about any additional career advancement. But that exit came when Wedge was asked to produce Double Your Money pilots in Canada and Australia.

    In Toronto, he set up studio space at CFTO-TV and found contestants, before doing the same in Sydney, Australia. By 1964, Wedge was producing 42 half hours of Double Your Money for the privately-owned CTV Television Network in five cities across the country, while editing the series in Toronto.

    A year later, Wedge made the decision to take a job offer at CTV, first in Montreal in August 1965 and then at headquarters in Toronto from August 1967 as a producer under Murray Chercover, executive vp of the network and programming chief Arthur Weinthal.  

    In 1970, Wedge was promoted to director of development. Suddenly, he was no longer considered strictly a music man or a producer as back in class-ridden UK, but was judged a TV exec asked to help lead a Canadian TV network. “This was a much more democratic environment than what I’d known in London. They took me at face value. They knew what I did, and none of my background mattered. This was a key element in my being happy with CTV,” Wedge recalled in the 1994 profile.

    He worked at CTV for 28 years until his retirement in June 1994, with his duties including producing Canadian variety and daytime programming like a trio of Petula Clark TV specials and early seasons of W5, the network’s flagship news magazine series.

    And Wedge bought CTV’s foreign programming, including U.S. studio series like Rowan and Martin’s Laugh-In, Soap and The Love Boat acquired each year at the Los Angeles Screenings, as he managed the network’s schedule. After leaving CTV, Wedge did consultancy work for the network and industry associations like the Canadian Association of Broadcasters.

    In November 2006, he was inducted into the CAB Broadcast Hall of Fame, and a year later became for 10 years an adjudicator for the Canadian Broadcast Standards Council, which helped regulate taste and standards on Canadian TV for the CRTC, the industry regulator.

  • ‘Michael’ Team on Jackson Family’s Involvement in Biopic and Choosing to Tell an “Uplifting Story of His Triumph” Amid “Complicated Opinions” Around Star

    ‘Michael’ Team on Jackson Family’s Involvement in Biopic and Choosing to Tell an “Uplifting Story of His Triumph” Amid “Complicated Opinions” Around Star

    Michael moonwalked into Hollywood on Monday night, as the story of Michael Jackson‘s early career premiered with the support of the film’s cast and the superstar’s family members.

    Siblings La Toya, Marlon, Jermaine and Jackie Jackson were all in attendance not only for the movie itself but also for Jaafar Jackson, Michael Jackson’s nephew (and Jermaine Jackson’s son) who transforms into his uncle in the biopic. “I was flabbergasted. I have to tell you that you think it’s Mike,” La Toya Jackson told The Hollywood Reporter of the portrayal. “You forget it’s Jaafar, you think it’s Michael.”

    The Jackson family, and Michael Jackson’s estate, was heavily involved in the making of the film, with producer Graham King revealing that in addition to frequent talks with the siblings, Michael Jackson’s son Prince Jackson “was on set every day” during shooting and was also around during the film’s development.

    Prince and brother Bigi Jackson have taken part in the film’s promotion — walking the carpet together at the Berlin premiere, while Prince Jackson was solo at the L.A. event — but sister Paris Jackson has spoken out against the movie, saying she wasn’t involved at all after she “read one of the first drafts of the script and gave my notes about what was dishonest/didn’t sit right with me and when they didn’t address it I moved on with my life.”

    Paris Jackson added on social media in September, “They’re going to make whatever they’re going to make. A big reason why I haven’t said anything up until this point is because I know a lot of you guys are gonna be happy with it. A big section, the film panders to a very specific section of my dad’s fandom that still lives in the fantasy, and they’re gonna be happy with it.”  

    King acknowledged he hadn’t spoken to Paris Jackson recently and writer John Logan said he didn’t talk to her during his research. “Certain people in the family weren’t interested in talking and that was fine; they didn’t want to be represented in the movie or dramatized in the movie, that’s totally fine,” Logan said. He continued, “And look, Michael is a complicated person, people have complicated opinions, and that’s fine. We chose to tell the uplifting story of his triumph in the movie, and that’s what we did.”

    From left: Kendrick Sampson, Adam Fogelson (chairman, Lionsgate Motion Picture Group), Deon Cole, Colman Domingo, Juliano Valdi, Antoine Fuqua, Mike Myers, Jaafar Jackson, Larenz Tate, Laura Harrier, Nia Long, KeiLyn Durrel Jones, Graham King, Miles Teller, Jon Feltheimer (CEO, Lionsgate Entertainment) and Lydia Silverman at the premiere.

    Savion Washington/Getty Images for Lionsgate

    Michael has faced a number of challenges on its way to the big screen. Reportedly, the film’s third act originally included some of the child sex abuse allegations against the superstar, but it was later discovered that Jordan Chandler, who alleged that Jackson sexually abused him in 1993, had reached an agreement to not be depicted in any dramatization of Jackson’s life. The movie then had to push its release date and do reshoots to rejigger the story.

    “I think it’s very important that everybody in the family was involved and took part in this to make sure you get it right. A lot of times people think they know the story and they read about things, but when the family’s involved, the family can say yay or nay,” La Toya Jackson noted, dodging a question on Paris Jackson’s comments but saying that “everybody has their opinion and their choice.”

    And as for Jaafar Jackson’s transformation, co-star Mike Myers admitted he was “starstruck” because the young actor seemed so much like the pop icon.

    That came from “many, many months, a couple years of preparation just allowing myself to understand everything behind the music, everything behind the moves, what was behind all of that, which was his heart,” Jaafar Jackson said. “Of course I wanted to pay attention to the little details and nuances of the performances but most important was his essence in his heart of how he truly treated people, how he was with everyone. And that was the most incredible experience I could ask for.”

    Michael hits theaters on Friday.

    Tiffany Taylor contributed to this report.

  • Tribeca Festival TV, Podcast Lineup Includes ‘Survivor’ Panel; ‘Adults’ Season 2 Premiere; Live Tapings With Kara Swisher, David Remnick

    Tribeca Festival TV, Podcast Lineup Includes ‘Survivor’ Panel; ‘Adults’ Season 2 Premiere; Live Tapings With Kara Swisher, David Remnick

    The 2026 Tribeca Festival has revealed its TV and podcast lineup.

    Among the TV highlights are the world premieres of season two of FX’s Adults, season two of X-Men ’97 and the third and final season of Survival of the Thickest and a Survivor 50th season panel with fan-favorite players Cirie Fields, Rob Cesternino, Kyle Fraser, Kamilla Karthigesu, Teeny Chirichillo and Jonathan Penner, also a Tribeca programmer.

    The festival will also debut the Ronan Farrow-led HBO docuseries Not A Very Good Murderer and The Palladino Files, both created with Emmy winners Fenton Bailey and Randy Barbato, as well as Hulu’s Every Year After adaptation, starring Elisha Cuthbert, and the third-episode premiere of Alice and Steve, starring Jemaine Clement and Nicola Walker.

    Additional screenings include the BBC’s Dear England, starring Joseph Fiennes, and the docuseries Alejandro Sanz: When No One Sees Me, about the music icon; 9/11: Reunited, about the bonds formed in the aftermath of the tragedy; The Man Will Burn, about the evolution of Burning Man; and Grandmasters, about the modernization of global chess.

    “At Tribeca, we’ve always believed in showcasing great storytelling no matter where we find it,
    Tribeca Festival Director and senior vp, programming Cara Cusumano said in a statement.
    “This year’s TV and podcast lineup reflects a creative landscape where stories move fluidly across formats and expands the Festival beyond the screen into shared, live moments of discovery. Together, they embody Tribeca’s commitment to interdisciplinary storytelling and to championing the voices
    shaping culture today, wherever and however those stories are told.”

    Festival senior programmer Liza Domnitz adds, “This year’s TV lineup blends dynamic documentary storytelling with contemporary dramas and provocative comedy, capturing the cultural pulse across generations and genres. From the intimacy of personal rediscovery to the
    shifting landscapes of art, sports, and sex, all our TV selections come anchored in brilliant
    post-screening conversations with creative teams, subjects, or cast.”

    The podcast lineup includes live tapings of On with Kara Swisher, featuring Marc Maron; The New Yorker Radio Hour with David Remnick; The New York Times’ Cannonball with Wesley Morris; and Slate’s Death, Sex & Money, with host Anna Sale joined by Peter Dinklage and Erica Schmidt.

    “This year marks our most expansive program yet, deepening our focus on independent
    podcast discoverability and creating even more opportunities to celebrate exceptional new
    work,” Tribeca podcasts and audio head Davy Gardner said in a statement. “Meanwhile, the Tribeca
    podcast stage has evolved into something larger than live recordings or performances. It’s a
    place where the defining voices of the medium come to create something new: one-night-only
    experiences that, together, feel like a live expression of where podcasting is today.”

    More information about this year’s TV and podcast lineup is available here.

    The 2026 Tribeca Festival is set to run from June 3-14 in New York.

  • Riccie Johnson, Longtime Makeup Artist at ’60 Minutes,’ Dies at 101

    Riccie Johnson, the venerated makeup artist who spent more than a half-century with 60 Minutes and put eyeliner on The Beatles for their first U.S. TV appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show, has died. She was 101.

    Johnson died Jan. 3, her family announced. CBS Sunday Morning paid tribute to her soon afterward, but otherwise her death had not been reported. For more than 20 years starting in the 1990s, she worked on the program, preparing host Charles Osgood and others.

    A protégé of the late Dick Smith, known as “Godfather of Makeup,” Johnson also dealt with Milton Berle on Texaco Star Theatre — and just may have been responsible for his popular powder-puff gag — with Sid Caesar on Your Show of Shows and on the CBS Morning News.

    Johnson began on 60 Minutes with the newsmagazine’s first episode on Sept. 24, 1968, making sure hosts Mike Wallace and Harry Reasoner were camera-ready, and was listed in the program’s credits as recently as December 2018.

    Through the decades, she touched up the likes of Dan Rather, Morley Safer, Roger Mudd, Ed Bradley, Bob Simon, Leslie Stahl, Anderson Cooper, Lara Logan, Steve Kroft and Scott Pelley. Andy Rooney, though, typically applied his own makeup; if Johnson did anything, he’d tell her not to go near the eyebrows. 

    It’s hard to come up with a famous person that hasn’t sat in Johnson’s makeup chair at one time or another. She applied her makeup brush on TV news giants (Walter Cronkite, Edward R. Murrow), showbiz icons (Elvis Presley, Frank Sinatra, Arthur Godfrey, Tallulah Bankhead) and presidents (Lyndon Johnson, Richard Nixon — not in time for his sweaty debate performance opposite John Kennedy, alas — Gerald Ford and Bill Clinton).

    Clinton resisted her help at first. “He was afraid he was going to look too made up,” she told the New York Post in 2014. “He came in rather tense. I told him, ‘Mr. President, I assure you I have a very light touch.’” Clinton signed a photo for her and wrote, “Thank you for making my old face look good.”

    Perhaps her most memorable assignment came on Feb. 9, 1964, when The Beatles arrived in New York to perform on CBS’ The Ed Sullivan Show.

    “I heard all this din outside,” she told Mo Rocca in 2016. “I looked out the window and saw all these young people. And I talked to the doorman. And he said, ‘Oh, some group from England.’ I said, ‘Wow. This looks serious!’ So I called home and said to my husband, ‘I can get the children in to a dress rehearsal.’ The children didn’t want to come. So of course, now they’re very sorry about that!”

    Johnson remembered Paul McCartney, John Lennon, George Harrison and Ringo Starr being a bit nervous and wondering what she was doing to their faces.

    Years later, she ran into McCartney in a hallway at CBS and, much to her surprise, he remembered her and their time together on the Sullivan show. He said, “You used pancake makeup and eyeliner, and when we asked you about the eyeliner, you said, ‘It’ll be fine,’” Johnson said in 2014.

    She was born Florence Riccobono on Feb. 27, 1924, in Clifton, New Jersey. At Georgian Court University, a Roman Catholic college in Lakewood Township, New Jersey, she picked up the nickname Riccie as well as a bachelor of arts degree, then pursued her master’s in Theater Arts at the Pasadena Playhouse.

    Her real makeup education began in 1950 when she was hired at NBC. Back then, she wanted to be an actress. She was offered a position in the makeup department and turned it down before she took a friend’s advice and reconsidered.

    The NBC makeup department was headed by Smith, who would go on to work on such films as Little Big ManThe GodfatherAmadeus and The Exorcist and receive an honorary Oscar.

    “He was very enthusiastic and a generous teacher,” Johnson told this writer during a 2015 interview for Makeup Artist Magazine. “He had us make each other up for practice when we weren’t busy. One day, he asked me to go with him to the control room during a dress rehearsal. In a whisper, he would show me what the lighting was doing — how it was causing shadows and where you needed to highlight.”

    One of her first assignments came on Texaco Star Theatre. (Berle did his own makeup on the sketch-comedy program, but she was in charge of the guests.) In one of the comedian’s most famous bits, he would yell “Makeup!” on stage, and someone would smack him in the face with a giant powder puff, covering him with white dust.

    Though the gag was as old as vaudeville itself, Johnson noticed that Berle began incorporating it on his show after she was stationed offstage with a powder puff and instructions to touch up the guests if needed.

    “I don’t want to take credit for that. I have no idea,” she said. “He didn’t use it before. I know that. It wasn’t like it was anything new, but I wondered if he didn’t think of it because I was standing there with a powder puff.”

    Johnson also did the makeup for another famed NBC comedy-variety program, Your Show of Shows, starring Caesar and Imogene Coca.

    An opportunity to tour Europe lured Johnson away from NBC, but she landed at CBS when she returned, working on the game shows I’ve Got a SecretTo Tell the Truth and What’s My Line?

    In 1952, she segued to the soap opera Guiding Light and met her future husband, James Johnson, a CBS cameraman. She first laid eyes on him after she was hit in the head with a boom that broke her glasses. “I was standing there with my hands in front of my face, and I hear this voice saying, ‘CBS will pay for these,’” she said. “And there was Jay, with the two pieces of glasses.”

    The two married in 1953 and had seven children in 10 years, raising them on the Upper East Side of New York. 

    When CBS launched a weekday morning news show, Johnson was asked to do the makeup, and that worked out just fine with the demands of motherhood. She stayed with the CBS Morning News for a dozen years until offered the 60 Minutes gig.

    Her husband died in 1999. In addition to her seven children, she is survived by 14 grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren. Donations in her memory may be made to Catholic Charities.

    In her interview with Makeup Artist Magazine, Johnson seemed astonished by her brush with so much greatness.

    “When you’re working — like when I made up The Beatles — I had no idea they would be so big. I just knew there were a lot of screaming kids out on the street, and there was talk about how important the group would be in the music world. But who knew how big they were going to be? And that’s the same with everything that I’ve done,” she said.

    “Of course, if you make up a president, he’s a president. But a lot of things that you do … Your Show of Shows, did we know that was going to be such history? Did we know 60 Minutes was going to last all these years? It’s just wonderful because [I’ve made so many] professional friends. I feel very honored to be able to say that I worked with them … and to have them acknowledge me.”

  • Why Miranda Priestly Doesn’t Remember Anne Hathaway’s Andy Sachs in ‘The Devil Wears Prada 2’

    Why Miranda Priestly Doesn’t Remember Anne Hathaway’s Andy Sachs in ‘The Devil Wears Prada 2’

    Twenty years after The Devil Wears Prada became a culture-defining hit, the sequel arrived in New York on Monday night in a scene straight out of Runway.

    Meryl Streep, Anne Hathaway, Emily Blunt and Stanley Tucci reunited at the Lincoln Center event, as they walked the runway-inspired red carpet and guests turned out in their best high fashion. The Devil Wears Prada 2 sees Streep’s Miranda Priestly still at the top of Runway magazine, as Andy Sachs (Hathaway) returns as features editor and they face off against Priestly’s former assistant turned rival Emily Charlton (Blunt).

    In addition to its stars, the Prada creative team also returns, with David Frankel back as director and Aline Brosh McKenna as writer. On the carpet, Frankel told The Hollywood Reporter that he said no to a sequel for 18 years, and would immediately shut down any Hollywood meeting that turned to discussion of it.

    But then screenwriter Aline Brosh McKenna “came to me with a notion that, gee, this world is shrinking in a major way, this fashion, media world. And what would it be like if you were on this sinking ship and Miranda’s future was not guaranteed and Andy’s future was shaky? How would they deal with that?” said Frankel. “That seemed to create a lot of drama.”

    McKenna added that, at the same time they were having these ideas, they heard Streep was open to a sequel, “so we went and sat down with Meryl. My personal belief system is that if Meryl Streep thinks it’s a good idea, it’s a good idea.”

    One of the most surprising developments in the sequel’s trailer was that Streep’s Miranda seemed to not remember Hathaway’s Andy, or many of the key events that took place in the original film. Frankel explained that decision may be “a little bit of a ploy on her part” but also “it’s that thing you have when you have your first boss — they mean everything to you, you never forget them and the boss has had a million assistants. You came and you were there for a year, who remembers that?”

    McKenna echoed, “It’s been 20 years, how many assistants do we think she’s had? She has two [at a time] so probably 50, I would guess. She definitely doesn’t remember [Andy] on sight, which I think is understandable.”

    For her part, Hathaway also told reporters about reprising her role as Andy, emphasizing, “I really love seeing how she treats people. Andy is coming into her power in her life and you’ll see in this movie, she has someone that works for her. I just love her approach. I feel like she’s gentle and kind and it’s a lovely anecdote to maybe the way that she was treated.”

    Tucci also said he’s happy with where Nigel is two decades later — still alongside Miranda at Runway — “because it makes sense. There’s an emotional trajectory to it that’s logical.”

    As Frankel kept the door open for more stories in the Prada world (“I’m still really curious about where these characters go and if there was a possibility, of course we’d entertain it”), one key difference this time around is Anna Wintour’s public support of the project, after rejecting comparisons to Miranda at the time of the original. McKenna explained of that pivot, “Once she saw the first movie I think she felt safe and comfortable, so I think she had a certain level of trust with us for this movie. I’m excited to hear what she thinks about it.”

    The Devil Wears Prada 2 hits theaters May 1.

  • L.A.-Based Fashion Label Re/Done Drops Limited Run of ‘Devil Wears Prada’ Graphic Tees

    L.A.-Based Fashion Label Re/Done Drops Limited Run of ‘Devil Wears Prada’ Graphic Tees

    If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, The Hollywood Reporter may receive an affiliate commission.

    On top of classic movie collectibles from brands like Funko and Fisher Price, L.A. cool-girl staple Re/Done has released a trio of its coveted vintage tees in partnership with Disney and 20th Century Studios’ The Devil Wears Prada 2. The three-part capsule builds upon the brands’ ongoing partnership, where characters like Mickey Mouse, Bambi and Dumbo have been featured on Re/Done’s ultra-wearable designs.

    T-shirt reads “Florals? For Spring? Groundbreaking.”

    Available online in limited quantities starting April 21, the collection showcases hand-painted watercolor artwork inspired by quintessential imagery and quotes from the original film: “Everybody wants to be us,” “That’s all” and, of course, “Florals? For Spring? Groundbreaking.”

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    T-shirt reads “Everybody wants to be us.”

    The collection includes two of Re/Done’s best-selling t-shirt silhouettes. The “Everybody wants to be us” design is printed on the brand’s Classic Tee in recycled heritage cotton jersey, with an easy slim fit, crewneck cut, regular length and short sleeves. The other two designs (“Florals? For Spring? Groundbreaking” and “That’s all“) are seen on the Re/Done x Hanes Boxy Crop Tee, with a shorter length, easy fit, crewneck cut and short sleeves, also in recycled cotton jersey. All three t-shirts in the collaboration retail for $160 and are available in sizes extra-small through extra-large.

    The exclusive clothing drop comes one day after The Devil Wears Prada 2 World Premiere, with its star-studded red carpet coverage streaming now on Disney+. Stay tuned for additional brand collaborations ahead of the film’s theatrical release on May 1.

    Related: Miranda Priestly Would Never Approve This ‘Devil Wears Prada’ Merch Drop on Amazon. That’s All

  • ‘Cat on a Hot Tin Roof’ Revival Set For Broadway In Spring 2027

    ‘Cat on a Hot Tin Roof’ Revival Set For Broadway In Spring 2027

    A revival of Tennessee Williams’ Cat on a Hot Tin Roof is coming to Broadway next season. 

    Sam Gold, the Tony Award-winning director of Fun Home and Macbeth, is attached to direct. Casting and exact dates have not yet been announced, but the plan is to bring the revival to Broadway in spring 2027.  

    The news comes as Broadway production company Seaview announced the acquisition of the revival rights from the new custodians of the Tennessee Williams estate. International Literary Properties took on the role after entering into a strategic partnership with The University of the South in 2025. 

    The last Broadway revival of the play was in 2013, starring Scarlett Johansson and Benjamin Walker. Premiering in 1955, the Pulitzer Prize-winning play follows a wealthy southern family competing for the dying patriarch’s inheritance. 

    This will be the third collaboration between Seaview and Gold, after An Enemy of the People with Jeremy Strong and Romeo + Juliet with Rachel Zegler and Kit Connor. Gold directed a Broadway revival of Tennessee Williams’ The Glass Menagerie in 2017.

    Cat on a Hot Tin Roof is the pinnacle of what the theatre can do. Two of the greatest roles for actors in the cannon, delivered to us by the world’s most original playwright, at the very height of his poetic powers, exploring themes that feel as shockingly honest and blood boiling today as they did 70 years ago,” Gold said. “I couldn’t be more excited to bring this masterpiece back to New York next season.”

    “It’s been such a gift to be making work with Sam Gold over the last four years,” said Greg Nobile, Seaview’s co-founder and CEO. “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof will mark our fifth production together, and I am certain Sam’s vision to bring Tennessee’s extraordinary and timeless characters to life next season will once again thrill and delight audiences.”

  • Naomi Ackie, Alison Oliver to Star in Luna Carmoon’s Sophomore Feature ‘To Make Ends Meat’

    Naomi Ackie, Alison Oliver to Star in Luna Carmoon’s Sophomore Feature ‘To Make Ends Meat’

    Naomi Ackie (Sorry Baby, Mickey 17) and Alison Oliver (Wuthering Heights, Saltburn) have just wrapped on Luna Carmoon’s sophomore feature To Make Ends Meat.

    Also starring Éanna Hardwicke (Saipan, The Sixth Commandment) and Armande Boulanger (The Returned, Eiffel), the film follows three women — all in debt to despicable men, their pasts and each other — who find themselves bargaining to survive in the only language these men seem to understand: consumption and violence. Goodfellas is handling international sales and will launch the film at Cannes, with True Brit nabbing U.K. and Ireland distribution rights.

    To Make Ends Meat is the British director-writer’s second film, shot in her hometown of London — her debut Hoard premiered at Venice Critics’ Week in 2023 where it won three prizes. The movie went on to receive international distribution and landed Carmoon a BAFTA nomination for outstanding debut in 2025.

    “This film has come from the belly of my soul, of all things, tar and family,” said Carmoon. “From my grandmother’s experiences in Newington Lodge, to my mother Toni and the cleaning houses she took me to where darker things lingered, to teddies and chicken farms. So much of my family and our memories seep deeper than you’d think. I cannot think of a more prevalent time than now to paint and stitch and weave to screen, it is my rage that has fuelled this. The weatherings of being a woman and how you are cannibalised by systems, by men, women and then by debts we sometimes write ourselves into because we believe we deserve it so.

    “This has been made with all my blood, figuratively and yes, physically, of all of me. I hope I know it will rupture, splinter and cry to us all when it is stitched together.”

    To Make Ends Meat reunites her with Hoard producers Helen Simmons (Erebus Pictures) and Loran Dunn (Delaval Film) with Cheri Darbon and Chloe Culpin as co-producers. Hélène Louvart (La Chimera, Rocks) serves as DP.

    Financing comes from BBC Film, BFI (awarding National Lottery funding), True Brit, Goodfellas, Mother, ProdCo, Arts Alliance, Affine Films, Cofiloisirs and Blush Film.

    Screen International was first to break the news.

  • Webby Awards Winners Include ‘Heated Rivalry,’ Bad Bunny, Timothée Chalamet, Sabrina Carpenter and The Hollywood Reporter

    Webby Awards Winners Include ‘Heated Rivalry,’ Bad Bunny, Timothée Chalamet, Sabrina Carpenter and The Hollywood Reporter

    Heated Rivalry, Bad Bunny, Timothée Chalamet, Sabrina Carpenter and The Hollywood Reporter are among the winners for the 30th annual Webby Awards.

    Other winners include Selena Gomez, Cardi B, Lady Gaga, Justin Bieber, Jimmy Fallon, Alex Warren, Kendrick Lamar & SZA, Amy Poehler, Jason Bateman, Sean Hayes & Will Arnett, Don Lemon, Jason & Travis Kelce, Conan O’Brien, Jimmy Kimmel, Heated Rivalry, Sinners, The White Lotus, SNL, Severance, WAYMO, Apple, Lady Gaga, KATSEYE, NPR, Stranger Things, Sinners, Abbott Elementary, Sonic the Hedgehog 3 and Sesame Street.

    The awards, which are run by the International Academy of Digital Arts & Sciences, honor “excellence on the Internet and celebrat[e] the creators, companies, platforms, and personalities shaping today’s cultural and technological landscape.”

    All nominees are eligible to win two awards: the Webby Award, selected by the Academy, and the Webby People’s Voice Award, voted on by the online community. The Hollywood Reporter won the People’s Voice Award in the category of Entertainment, General Desktop & Mobile Sites (Websites & Mobile Sites). 

    Winners will be recognized May 11 at a special 30th-anniversary awards ceremony hosted by Emmy-nominated stand-up comedian and The Daily Show correspondent Josh Johnson in New York City. The ceremony is known for requesting that winners give speeches that are only five words long.

    This year, the Webby Awards will also honor several folks with Special Achievement Awards for their “outstanding contributions to Internet culture.” They include Claude (Webby Person of the Year Award); Shonda Rhimes (Webby Streaming Person of the Year Award); Kylie Kelce (Webby Podcast of the Year Award); Taraji P. Henson (IADAS and NAACP Webby Advocate of the Year Award); Druski (Webby Special Achievement Award); and Pete Davison (Webby Special Achievement Award). Adobe and the Webbys also will present the Special Achievement in Creative AI Award to James Gerde.

    In addition, Google will be honored as brand of the year, iHeart Media will receive the Webby Podcast Company of the Year achievement, and PBS will be recognized as the Webby Media Company of the Year.

    “This 30th Anniversary class of Webby Winners is a reflection of the Internet at its best: vibrant, diverse, and continuously innovative,” said Jesse Feister, executive director of Webby Media Group. “From global superstars, viral online personalities, and culture-defining entertainment, to AI platforms like Google Gemini and Claude Code, these honorees are the voices setting the standard for digital excellence. We are proud to champion their creativity and celebrate the extraordinary ways they are shaping the future of the online world.”

    A partial list of winners follows. See the full list on the Webby Awards website

    • Air: Where All Creators are Heroes featuring The Rizzler won the Webby Award for Best Creative Use of AI & Technology, Creator Excellence (Creators)
    • Apple Pay won the Webby Award and People’s Voice Award for Shopping & Retail, Consumer Apps (Apps, Software & Immersive)
    • Are You Okay? won the Webby Award and People’s Voice Award for Interview or Talk Show, Social Content Series (Social)
    • Bye Bye Dongle – Logitech won the Webby Award and People’s Voice Award for B2B, Branded Content (Advertising, Media & PR)
    • Claude Code won the Webby Award and People’s Voice Award for Best Product or Service, AI Features & Innovation (AI)
    • Colin & Samir won the Webby Award for Best Duo or Group, Creator Excellence (Creators)
    • Feel Good Foodie won the People’s Voice Award for Creator Launch or Drop, Creator Business (Creators)
    • Flow won the Webby Award and People’s Voice Award for Creative Tools, AI Experiences & Applications (AI) 
    • FidoCure: Revolutionizing dog cancer treatment won the People’s Voice Award for Healthcare & Life Sciences, AI Experiences & Applications (AI)
    • Figma Slides: All Hands on Deck won the Webby Award for B2B, Branded Entertainment (Video & Film)
    • GoFundMe Giving Funds won the People’s Voice Award for Responsible Innovation, Responsible Technology (Websites & Mobile Sites)
    • Google Gemini 3 won the Webby Award for Best AI Technical Achievement, AI Features & Innovation (AI)
    • Good Hang With Amy Poehler won the Webby Award and People’s Voice Award for Best Host, Features (Podcasts)
    • Heated Rivalry social won the Webby Award and People’s Voice Award for Best Social Campaign, Social Features (Social)
    • Justin Bieber Livestream on Twitch won the Webby Award for Creator Launch or Drop, Creator Business (Creators)
    • KATSEYE and GAP’s “Better in Denim” won the Webby Award and People’s Voice Award for Fashion, Beauty & Lifestyle, Branded Entertainment (Video & Film)
    • Kendrick Lamar & SZA – “Luther” won the Webby Award for Music Video, General Video & Film (Video & Film)
    • Lady Gaga Monster Press Conference – Spotify won the Webby Award and People’s Voice Award for Events & Livestreams, Social Campaigns (Social)
    • LEGO Party! won the Webby Award for Kids & Family, Games General (Games)
    • Lionel Messi Intercepts the Super Bowl – Apple won the Webby Award for Social Video, Individual (Advertising, Media & PR)
    • MasterClass On Call won the Webby Award for Best Real-Time Engagement, AI Features & Innovation (AI)
    • More Than A Game – ACLU won the Webby Award and People’s Voice Award for Sports, General Video & Film (Video & Film)
    • MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories won the People’s Voice Award for Newsletter or Written Stories, Creator Business (Creators)
    • Mythical Kitchen won the Webby Award and People’s Voice Award for Food & Drink, General Social (Social)
    • NASA’s Curious Universe: The Earth Series won the Webby Award and People’s Voice Award for Health, Science & Education, Limited-Series & Specials (Podcasts)
    • NikeSKIMS Spring ’26 Campaign featuring Blackpink’s LISA won the Webby Award and People’s Voice Award for Launch or Drop, Advertising Campaigns (Advertising, Media & PR)
    • New Heights With Jason & Travis Kelce won the People’s Voice Award for Sports, Shows (Podcasts)
    • Now You See Me: Now You Don’t – Making Music Happen With Zach King won the Webby Award for Entertainment or Meme, General Creator (Creators)
    • NPR Music Tiny Desk Concerts won the Webby Award and People’s Voice Award for Entertainment & Music, Series & Channels (Video & Film)
    • PayPal Open: From Farmers Market to Global Markets won the Webby Award and People’s Voice Award for Best B2B Campaign, Media Campaigns (Advertising, Media & PR)
    • Sabrina Carpenter “Tears” won the People’s Voice Award for Music Video, General Video & Film (Video & Film)
    • Samsung x Google Gemini Museum Tour won the Webby Award for Best Immersive Technology Innovation, Immersive Experiences (Apps, Software & Immersive)
    • Severance S2 – Tune-In Campaign won the Webby Award and People’s Voice Award for Social Media Campaign, Advertising Campaigns (Advertising, Media & PR)
    • Sinners Theatrical Social Campaign won the Webby Award for Best Overall Social Presence – Media/Entertainment, Social Features (Social)
    • Smirnoff x Troye Sivan: Go Off! won the Webby Award and People’s Voice Award for Digital Campaign, Advertising Campaigns (Advertising, Media & PR)
    • SNL50: The Anniversary Special won the Webby Award and People’s Voice Award for Events & Live, Limited-Series & Specials (Video & Film)
    • Steph Curry Shoots the Moon won the People’s Voice Award for Best Use of Earned Media, Media Campaigns (Advertising, Media & PR)
    • Take a Moment With Elmo and Jonathan Bailey won the Webby Award and People’s Voice Award for Health & Wellness, Social Video Short Form (Social)
    • Thanks Dad With Ego Nwodim won the Webby Award for Interview or Talk Show – Entertainment & Culture, Shows (Podcasts)
    • The Beatles Anthology 2025 won the People’s Voice Award for Arts, Culture & Lifestyle, Social Campaigns (Social)
    • The Daily Show won the Webby Award for Comedy, General Social (Social)
    • The @MeetCutesNYC Universe won the Webby Award for Cross-Platform Presence, Creator Business (Creators)
    • The Don Lemon Show won the Webby Award and People’s Voice Award for Best Video Podcast Host, Features (Podcasts) 
    • The Intersection by MeidasTouch won the People’s Voice Award for Best New Podcast – News, Business & Society, Features (Podcasts)
    • The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon won the Webby Award and People’s Voice Award for Entertainment, General Social (Social)
    • The Way Meditation App won the People’s Voice Award for Best Visual Design – Function, App Excellence (Apps, Software & Immersive)
    • Timothée Chalamet for Cash App won the Webby Award for Short Form, Branded Entertainment (Video & Film)
    • Toast x Keith Lee “It’s the Little Things” won a Webby Award and People’s Voice Award for Creator/Influencer Partnership or Collaboration – Brand, Creator Business (Creators)  
    • Touch: Beyond Vision – AI for Blind won the Webby Award for Belonging & Inclusion, AI Experiences & Applications (AI)
    • Tracking Bad Bunny won the Webby Award for Best Community or Fan Engagement – Media/Entertainment, Social Features (Social)
    • Trixie Mattel won the People’s Voice Award for Entertainment or Meme, General Creator (Creators)
    • Try Guys Try Ghost Hunting won the Webby Award for Best Creator-to-Creator Collaboration, Creator Excellence (Creators)
    • Waymo | Safety Hub won the Webby Award for Best Responsible AI Implementation, AI Features & Innovation (AI)
    • The White Lotus Official Podcast won the Webby Award for Television & Film, Individual Episode (Podcasts) 
    • Zarna Garg & Malala: Almost-Therapy Skit won the People’s Voice Award for Best Shortform Video, Creator Excellence (Creators)
    • Zohran for NYC (New York City Mayoral Primary) won the Webby Award and People’s Voice Award for Politics & Advocacy, Branded Content (Advertising, Media & PR)