What say you, Dataloungers.
[Quote]Actor says the mockery which greeted his performance on screen playing a teenager as a 27-year-old was ‘a disappointing experience, and difficult’
Well, not as disappointing as sitting through it, I say.
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What say you, Dataloungers.
[Quote]Actor says the mockery which greeted his performance on screen playing a teenager as a 27-year-old was ‘a disappointing experience, and difficult’
Well, not as disappointing as sitting through it, I say.
by Anonymous | reply 33 | January 12, 2023 12:46 AM |
Aww, poor nepo baby had to endure criticism. He should call up Beanie to commiserate.
by Anonymous | reply 1 | November 2, 2022 10:43 AM |
😂 The fuck, I came across this movie on cable and I’m wondering who the hell is this 40 year old man playing a high schooler? Figured there had to be a DL thread.
by Anonymous | reply 2 | January 11, 2023 8:30 PM |
[quote]Aww, poor nepo baby
Oh, God - Nepo's the new annoying insult all the idiots are using ad infinitum - we'll have years of this, won't we?
by Anonymous | reply 3 | January 11, 2023 8:50 PM |
The movie is terrible to boot.
by Anonymous | reply 4 | January 11, 2023 8:53 PM |
This guy has no talent. The lack of self-awareness is hilarious. Didn’t his daddy find his career?
by Anonymous | reply 5 | January 11, 2023 8:57 PM |
R3, it's the new "sheeple."
by Anonymous | reply 6 | January 11, 2023 8:58 PM |
[quote]The internet can be horrific
Then, stay off of the internet Ben.
by Anonymous | reply 7 | January 11, 2023 9:00 PM |
r3 You think nepotism is a new term, do you?
by Anonymous | reply 8 | January 11, 2023 9:34 PM |
Why do celebrities somehow think they are immune from criticism? if you're going to put yourself out there by starring in a musical, you're opening yourself up to criticism.
I have so much contempt for them when they do this.
by Anonymous | reply 9 | January 11, 2023 9:37 PM |
R9 I suppose they want to stay "relevant" so they keep flapping their gums to anyone who will listen and sympathize.
I don't sympathize!
by Anonymous | reply 10 | January 11, 2023 9:40 PM |
To be fair, if the movie had been as good as the show, folks wouldn't have minded so much.
But, he didn't even give as good a performance in the movie as he did any the Tony's, Also, many of the other parts were wholly miscast.
Finally, the way he was styled made accentuated his age, rather than downplayed it. The movie was an utter failure on so many levels.
by Anonymous | reply 11 | January 11, 2023 9:41 PM |
He could of just said no "I'm to old" and enjoy his tony
by Anonymous | reply 12 | January 11, 2023 9:43 PM |
Well, when your father produced the movie especially for you, saying " No" is hardly an option, especially since you didn't have much going on anyway.
by Anonymous | reply 13 | January 11, 2023 9:46 PM |
If his anus looks anything like his mouth, I’m not interested.
by Anonymous | reply 14 | January 11, 2023 9:47 PM |
[quote] Oh, God - Nepo's the new annoying insult all the idiots are using ad infinitum - we'll have years of this, won't we?
It’s true though and unlike in years past, these nepo babies have no talent. They’re basically disposable TikTok trash.
by Anonymous | reply 15 | January 11, 2023 9:48 PM |
This guy has no talent. The lack of self-awareness is hilarious. Didn’t his daddy fund his career?
by Anonymous | reply 16 | January 11, 2023 9:48 PM |
[quote]Well, when your father produced the movie especially for you, saying " No" is hardly an option, especially since you didn't have much going on anyway.
Daddy should have done it 3-5 years ago. EVERYONE was saying that Ben was in danger of aging out, even then. Stage and movie are radically different although I can see where they thought they might get away with it after The Politician.
by Anonymous | reply 17 | January 11, 2023 9:53 PM |
Calling him "no talent" is absurd. Did he have any control over any aspects of the movie, especially the ones mentioned?
by Anonymous | reply 18 | January 11, 2023 9:54 PM |
He looked fabulous
by Anonymous | reply 19 | January 11, 2023 9:55 PM |
His ma had one ugly kid!
by Anonymous | reply 20 | January 11, 2023 9:55 PM |
This really pisses me off. This guy is not just a nepo baby, but their goddamn king. He and Beanie are poster children for millennials who were born on third base but can’t handle people telling them they hit anything less than a home run.
by Anonymous | reply 21 | January 11, 2023 10:00 PM |
The link to the guardian article is a bit misleading, I discovered--it actually refers back to a NYTimes interview with him today, and he only talks about the pain of the attacks on him because of the movie of "Dear Evan Hansen" because he is directly asked about it (even so, he refused to talk about his friend beanie Feldstein's experience with "Funny girl," saying she's moved on, and perhaps he should have done the same thing). So it doesn't look like he's really dwelling on his pain at the movie's reception as the Guardian quote makes him sound like he is.
He's not aging attractively, and he's probably going to have to do only character work in movies if he does any work in movies at all. He may be better off doing big character parts (like Nicely-Nicely Johnson) on Broadway where it sounds like he's happier anyway.
by Anonymous | reply 22 | January 11, 2023 10:08 PM |
When Ben Platt was a kid, listening to show tunes in the family car, he developed a fondness for “This Is Not Over Yet,” an optimistic and upbeat Jason Robert Brown song from the short-lived musical “Parade.”
It was only years later, as Platt grew up, that he encountered the rest of the show, and realized what it was actually about — the 20th-century lynching of a Jewish Southerner, fueled by antisemitism.
Now Platt is starring in a seven-performance revival of the 1998 musical at New York City Center, and says the timing is sadly perfect, given the antisemitism once again coursing through the nation’s culture. “It’s felt urgent,” he said, “in a way that is shocking to all of us.”
The musical, which won Tony Awards both for Brown’s score and Alfred Uhry’s book, tells the story of Leo Frank, an Atlanta factory manager who was convicted in 1913 of murdering a 13-year-old girl. A public outcry over whether Frank was actually guilty prompted the Georgia governor to commute Frank’s death sentence, at which point Frank was lynched by a mob.
The City Center revival, directed by Michael Arden, begins performances Tuesday and runs through Sunday; there is already talk of a possible Broadway transfer, but no firm plans.
Platt, 29, vaulted to fame, and won a Tony, playing the title character in the 2016 musical “Dear Evan Hansen.” In the years since, he has been working onscreen, starring in “The Politician” for Netflix and a film adaptation of “Dear Evan Hansen,” as well as the forthcoming “The People We Hate at the Wedding” for Amazon Prime Video and a movie called “Theater Camp,” which he wrote with a group of friends. He also created a new lane for himself as a performer: writing songs, recording albums and touring.
In an interview, he talked about “Parade,” the ups and downs of “Dear Evan Hansen” (the stage version was a hit; the film adaptation was panned), and his decision to drop off Twitter. These are edited excerpts from the conversation.
[bold]Tell me why you wanted to do “Parade.”[/bold]
This was a character I related to. I recognized this guy. And I realized how much modern application there is for it. It’s a lot harder to distance from than I was hoping it would be. This show is all about not only antisemitism, but the failure of the country to protect lots of marginalized groups, and we’re all feeling that really intensely right now. (cont.)
by Anonymous | reply 23 | January 11, 2023 10:10 PM |
(cont.) [bold] How do you connect to your character?[/bold]
The very obvious thing is that we’re both Jewish. He’s also, similar to other characters that I’ve played, not the best at expressing his emotions. Leo learns during his journey that vulnerability does not mean you’re any less strong, and I definitely relate to that journey. Being wrongly convicted of murder, I fortunately cannot relate to. I hope I never learn that.
[bold]What does this show tell us about antisemitism?[/bold]
I don’t necessarily want to dictate what people feel when they come away from the show. There’s a lot of gray in the show. It doesn’t make any decisions for you. Hopefully, most of all, it shows how hatred is learned. With every character, you see how they got to where they are.
[bold]What’s it like being back onstage after five years away?[/bold]
It’s just the best. I spent my whole life doing it, pretty much nonstop, from 6 years old to 24. It just feels like a homecoming.
[bold]I never fully understand why actors want to do these short-run shows. You put in all this time for a few nights. [/bold[
Two reasons. One is the unselfish reason, which is it’s just a story worth telling, especially right now. The selfish reason is that I carry ulterior hopes that maybe we’ll have a longer opportunity in the future.
[bold]You spent so many years working on “Dear Evan Hansen.” How are you feeling about that experience?[/bold]
I’m feeling really grateful for it. It was my ultimate dream come true, to originate something, and it inspired me to start looking inward and writing my own music. It will always be a piece of me. I feel a simultaneous constant pride and desire to keep it in my heart at all times, but also a real readiness and excitement at having moved forward and embracing my adulthood and playing characters that live in different worlds than that. I got to live in that world for a very long time, and it was not the easiest world to live in. So I look at it fondly but I’m also happy to be moving ahead.
[bold]Your boyfriend is your successor in the role, Noah Galvin. Is that weird?[/bold]
I don’t think about him in that way, because I knew him for three or four years before we even had that experience. There’s this lore that that’s how we met, but it’s not. But it’s nice to have that detail of him understanding deeply what that experience was. And I feel very lucky to be with him — he’s changed my perspective, and made things, in a very positive way, feel a bit smaller and more manageable.
[bold]You’ve been working on a film version of “Merrily We Roll Along,” to be shot over 20 years. What’s that like?[/bold]
There are so many variables. The only way I’ve found to approach it is that you have to treat [each shoot] like short films, let it go, and move on and live your life, and as the next one rolls around, find your way back into it. If I constantly have it in the back of my head, it just feels so unimaginable to get to the end, that I get scared about it in a way that’s not productive. So I’m just taking each of the little gifts along the way and hoping we make it to the end of the road.
[bold]One of your closest friends, Beanie Feldstein, who is also starring with you in “Merrily,” had a bumpy ride with “Funny Girl” on Broadway. I wonder what you make of how her experience went.[/bold]
I know more than anything, she just wants everybody to move on. So I’ll just say that I love her and I admire her strength.
[bold]You had your own rough ride with the film version of “Dear Evan Hansen.”[/bold]
It was definitely a disappointing experience, and difficult, and it definitely opened my eyes to the internet and how horrific it can be. You’d think, after doing “Dear Evan Hansen” onstage for four years, I would have already known that. I try my best to focus on people who tell me it was moving to them and they really felt seen by it. It is very easy for the good to get drowned out by the bad. (cont.)
by Anonymous | reply 24 | January 11, 2023 10:13 PM |
^^^sorry for screwing up the bold-facing.
by Anonymous | reply 25 | January 11, 2023 10:14 PM |
(cont.) [bold]I don’t know if this is connected, but I noticed that you’re no longer on Twitter. What’s that about?[/bold]
I find that Twitter is almost exclusively for tearing people down. I wasn’t getting anything positive, and it’s been really nice to be away.
[bold]Since “Evan Hansen” you’ve become a pop performer, recording and touring.[/bold]
It’s a whole different animal because it’s been the only avenue in which to express my perspective. I find that in everything else — film and TV and especially theater — as much as you’re giving of yourself, you’re also doing your best to disappear, to serve somebody else’s mission or tell somebody else’s story. I love that experience, being a cog in a larger wheel. But I also think that being afforded the opportunity to do the opposite is a very liberating and freeing experience. One makes me really appreciate the other.
[bold]Do you see yourself back on Broadway?[/bold]
I would love to, yes. I’m very much so hoping, whether it’s this or something else, to get back there as soon as I can.
by Anonymous | reply 26 | January 11, 2023 10:15 PM |
Such a difficult life - poor thing
by Anonymous | reply 27 | January 11, 2023 10:18 PM |
r18 His daddy produced the film, of course he had control. He also claims they wouldn't have made the film without him as Evan, so if we're going to take him at his word, then that would also give him great power and control. Stop simping.
by Anonymous | reply 28 | January 11, 2023 10:21 PM |
I think he’s tremendous!
by Anonymous | reply 29 | January 11, 2023 10:26 PM |
[post redacted because linking to dailymail.co.uk clearly indicates that the poster is either a troll or an idiot (probably both, honestly.) Our advice is that you just ignore this poster but whatever you do, don't click on any link to this putrid rag.]
by Anonymous | reply 30 | January 11, 2023 10:28 PM |
R30, good thing the people criticizing a 27yo playing a teen never saw the film version of Grease.
by Anonymous | reply 31 | January 11, 2023 10:36 PM |
The cast of Grease did not have their faces electronically altered to look like a teen, but which made him look like an unnatural freak.
by Anonymous | reply 32 | January 12, 2023 12:32 AM |
The cast of Grease was uniformly hot. Even Stockard was sexy.
by Anonymous | reply 33 | January 12, 2023 12:46 AM |
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