Theater Review: Mike Nichols’s Staggering New Death of a Salesman Goes Back to the Source
Starring Philip Seymour Hoffman and Andrew Garfield.
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Starring Philip Seymour Hoffman and Andrew Garfield.
Theater critic Scott Brown surveys the onstage landscape for the first half of this year.
Theroux: "Sam Rockwell is a deadweight. We gotta cut him. We gotta recruit Jeremy Sisto."
Also, 'Glee' star Dianna Agron is a contender for the film's Gwen Stacy.
With Mike Nichols directing.
"We kept coming up against a wall that we couldn't overcome."
It's about campaign dirty tricks.
And he's the director! Really not looking out for himself.
Eddie Murphy! Shia LaBeouf! Cher! Joseph Gordon-Levitt, now, too!
Which of the three do you think could most believably have sprung from Philip Seymour Hoffman's loins?
Plus: Batali's two new TV projects might get him behind the stove again.
Why does this thing need to cost $35 million, anyway?
They gathered with other Public Theater alumni to tear down the lobby before it gets refurbished.
Hoffman and Ruffalo, both first-time filmmakers, only one successful. And Gosling and Williams are great together.
Plus: Victoria Beckham does the robot dance, Jamie-Lynn Sigler plays ping-pong, and other expressions of celebrity joy, in today's gossip roundup.
politics, 2012, occupy wall street, herman cain, no he cain't, crimes and misdemeanors, the national interest, rick perry, video, michael bloomberg, mitt romney, neighborhood news, nypd, occupy everywhere, campaign 2012, herman cain sexual harassment, ink-stained wretches, nyc, protest movements, rick rolling, the third terminator, barack obama, business, made-off, bernie madoff, early and awkward, finance, google, international intrigue, jon huntsman, mf global, not too big to fail, occupy oakland, sad things, the hunt for red november