ΤΟ ΙΣΤΟΛΟΓΙΟ ΜΑΣ ΞΕΠΕΡΑΣΕ ΜΕΧΡΙ ΣΗΜΕΡΑ ΤΙΣ 2.300.000 ΕΠΙΣΚΕΨΕΙΣ.
Tuesday, October 15, 2019
ESSENTIAL INDUSTRY AND AWARD NEWS
OCTOBER 15, 2019
How Cynthia Erivo Found Her Voice
“I’m the singing friend,” Cynthia Erivo told Vanity Fair’s Yohana Desta, as she prepared to call a friend for her birthday. If you’ve ever heard Erivo sing even a note, you get it—the Color Purple star has what Desta describes as “a soft, clear soprano that can stretch until it’s a hundred feet tall.” And Erivo uses that superpowered voice from time to time in Harriet, which is not a musical but a thoughtful biopic about the Underground Railroad heroine Harriet Tubman, whose voice is one of many tools she uses to help hundreds of slaves escape to freedom. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the experience of making Harriethas made the London-born Erivo an ardent Harriet Tubman fan, with no patience for the Trump administration’s decision to delay her arrival on the $20 bill: “It annoys the hell out of me,” Erivo said.
Elsewhere in HWD, Richard Lawson reviews the Angelina Jolie sequel Maleficent: Mistress of Evil; Julie Miller talks to a neurocriminologist who considers Joker a “great educational tool”; and Jenn Wood talks to the writers and stars of It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphiaabout making a topical comedy for nearly a decade and a half, even when the real world has gotten nearly as insane as what happens in Paddy’s Pub.
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