Category: 5. Entertainment

  • A Photographic History of Queer Intimacy

    A Photographic History of Queer Intimacy

    LOS ANGELES — A circa 1848 daguerrotype featuring a nude lesbian couple engaging in foreplay meets Matías Sauter Morera’s AI-assisted fictional portrait of what he terms a “pegamacho,” a rural heterosexual Costa Rican man known to have discreet sexual encounters with gay men, in Queer Lens: A History of Photography at the Getty Museum. This ambitious and illuminating exhibition explores the history of queer experience and identity through photography, with over 270 works by LGBTQ+ as well as straight photographers, dating from the mid-19th century to the present day. Organized chronologically, the survey reveals how attitudes and customs have evolved alongside technical advancements in photography.

    Overall, the exhibition is a concise history lesson that ties queer photography to consequential moments, including the 19th-century birth of the term “homosexual,” the popularity of drag clubs in the 1920s–30s, the emergence of homophile groups during World War II, the 1950s Lavender Scare, Stonewall and the rise of the Gay Liberation Movement, the AIDS Crisis, ACT-UP and Queer Nation, the legalization of gay marriage, and the recent rise of decidedly queer art and increased attention to inclusivity. Some surprising tidbits brought to light include Eadweard Muybridge’s 1887 sequence of two women kissing and the extensive number of LGBTQ+ historical figures and celebrities included in the museum’s salon-style installation “Friends of Dorothy,” a common term for gay people that refers both to the Wizard of Oz movie and the gay friends of the writer Dorothy Parker.

    Left: Tee A. Corinne, “Yantra #22” (1982), black and white print, solarized, collaged; right:
    Tee A. Corinne, “Yantra #56” (1982), black and white print, collaged

    Thematically, several subjects — such as the nude, seen with reverence through a same-gender gaze — transcend time periods. F. Holland Day’s “Pilate” (1906) is an early example: The photo’s lighting emphasizes the subject’s male musculature; the biblical narrative, the wall text tells us, is a cover to photograph nudity. In the 1980s, Tee Corinne arranged her photos of female nudes to form kaleidoscopic vaginal patterns as metaphors for female sexual energy. Other photos focus on relationships marked by affection and tenderness, as in sensitive portrayals of same-sex couples embracing by JEB (Joan E. Biren) and Bill Jacobson. Another recurring interest is gender-bending, as seen in Frederick Spaulding’s circa 1870 photo of two London actors who regularly ventured around town in drag, and in Weegee’s iconic “The Gay Deceiver” (1939), in which a figure smiles proudly, showing off their garter, while getting arrested for cross-dressing.

    Some of the cleverest or most emotionally charged imagery in the exhibition can be found in performative self-portraiture. Tseng Kwong Chi humorously celebrated his “otherness” by posing in front of famous sites in a Mao Zedong costume, while Yasumasa Morimura portrays himself as whimsically androgynous in an image printed on a Japanese fan, an ode to his heritage. More somber in tone, yet no less politically powerful for it, is David Wojnarowicz’s “Untitled (Face in Dirt)” (c. 1990). Shortly before his death from complications of AIDS, Wojnarowicz photographed himself immersed in dirt with only a portion of his face exposed, simulating a death mask. While the artist was literally dying at the time, his self-portrait also remains a potent reminder that the government was then burying the AIDS crisis itself in the sand. Ultimately, Queer Lens reveals how the concept behind “gay pride,” a term popularized in the early ’70s, was expressed through photographers’ ingenuity long before that time, and continues to be a driving force underlying queer visibility, dignity, and self-expression.

    David Wojnarowicz, ”Untitled (Face in Dirt)” (c. 1990), gelatin silver print
    Eadweard J. Muybridge, “Two Women Kissing” (1887), collotype
    Installation view of the museum’s “Friends of Dorothy” installation
    Weegee (Arthur Fellig), “The Gay Deceiver” (c. 1939/ c. 1950), gelatin silver print

    Queer Lens: A History of Photography continues at the Getty Museum (1200 Getty Center Drive, Los Angeles, California) through September 28. The exhibition was curated by Paul Martineau.

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  • CoComelon Is Going Live-Action

    CoComelon Is Going Live-Action

    Great news, kids (and potentially fairly annoying news, parents?) — much more CoComelon is on the way, now including a live-action series.

    The smash-hit preschool brand will premiere The Melon Patch Sept. 23 on YouTube, Moonbug announced on Tuesday. Brace your youngest ones now, because Ms. Appleberry is coming to life. This has the potential to go either way with the target-audience’s (very) developing brains. CoComelon is a giant, averaging more than four billion monthly views on YouTube. It’s also been a regular presence on Netflix’s top 10.

    Appleberry, who will be played by Allie Rivera Quiñonez, has a (“vibrant interactive”) classroom to run — the learning, growing, and playing doesn’t just happen all on its own, you know. Ms. Appleberry will have the help of Mr. Doodad the imaginative art teacher, Mr. Acorn the nature and exploration expert, Ms. Twist the dance and movement coach, puppets Jelly Bean and Neighomi, and some unnamed (for now) guest stars.

    Save Appleberry, those are all new characters; she’s been with CoComelon since before your preschooler was born. The original CoComelon, by the way, is moving from Netflix to Disney+ in 2027. So if you’re currently pregnant, maybe prepare for that. An animated CoComelon film from Universal Pictures is in the works for release the same year.

    The Melon Patch will consist of 25-minute episodes blending music, story, movement and art in a way to “keep little learners engaged while exploring milestones like bath time, textures, big feelings and the joy of music,” the announcement reads.

    “With The Melon Patch, we’ve created a joyful space where kids can learn through music, play, and the warmth of a teacher they know and love, Ms. Appleberry,” said Nicole Rivera, senior creative executive at CoComelon. “She helps make every lesson feel like an adventure, blending songs, stories, and real-life learning in a way that’s as fun as it is meaningful.”

    The new series’ curriculum was developed by early childhood education expert, Dr. Natascha Crandall. Parenting consultant Clarice F. Dionisio, M.A., CLE, IBCLC, advised on the show’s structure to ensure it meets the needs of kids and their caregivers. In other words, Moonbug is saying this is not empty calories — or totally wasted screen time — for the kiddos.

    The Melon Patch offers children the foundations for lifelong learning and well-being,” Dr. Crandall said. “By using the fundamentals of child development, this show meets children where they are and  helps them rise to reach their next milestones with greater ease.”

    CoComelon will also launch the soundtrack, CoComelon Nursery Rhymes (Songs From ‘The Melon Patch’), on Sept. 19.

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  • Why Taylor Swift Enlisted Boyfriend Travis Kelce for New Album Promo

    Why Taylor Swift Enlisted Boyfriend Travis Kelce for New Album Promo

    Taylor Swift is not typically one to center her boyfriends.

    I know that contradicts the party line that Swift’s critics began to hawk when she was a teenager — that she’s either a besotted, boy-crazy mess or a serial man-eater, depending on whom you ask.

    Yes, Swift writes songs about falling in love, breaking up, and every stage of romance in between. (She also writes songs about many other topics, including friendship, fame, sexism, and more, but that’s a lecture for another day.) But as a public figure and music industry tycoon, Swift has largely avoided mixing business and pleasure — until now.

    At 12:12 a.m. on Tuesday morning, Swift announced the title of her 12th album, “The Life of a Showgirl.” But instead of doing it on her social media accounts, a livestream, or during her Grammys acceptance speech, she gave the exclusive to her boyfriend Travis Kelce’s football podcast.

    Swift sits next to Kelce in a teaser clip from his “New Heights” podcast, which the NFL star co-hosts with his brother Jason. “I wanted to show you something,” Swift tells Jason, reaching for a mint green briefcase labeled “T.S.” She opens it while announcing the record’s title, though the album’s cover is blurred out.

    For a different celebrity, announcing your latest project on a partner’s podcast might not be a big deal. But Swift’s star power is such that she doesn’t need anyone else to promote her music. For years, she has pulled back from traditional media opportunities like magazine covers and late-night TV appearances, instead relying on the self-contained machine of her website and verified social media accounts to communicate news to her fans.

    Glimpses of her private life were similarly limited. Swift spent the previous six or so years evading public scenes with her then-boyfriend, Joe Alwyn, dodging questions about their relationship and executing minimal album rollouts — no lead singles, very rare interviews, and certainly no sports podcasts.

    Swift’s relationship with Kelce, whom she began dating in 2023, has marked a new era for the pop star’s public persona. It’s not that Swift hasn’t dabbled in the customary celebrity-in-love playbook before; she’s executed plenty of paparazzi walks and award-show date nights. It’s not even the first time she’s involved a boyfriend in her creative pursuits: She wrote the lyrics for then-boyfriend Calvin Harris’ 2016 hit “This Is What You Came For,” while she and Alwyn cowrote multiple songs for her surprise 2020 album “Folklore” while they were dating. It’s that those collaborations were always under pseudonyms and revealed after the fact, as Swift worked hard to center herself in her own work, rather than muddying her career moves by putting even more attention on her love life.

    With Kelce, Swift is proudly involving him every step of the way. Swift has cheered for Kelce at seemingly every football game she can manage, even as she was busy touring the world. Kelce returned the favor by attending several Eras Tour shows, where Swift would sometimes change her own lyrics to honor his presence. (Who among us could forget the first time she sang, “Karma is the guy on the Chiefs, coming straight home to me,” in Buenos Aires?) The couple even shocked fans with the ultimate hard launch, when Swift welcomed Kelce onstage for a surprise cameo, signaling a decisive shift in her drive for publicity around her relationship.

    Both Swift and Kelce have publicly put emphasis on their bond as equal partners and supporters, something Kelce reiterated in an expertly timed GQ cover interview published mere hours after Swift’s album announcement.

    “I get to go and be that fan,” Kelce told GQ of attending Swift’s concerts. “Because I am a fan. I’m a fan of music. I’m a fan of art. And it’s so cool that I get to experience her being that plus one for me on the football field…. I feel that same enjoyment every time she comes to my shows.”

    Their synergy quickly began to work in Kelce’s favor. Swift’s high-profile fandom sparked an unprecedented surge in NFL viewership, especially among younger girls, and a marked increase in Kelce’s jersey sales.


    Fans support Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift at a Kansas City Chiefs game.

    Fans support Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift at a Kansas City Chiefs game.

    Eric Thomas/Getty Images



    Swift launching her next era with Kelce by her side suggests that Swift considers Kelce’s podcast a piece of her own media empire. He is not only playing the role of her boyfriend in her personal life, but also is an active participant in both her professional organization and public image.

    Time will tell if their synergy will work for Swift as well as it has worked for Kelce. She arguably has much less to gain from his audience than vice versa; her business was thriving just fine without him. The Eras Tour, which caused a ticket stampede long before Kelce entered the picture, sold so well that it helped make Swift a billionaire. Her most recent album, “The Tortured Poets Department,” which was self-evidently not written about Kelce, sold over 2.6 million copies in its first week of release and topped the Billboard 200 chart for 17 weeks, the best commercial performance of her career thus far.

    Will an album about a happy relationship sell better than one about a self-described “manic phase” that resulted in heartbreak? My instinct says no — Swift’s best-loved songs are her breakup anthems. But I never thought I’d be tuning in to a football podcast to hear Swift talk about her music, so perhaps anything is possible.


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  • July’s Comment Of The Month Highlights Surfing’s Most Core Philanthropist

    July’s Comment Of The Month Highlights Surfing’s Most Core Philanthropist

    “Right now, there are so many surfers who are getting paid because they’re really good in front of the camera, more than for their ability in the water — and I think that’s kinda bullshit,” said Logan ‘Chucky’ Dulien, in our most recent How Surfers Get Paid episode. “I feel that the guy that surfs the best deserves the money, more than the guy who’s good at putting the phone in front of himself and taking selfies.”

    The above quote is an excerpt from Logan’s explanation of how he secured Clay Marzo a deal with RVCA, after paying for the Hawaiian’s travel and filming costs for years. Not to mention, he’s covered Mateus Herdy’s 2025 Challenger Series campaign, up until last week, when Mateus got sponsored by Rivvia, starred in the Snapt 5 world premiere, and came second in the USO, in that order.

    Of course, Mateus and Clay aren’t the only benefactors of Logan’s baffling kindness — with the Snapt films and a few other surfers travel budgets hanging on the financial coattails of River Jetties’ most barreled philanthropist.

    Logan’s benevolence is a fact that BVPS acknowledges in the comment section of the recent How Surfers Get Paid episode — and one that wins ‘em July’s comment of the month. 

    2x COTM winner Mr. Cheddar also adds some very important context, which you can read about here. 

    BVPS, please send us an email at [email protected] with screenshot proof of your Disqus account. You just won a free year of Stab Premium and you will be entered in the running for the mega-prize for “Comment of the Year” at then end of, you guessed it, the year.

    If you remember from this article, BVPS will now be one of 12 commenters (one for each month) that will be a candidate for COTY. He’ll be sparring against 11 other keyboard vermin for top honors.

    And yes, we know it’s the middle of August. Better late than never.


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  • ‘Weapons’ Has Record August Monday For Horror Movie

    ‘Weapons’ Has Record August Monday For Horror Movie

    There’s always that movie in August that becomes the definitive title to see for the rest of summer, i.e. Guardians of the Galaxy, Free Guy, etc. and this year, it’s New Line‘s Weapons.

    Yesterday, the Zach Cregger movie, did $5.2M which is the most a horror film has ever done on a Monday in August, besting Sixth Sense‘s $4.35M and New Line’s Annabelle: Creation‘s $3.6M. Weapons is also arguably the best opening for a horror movie in August with $43.5M (Sorry, The Meg is a shark movie, whole different type of genre).

    While $5.2M might seem small from a weekday point of a view especially during the summer, it’s very notable for a horror movie. Weapons’ Monday, though under Sinners’ $7.8M first Monday, is higher than the first Mondays of R-rated Final Destination: Bloodlines ($5M), Get Out ($4.1M), 28 Years Later ($2.8M) and even the PG-13 rated Five Nights at Freddy’s ($4M).

    Today is looking to be around $7M for the Julia Garner, Josh Brolin, Benedict Wong and Alden Ehrenreich feature, which is higher than the Tuesdays of Get Out ($4.9M) and Final Destination: Bloodlines ($6.1M). This weekend, the most conservative estimate is a -50%. ease so around $21M for the Cregger title. Whether there’s a greater horror phenomenon going on with Weapons ala the second weekend holds of Sinners (-5%) or Get Out (-15%), we’ll know once we’re in the throes of Friday-Sunday.

    Also, props here to Warner Bros global distribution boss Jeff Goldstein for moving the New Line made Weapons to the second weekend of August from its original date of MLK 2026. I also understand Cregger championed for a summer date. Rather than having a box office hit later, the overall late summer marketplace is significantly richer with Weapons sharing the marquee with Freakier Friday. Previously, Warner Bros had Legendary’s Ryan Reynolds produced and voiced animation live-action hybrid Animal Friends on Aug. 15 (the studio obtaining the title from Sony); that comedy now opening on May 1, 2026.

    Universal’s Nobody 2 starring Bob Odenkirk is the only major studio wide entry this coming weekend, eyeing a start north of $10M+ at 3,200 theaters. The first 87North action movie bowed to $6.8M back in March 2021 just as theaters were reopening coast to coast, finaling at $27.5M stateside. Nobody 2 is prime with older guys with solid total awareness and definite interest climbing.

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  • Anna Sorokin says she received hundreds of death threats over bunnies abandoned in Brooklyn park

    Anna Sorokin says she received hundreds of death threats over bunnies abandoned in Brooklyn park

    Anna “Delvey” Sorokin says she’s received hundreds of death threats in the days since she was accused of dumping pet rabbits she posed with for a photoshoot in a Brooklyn park.

    The fake German heiress who stole tens of thousands of dollars from banks posed alongside three bunnies on the streets of Manhattan’s posh Tribeca neighborhood last week. The bunnies were recognized and discovered in Brooklyn’s Prospect Park days later, prompting fierce online backlash.

    But the headline-making New York City socialite — who vehemently denied responsibility for the discarded bunnies — said in an interview with NBC News that she’s particularly shocked by the strong reaction over the incident.

    “It just seems to me like everything I do is just wrong,” Sorokin, 34, said in a phone call with NBC News. “I can never do right by these people.”

    Sorokin shared screenshots of dozens of hateful messages she’s received within the last few days to her Instagram — which she called “unusable” — with NBC News. Some of them suggest that she she should be killed or take her own life, including one that advises Sorokin to get someone to “make a carpet out of your skin.”

    “It seems like a lot of these people, just because they’re engaged in animal rescue, they feel like they’re entitled to insult you or talk to you or say anything because they’re hiding behind this thing that they’re doing,” she said.

    The 34-year-old, whose life was depicted in Netflix’s hit 2022 series “Inventing Anna,” took the photoshoot with the bunnies on August 3 to create content for her Instagram account, which has more than 1.1 million followers.

    Shortly before the shoot, she posted on Instagram story asking if any of her followers in the New York City metropolitan area had a pet rabbit she could borrow for the shoot, Sorokin said.

    Christian Batty, a 19-year-old hair stylist Sorokin met briefly last year, reached out to her and offered what he described as a friend’s rabbits, she said.

    Sorokin added that she paid Batty to provide the rabbits and for his Uber to return the rabbits to their owner in Yonkers — or so she thought. A screenshot of the Uber receipt Sorokin shared with NBC News show the ride’s drop off location was just south of Prospect Park, where the rabbits were later spotted.

    Days later, she said she started receiving messages on social media about the rabbits being spotted in Prospect Park. A Facebook user posted images of the domesticated bunnies in the park to a public Facebook group dedicated to rabbits, House Rabbit Society, and other users connected them to Sorokin’s photos.

    Sorokin initially thought the posts were fake, but the flood of messages did not stop.

    At first, Batty denied dumping the rabbits in the park, according to screenshots of text messages between Sorokin, Batty and photographer Jasper Soloff that Sorokin posted on her Instagram story and shared with NBC News.

    “Jasper had no knowledge or input as to how the bunnies were obtained or what happened to them after the photo shoot,” Soloff’s attorney, Gary Adelman, said in a statement.

    Batty did not immediately return a request for comment.

    Hours later, Batty confessed that he did dump the rabbits and absolved Sorokin of any involvement, according to a statement he posted to his Instagram account, which has since been taken down.

    “When I realized the rabbits were being surrendered to me, I panicked,” Batty said in the statement, screenshots of which were provided by Sorokin. “At 19, with no experience caring for animals, no pet-friendly housing, and no knowledge of available resources, I felt overwhelmed and made the worst possible choice.”

    “Believing, mistakenly, that there were existing rabbits in that area, I released them there, thinking that was my best option,” he added.

    Sorokin pushed back on the notion that Batty’s age was an issue.

    “He’s old enough to move to New York and live on his own, he should have enough common sense to handle rabbits,” Sorokin said. “We’re not like asking him to do anything that requires high IQ from him. I just don’t know what to say.”

    Sorokin said that she was concerned about how the incident might affect her pending immigration case.

    Sorokin was convicted by a Manhattan jury in April 2019 on four counts of theft services, three counts of grand larceny and one count of attempted grand larceny after being accused of defrauding banks and friends of tens of thousands of dollars.

    Prosecutors said that Sorokin convinced friends and businesses to loan her money to afford a lavish lifestyle under the guise that she was the daughter of a oil baron or diplomat, worth tens of millions of dollars.

    In 2021, Sorokin was released on parole while she fights deportation. She has been forced to wear an electronic ankle monitor and cannot leave a 75-mile house arrest radius based in New York.

    “This time, I’ve done nothing wrong,” she said. “And I had the best intentions and it’s really frustrating.”

    The New York Times reported that the rabbits were rescued by blogger Terry Chao, who spotted the rabbits in the park. Chao could not immediately be reached for comment.

    Sorokin said she donated $1,000 to the group All About Rabbits Rescue in the aftermath of the scandal. She also denied harming the rabbits by putting them in leashes, as some have suggested online.

    “I don’t know, I’m not a bunny professional. I didn’t know the leashes were such a big deal,” she said. “We would put them down for, I don’t know, a minute or two, take a picture and pick them up. We were not walking them by any means. And they seemed to be happy.”

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  • Chris Brown Surprises Teen Fan & Her Mom With New Car & $10,000 Cash

    Chris Brown Surprises Teen Fan & Her Mom With New Car & $10,000 Cash

    A 13-year-old fan and her mother received the ultimate surprise when attending a recent Chris Brown concert, as Breezy and TikTok influencer MDMotivator hooked up the pair with a special VIP package that included $10,000 and a new car. And it was all caught on video, which the star shared on social media Sunday (Aug. 10).

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    It all starts with MDMotivator looking for the biggest Chris Brown fan and caught 13-year-old Gabby’s attention, who recognized CB’s 11-year-old daughter, Royalty, nearby.

    Gabby then convinced her mother to purchase the “mystery tickets” from MDMotivator for $5, for which they received a Breezy Bowl filled with $10,000 in cash and the opportunity to meet Brown himself that night.

    “This is the best night of my life!” Gabby cries in the video. “Chris, you influenced my whole dance career. I grew up dancing to you. You’re such an inspiration to me. I love you so much!”

    Brown is shown in the clip giving MDMotivator his flowers for “changing people’s lives,” and also shared that his daughter Royalty cried after watching one of the influencer’s videos in which he’s helping others.

    The video then shows Gabby and her mom being blindfolded and escorted to a parking lot, where they were in shock after seeing a brand new Ford with a red bow on it that they would be taking home.

    Once Brown found out Gabby was a dancer, he gave her some advice for the road ahead. “You said you dance? Don’t stop, go harder and harder,” he relayed. “Always be yourself. I love you guys.”

    CB got a ton of love in his comment section from the likes of Tony Yayo, Kelly Rowland and actor Omari Hardwick. Brown’s Breezy Bowl XX stadium tour continues this week with shows in New Jersey and Philadelphia.

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  • Jenna Ortega Takes Over Seoul for ‘Wednesday’ Press Amid Ratings Reveal for Netflix Launch: Photo 5190009 | Tim Burton Photos | Just Jared: Celebrity News and Gossip

    Jenna Ortega Takes Over Seoul for ‘Wednesday’ Press Amid Ratings Reveal for Netflix Launch: Photo 5190009 | Tim Burton Photos | Just Jared: Celebrity News and Gossip

    About Photo #5190009: Wednesday’s second season debuted with Part 1 on Netflix last week and viewing numbers are in! Netflix has reported that there were 50 million views for the…Read More Here

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    Jenna Ortega,
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    Wednesday


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  • Jenna Ortega Takes Over Seoul for ‘Wednesday’ Press Amid Ratings Reveal for Netflix Launch: Photo 5190011 | Tim Burton Photos | Just Jared: Celebrity News and Gossip

    Jenna Ortega Takes Over Seoul for ‘Wednesday’ Press Amid Ratings Reveal for Netflix Launch: Photo 5190011 | Tim Burton Photos | Just Jared: Celebrity News and Gossip

    About Photo #5190011: Wednesday’s second season debuted with Part 1 on Netflix last week and viewing numbers are in! Netflix has reported that there were 50 million views for the…Read More Here

    Posted to
    Emma Myers,
    Jenna Ortega,
    Tim Burton,
    Wednesday


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  • Katie Holmes booked as lead in Old Globe’s 2026 ‘Hedda Gabler’ production

    Katie Holmes booked as lead in Old Globe’s 2026 ‘Hedda Gabler’ production

    Actress Katie Holmes will help the Old Globe Theatre kick off its 2026 season as the lead in a new production of Henrik Ibsen’s “Hedda Gabler,” it was announced Tuesday.

    The Globe-commissioned version of the play is by Erin Cressida Wilson. “Hedda Gabler” will play on the Donald and Darlene Shiley Stage, part of the Globe’s Conrad Prebys Theatre Center in Balboa Park.

    Performances run Feb. 7 through March 8, 2026.

    The Old Globe’s Artistic Director Barry Edelstein, who directed Holmes in the off-Broadway production of “The Wanderers” in 2023, is set to direct this “fresh and emotionally charged take on the Ibsen classic,” according to a statement from the Globe.

    “`Hedda Gabler’ is one of the landmark works of world drama and I’m truly thrilled to bring a bracing new take on it to the Globe,” Edelstein said. “Like all of Ibsen’s plays, this one is obsessed by how the choices we make in our pasts come back around to shape our present. That’s why it’s so fun that it reunites me with two artists I’ve had significant collaborations with over the years.”

    The first is playwright and screenwriter Wilson. The other is Holmes (whose credits include “Dawson’s Creek,” “Batman Begins” and “Logan Lucky”).

    “Hedda, like Hamlet, rises or falls with the actor in the title role. [Holmes is] everything: victim, tyrant, femme fatale; funny, scathing, tragic,” Edelstein said. “Only an actor with immense imagination and charisma can take on Hedda Gabler, and in Katie’s radiant and powerful performance, Globe audiences are going to witness something rare and special.

    “She’s an artist at the height of her powers and we’re lucky to have her in San Diego. This is going to be a memorable moment at The Old Globe, and I can’t wait to share it.”

    The Tony Award-winning Old Globe is a professional nonprofit regional theater, now in its 90th year. It produces a year-round season of 16 productions of classic, contemporary, and new works on its three Balboa Park stages.

    The Old Globe will announce its full 2026 season at a later date.

    Tickets are currently available by subscription only at TheOldGlobe.org, by phone at 619-234-5623, and in person at the Globe’s box office in Balboa Park.

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