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This Targaryen Family Tree Shows Us What The Powerful House Might've Looked Like

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Confused about the Targaryen lineage? So are we. 


Thankfully, French illustrator and video game developer Maryon B. is using her creative talents to help make things a bit clearer. She drew the complete Targaryen family tree and shared it on Deviant Art for fans' use, along with the disclaimer "I DON'T EVEN LIKE HOUSE TARGARYEN WHY DID I DO THIS." 


"I actually started the tree out of spite because all their descriptions (and fan representations) make them look the same — beautiful, silver-haired and purple eyes, and it frustrated me to see them as elf-clones," she told Vox in an email. 


Maryon B. sketched 100 Targaryens for her tree, with generations tracing back to momentous times from Old Valyria through the War of the Usurper. The Targaryens and their mighty dragons ruled the Seven Kingdoms for three centuries. 






While Maryon B. was not much of a fan to begin with, that changed as she worked on her illustrations.


"[I]n the end it made me appreciate House Targaryen much more since now I share a personal story with each and every one of them, and I would suggest anyone who likes 'Game of Thrones' to be curious about them because they have a lot of stories to tell," she told Vox. 






For those watching Season 6 or reading spoilers on Reddit, one of the biggest fan theories links this family to another fan-favorite -- a team that may just be the salvation of the realm. 


But we digress ... 

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The Best Restaurant In The World Is Not What You're Thinking

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People who pay attention to food news may think of Noma as the best restaurant in the world. (These people are not the majority of our population who think Cheesecake Factory is the end-all, be-all of dining). 


But listen up, people. There's a new best restaurant in the world, and it isn't the first one that comes to mind. The magic lies behind this demure little doorway in Modena, Italy:



A photo posted by Andrea Beneventi (@bbengodi) on



The best restaurant in the world is officially Osteria Francescana, a small, contemporary Italian spot in the country's northern region. It took top honors in the 2016 World's 50 Best Restaurants, an annual list based on picks from an "academy" of 1,000 professional dining experts, USA Today reports. 


Osteria Francescana is known for its playful take on classic Italian dishes, which are said to be influenced by art and music:



A photo posted by Wat eet Luc? (@wateetluc) on






Mmm, there's nothing like a well-plated lettuce leaf. 


If you're curious, here are the rest of the top 10 best restaurants in the world. For all 50 names, head over to the official World's 50 Best list. Happy dining!




  1. Osteria Francescana in Modena, Italy




  2. El Celler de Can Roca in Girona, Spain




  3. Eleven Madison Park in New York City, U.S.




  4. Central in Lima, Peru




  5. Noma in Copenhagen, Denmark




  6. Mirazur in Menton, France




  7. Mugaritz in Errenteria, Spain




  8. Narisawa in Tokyo, Japan




  9. Steirereck in Vienna, Austria




  10. Asador Etxebarri in Axpe, Spain



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How One Photograph Prompted Colin Powell To Support Obama

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Former Republican Secretary of State Colin Powell was encouraged to support Barack Obama in the 2008 presidential election after witnessing Islamophobia within his own party -- and after seeing one particular photograph.


Captured by Platon, who's photographed many of the world's top leaders, the portrait shows a woman at Arlington National Cemetery hugging the tombstone of her Muslim-American son who died fighting in the Iraq War in 2007. The image was featured in The New Yorker as part of a series on members of the U.S. military called "Service."


Platon recalls Powell explaining how that photo series inspired him to announce -- just 16 days before the 2008 election -- that he would be endorsing Obama because of anti-Muslim sentiments in the Republican Party. Hear the story behind the photograph and why its message is still relevant as we approach the 2016 election in the video above.


This video was produced by Will Tooke and edited by Alfred Marroquin.

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Orlando Massacre Survivor: 'The Guilt Of Being Alive Is Heavy'

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Patience Carter is one of the victims who survived the massacre at Pulse Nightclub in Orlando, Florida, on Sunday, which took the lives of 49, mostly people of color, and injured 53 more.


During a press conference yesterday in which victims talked about their horrific experience at the LBGTQ nightclub, Carter recited a poem, which she wrote from her hospital bed to cope the night before at Florida Hospital. Though she said she is grateful to be a survivor, Carter said this comes with a great weight.


"The guilt of feeling grateful to be alive is heavy," the 20-year-old said, hands trembling. "Wanting to smile about surviving, but not sure if the people around you are ready as the world mourns the victims killed and viciously slain. I feel guilty about screaming about my legs in pain because I could feel nothing like the other 49 who weren't so lucky to feel this pain of mine."


Carter, who was in Orlando on vacation from Philadelphia, said she fled to the bathroom when the shooter, Omar Mateen, began his onslaught. While Mateen was in the bathroom, Carter said she heard him pledge his allegiance to ISIS during a phone conversation with police negotiators.


She also said she heard him ask, "Are there any black people in here?"


After another black person replied yes, Mateen said, "I don't have a problem with black people," according to Carter. "This is about my country. You guys suffered enough."


Carter recalled the bloody scene in the bathroom. She said as she was lying on the floor looking at the "piles" of bodies, she "made peace with God and within myself."



Before police breached a bathroom wall to enter the club, Mateen killed three more victims. One of those victims was shielding Carter from the gunfire. 


"If it wasn't for that person shielding me it would've been me shot and I wouldn't be sitting here today," she said, adding that the shooter wouldn't stop until he was killed by police.


Carter, who had been shot in both legs, went to the club that night with two friends, Tiara Parker and Akyra Murray. Parker was injured but survived. Murray did not. 


She said her poem was inspired by feeling at fault for Murray's death:



"The guilt of feeling lucky to be alive is heavy. It's like the weight of the ocean's walls crushing uncontrolled by levies. It's like being drug through the grass with a shattered leg and thrown on the back of a Chevy. It's like being rushed to the hospital and being told you're gonna make it when you're laid beside individuals whose lives were brutally taken. The guilt of being alive is heavy."



Her poem not only highlights how much she -- and likely others -- is struggling with being one of the survivors, but also that the people affected by the homophobic massacre, including the LGBTQ community, will be mourning for a long time.


Watch Carter recite her full poem in the video above.



Donate to Pulse Orlando Relief Fund here: 



 


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'She Loves Me' To Be The First Live Streamed Broadway Show

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If you love the theatrics of "She Loves Me"  -- you know, the ones you saw during the 70th Annual Tony Awards (including that killer split by Jane Krakowski) -- but can't make it to Broadway for the real thing, you're in luck. 


According to Variety, The Roundabout Theater Company's revival of the 1963 show will be the first Broadway production to live stream a performance via BroadwayHD on June 30.


Of course, watching a live stream on your home television lacks some of the excitement of being in the room where it happens, but the price -- $9.99 -- is a lot easier to swallow than most Broadway tickets.  


As Variety points out, an offer like this makes sense for "She Loves Me," a limited-engagement show that ends July 10. Having a live stream, and then a recorded version, allows BroadwayHD to entice fans with big names like Krakowski long after the actual show's final curtain drops.


Of course, the news of one Broadway show's live stream makes one naturally speculate whether other big-name productions might go the same route. Perhaps, even, one little-known musical about a 10-dollar founding father without a father?


While everyone went nuts for the selection of "Hamilton" tunes performed live at the White House in March, it's unlikely that a crazy-popular show -- with, we imagine, a long life ahead of it on Broadway -- will be available for public streaming anytime soon.


If you make like Aaron Burr and wait for it, you'll probably be waiting a little longer. 


Catch "She Loves Me" live on Broadway HD on June 30 at 8 p.m. ET. 

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LGBTQ Latinxs And Allies Share Heartfelt Messages In Honor Of Orlando Shooting Victims

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Edward Sotomayor Jr., Oscar A. Aracena-Montero, Simon Adrian Carrillo Fernandez, Juan Ramon Guerrero, Eric Ivan Ortiz-Rivera, Peter O. Gonzalez-Cruz...


These names, along with many others that belong to the 49 victims killed in Orlando at Pulse on Sunday, all seem to have at least one thing in common: Latino heritage. After all, it was "Latin night" at the nightclub the evening of the massacre.


And some in the Latino community, including "My So-Called Life" alum Wilson Cruz, have asked that the media not forget that this tragedy was, in many ways, "a direct attack on LGBT Latinos" and it should be reported as such. 


“Naming those names and where they’re from and the struggle that they were living daily as LGBT Latinos is part of the story and not naming it, to me, feels like erasing a large part of who they are and their experience," Cruz, who lost a family member in the shooting, told The Huffington Post. "Let’s not whitewash their experience, it’s multi-faceted.”


With that in mind, we visited the memorial at Stonewall in New York City's West Village and asked LGBTQ Latinxs and their allies to write a message in honor of the lives lost in Orlando. Here's what they had to say: 



In his interview with HuffPost, Cruz also had a message of his own for any young LGBTQ Latinxs who are afraid to be who they are because of the tragedy:



I don’t know that there is anything that I could say that is going to take the pain away but I can tell you this: I hope they find some refuge and some comfort in knowing that they are members of a long line of LGBT Latino people that have fought their entire lives, generation after generation, for our right to live the lives that we live now... And while the pain that they feel right now and the fear that they feel right now is very real, their responsibility is to feel it, to understand it, to never forget it but to use it so that the young people who come after them won’t have to deal with fear in the same way. Because that’s what people did for them, and that’s what people did for me.



Donate to Orlando here: 



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25 Wedding Images That Are More Than Just A Bunch Of Pretty Pictures

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These wedding photos really make an impression.


On Monday, Fearless Photographers -- a site dedicated to celebrating the world's best wedding photography -- released their latest collection. The curators received thousands of submissions but only 152 images made the cut. 


Below are 25 of our favorite shots, along with commentary from the Fearless editors. 



To see the collection in full, visit the Fearless Photographers site. 

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Wands Raised To Honor Orlando Shooting Victim, 'One Of The Best Gryffindors The World Has Ever Known'

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“We are standing here tonight in front of Hogwarts Castle raising our wands to honor one of our fallen. Tonight we raise our wands to one of the bravest and best Gryffindors the world has ever known. Tonight we raise our wands to Luis Vielma.”


Those were the moving words uttered by one of Vielma’s friends to the crowd gathered at Orlando’s "Wizarding World of Harry Potter” on Monday night. The group came together to pay tribute to Vielma, who was among the 49 people killed in the Orlando nightclub attack, the worst mass shooting in U.S. history.






Vielma, 22, was an attraction operator at Universal Orlando who ran the Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey ride, among other responsibilities.


“Tonight we remember a team member, a brother, a son, a friend,” Vielma’s friend said to the crowd at the vigil. “Tonight we remember someone that created a type of magic that we can never replace.”


Vielma, she added, was “one of the kindest souls you will ever meet in your life.”


On Sunday, "Harry Potter" author J.K. Rowling said she was saddened after hearing the news of Vielma’s death.






Monday's tribute to Vielma was a nod to one of the most poignant moments in the “Harry Potter” series, when students and professors raised their wands to honor Professor Albus Dumbledore after the wizard's death. 


Dumbledore shared many poignant words about death and loss. However, in “The Prisoner of Azkaban,” he reminded Harry that the dead we loved never truly leave us.





Read more on the Orlando Shooting:


Celebrities And Politicians React To Mass Shooting At Queer Orlando Nightclub


Blood Donors Needed After Orlando Gay Club Shooting, But Queer Men Are Banned


Congress Is ‘Complicit’ In Orlando Slaughter, Senator Says


Barack Obama On Orlando Shooting: ‘We Will Not Give In To Fear’


Pulse Nightclub Was A Lifeline For Orlando’s LGBTQ Community


James Corden Opens Tony Awards With Powerful Message To Orlando Shooter


Orlando Vigils Around The World Fight Hate With Love, Unity


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Shakespeare’s Trickiest Play Gets A Modern Revamp In Anne Tyler’s ‘Vinegar Girl’

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Shakespeare’s “The Taming of the Shrew” -- perhaps his most contentious story -- starts with a bang, and ends with a whimper. 


Katherina, a headstrong, quick-witted woman, puts off suitors in search of a docile young wife, until, that is, she meets her supposed match: an opportunistic man as uninterested in societal strictures as she is. That Kate should consider marriage at all is at odds with her personality, but her father has set up a rule: her sought-after younger sister, Bianca, can’t be married until Kate is. Bianca’s inspired suitors enlist Petruchio for the job, and he successfully convinces Kate to marry him, namely by telling her that her every unkind utterance is music to his ears.  


Already, these mind games are achingly resemblant of pick-up artistry. From there, the play’s controversial morality escalates, culminating in a monologue given by Kate, in which she offers to place her hand beneath her husband’s foot as a symbol of her service. “Our lances are but straws,” she says of women’s strength, an idea that’s been interpreted both sincerely and forgivingly, as a lamentation of society’s impossibly bright lines.


But what to make of the play now that those lines have dimmed, allowing for a fluidity between genders and gender roles? In modern adaptations, Kate’s tricky final monologue has been either interpreted as earnest -- Kate has fallen in love with Petruchio, a specific feeling that softens the general blow of societal norms -- dashed off as ironic, or circumvented altogether, as in the Julia Stiles-led “10 Things I Hate About You.” 


In Anne Tyler’s modern rewrite of the story, Vinegar Girl, the final scene is recast in a new light and given all the trappings of contemporary relationships -- misconstrued texts, lukewarm feelings about nuptial celebrations. Still, Tyler manages to end the story on a pontifical note, one that’s troublingly reminiscent of the original play’s sexist sincerity. And, unfortunately, the regressive ideas at work in Vinegar Girl are made clear long before its final pages. 


When we’re introduced to 29-year-old Kate Battista, she’s gardening behind her father’s house before she’s interrupted by a phone call. She lets the call go to voicemail, and we hear her 15-year-old sister’s voice intoning ditsy pleasantries, each ended in an unsure question mark. Kate learns that her dad, who runs a research lab for autoimmune diseases, has forgotten his lunch, and could she kindly bring it in? It’s clear from Page 1 that Kate is the reluctantly responsible family member, preparing dinner and performing other domestic duties for her hapless unit. To this end, she’s taken a job at a daycare after dropping out of school, where she studied botany and where she had hoped to eventually return. 


When she brings her father his lunch, Kate senses something’s amiss; usually too focused on his work to pay mind to his daughters’ emotional needs, Doctor Battista encourages her to stay and eat with him and his research assistant, Pyotr Cherbakov, who’s in America on a soon-to-expire extraordinary-ability visa. Over the course of a few more strange encounters, Kate learns of her father’s plan: he wants her to marry so that he can stay in the country and continue to work in his lab. The arrangement would only be temporary, but they’d have to gather enough photographic evidence to make the romance seem legitimate.


Kate, naturally, is appalled; until, abruptly, she isn’t. Won over in part by Pyotr’s brusque mannerisms, which to her seem more sincere than the chattiness of her coworkers, and in part by her father’s uncharacteristic pleas, Kate agrees to the deal. Besides, she thinks, her career and home lives have gotten stale. A shake-up may be just what she needs.


While Kate takes the plan curiously in stride -- aside from a few chiding remarks correcting her father’s reductive view of women -- it’s clear throughout the story that Pyotr’s affections needn’t be feigned. From the onset he’s smitten with Kate’s flowing long hair. Later, he gives her the nickname "vinegar girl," after a proverb from his home country: “beware against the sweet person, for sugar has no nutrition.” Kate counters that in America, it’s said that honey catches more flies than vinegar, and Pyotr guffaws: “Why would you want to catch flies, huh?” 


The proverb bit is prevalent throughout the story, painting a reductive picture of Eastern European immigrants, who, in the context of this story, are barely more than comic relief characters. The same goes for teenage girls who gussy themselves up for the sake of male attention -- the easiest form of power allowed them -- and aging Asian-Americans, who, according to the narrator, are prone to dressing in casual menswear. Throughout the book, stereotypes are embraced rather than questioned, mostly for the sake of easy jokes.


In a particularly off-putting scene, Kate has an epiphany about Pyotr: Although he speaks slowly, bluntly, and with jumbled article usage, he’s capable of thinking as sharply as she is. That this information is revelatory to her makes her character development uninteresting at best.


It is this realization, and the sympathy she feels for Pyotr when she learns that he’s an orphan with no family to speak of, that leads Kate to feel tenderness for him, and to begin to view their arrangement as beneficial not only to her family, but to herself. The specifics of their relationship are touching, but Tyler balloons them, writing a global observation about men, women, marriage and sexism that is not only reductive, but out of character coming from the headstrong Kate. 


“It’s hard being a man,” she announces at her wedding reception. “Anything that’s bothering them, men think they have to hide it […] They’re a whole lot less free than women are, when you think about it.” She continues, in earnest, “[Women] know how things work underneath, while the men have been stuck with the sports competitions and the wars and the fame and success.”


Perhaps Tyler isn’t fully to blame for the askew morality of Vinegar Girl. She did take on one of the trickiest oft-retold stories, one that’s difficult to depoliticize, given the outdated framework it functions within. As with “Taming of the Shrew,” the story can be appreciated if the ideals of its protagonist are unmarried from the ideals of its author, but doing so begs the question: why tell it at all? 


The bottom line:


In taking on a play notorious for its reductive views on gender roles, Tyler does little to set the record straight, maintaining the divisive power of social difference. Her entertaining book may nevertheless appeal to Bard fanatics.


What other reviewers think:


The Guardian: “You have to hand it to Tyler. This is just about as believable as it gets in terms of a modern way of rendering a Shakespeare plot. Which is sort of the problem. While Tyler has a lot of fun with it, it never rings entirely true or escapes what this is: an experiment in form.”


Kirkus: “Neither a faithful retelling nor a trenchant countertale, though agreeable enough as an afternoon’s entertainment.” 


Who wrote it:


Anne Tyler is a Pulitzer Prize-winning author. Her most recent novel is A Spool of Blue Thread. 


Who will read it:


Anyone interested in Shakespeare, contemporary conversations about gender, or modernizations of classic stories.


Opening lines:


"Kate Battista was gardening out back when she heard the telephone ring in the kitchen."


Notable passage


“'I am not proud,' Pytor said. 'I would like to not have accent.'


"He was looking down at his sandwich as he said this -- just holding it in both hands and gazing downward, with those lids of his veiling his eyes so she couldn’t tell what he was thinking. It occurred to her suddenly that he was thinking -- that only his exterior self was flubbing his th sounds and not taking long enough between consonants, while inwardly he was formulating thoughts every bit as complicated and layered as her own. "


Vinegar Girl by Anne Tyler
Hogarth, $25.00
Publishes June 21


The Bottom Line is a weekly review combining plot description and analysis with fun tidbits about the book.

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Go Inside Tony Robbins' Illustrious Retreats With The First Trailer For Netflix Documentary

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For the countless devotees who have made his books bestsellers and his retreats religious experiences, Tony Robbins is a guru. But don't tell him that. 


The new documentary "Tony Robbins: I Am Not Your Guru" offers an unprecedented look at the life coach's annual six-day seminar, where 2,500 people gather to learn from Robbins' outsize counsel. Joe Berlinger -- the director known for gritty documentaries about the West Memphis 3, Chevron and Whitey Bulger -- was the first person allowed to bring a camera crew to the Florida retreat. Berlinger has since fashioned a serene snapshot of the Robbins phenomenon.


The movie's first trailer is now online. "Tony Robbins: I Am Not Your Guru" premieres on Netflix and opens in theaters on July 15.




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NFL Players Get Father's Day Message From Their Adorable Kids

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An adorable ad from Courtyard Hotels is celebrating dads in honor of Father's Day. 


In the video, kids talk about their dads, offering sweet descriptions like, "He's good at hugs and kisses" and "I love Daddy because he's funny -- he tells jokes." We soon learn that these are the children of NFL players Drew Brees, Vince Wilfork, Antonio Brown and Ryan Kalil.


Little do the kids know, their dads are secretly listening to their words, and eventually, they come out to surprise them.


"I think being a father helps you prioritize what's important, and your kids have a funny way of making sure you know what the important things are," says Kalil at the end.


Happy Father's Day to all the daddies out there!

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For 'Hedwig' Star Lena Hall, A New Show Brings New Revelations

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In recent years, Lena Hall has established herself as one of the New York theater scene’s consummate rule breakers.


True to form, the Tony Award-winning singer-actress taps into her flair for the unexpected in her latest cabaret show. “Oh! You Pretty Things,” which opened at New York’s Café Carlyle on Tuesday, sees Hall crooning songs by David Bowie, Elton John and The Sex Pistols, among others. It’s a vastly different set than those favored by Hall’s contemporaries in musical theater, who frequently stick to standards and torch songs.


Of course, Hall wouldn’t have it any other way. Her last two concerts, "Sin & Salvation” and "The Villa Satori: Growing Up Haight-Ashbury," have also eschewed show tunes in favor of classic and contemporary rock-and-roll. Every song in the new show, she said, was selected for a very personal reason — in this case, each is tied to the memory of one of her romantic relationships.



“Oh! You Pretty Things,” the 36-year-old told HuffPost, is a “pretty personal story. It’s about breaking that kind of wall down and giving people a real glimpse into who I am, what happened in my life and why I am the way that I am now.” Still, the star’s former flames needn’t fret. “The guys that I talk about — if they came and saw the show, they would know who they were, but everybody else won’t,” she said. “It’ll be a very therapeutic show.”


As it turns out, “Oh! You Pretty Things” is just one component in what appears to be an artistic blitz for Hall. Shortly after “Pretty Things” concludes on June 25, the star plans to launch a YouTube video series in which she’ll put her unique spin on musical requests from fans, and a live album of her "Villa Satori" show is due out later this year. She'll also begin rehearsals to reprise her Tony-winning turn as Yitzhak in the touring production of the smash musical, “Hedwig and the Angry Inch,” in Los Angeles and San Francisco.



This time, however, Hall faces a unique challenge: she’ll also tackle the role of Hedwig once a week, alternating with “Glee” star Darren Criss. It will mark the first time in the history of the show that the same performer has played both roles in the same production. Hedwig, of course, has been played memorably by a number of male stars, including John Cameron Mitchell, who also created the show, and Neil Patrick Harris, who won a Tony Award for the role. Though the character, described as a transgender East German “slip of a girlyboy,” has rarely been embodied by a woman, Hall said she’s “all about going after things that are not typical for a woman to do.”


Having spent a year in drag (and a prosthetic penis) as Yitzhak on Broadway, Hall said she was initially reluctant to sign on for the tour before the chance to play the title role came along. 



“When you say goodbye to a character in such a grandiose way like I did, there’s nothing that can top that,” she said. “I needed something more, something that would make it interesting, something that would make it a different thing than it was when it was on Broadway. This makes it interesting, so now I’m on board.” As to how her take on Hedwig will differ from that of her male co-stars, Hall said she plans to “butch [the character] up a bit.”


Earlier this spring, that willingness to dare — and bare — more took Hall from the stage to HBO’s “Girls,” where was seen in a guest stint on HBO’s “Girls” as a yoga instructor who enjoys a steamy dalliance with Hannah (Lena Dunham).







Looking back, Hall praised Dunham’s work ethnic, and described the experience of shooting the Lena-on-Lena scene, a snippet of which can be seen above, as “really fun.”


“We filmed it so many times that when we were finally done and I stood up, I felt lightheaded, woozy and tipsy,” she said. “[Dunham] is super awesome to work with and made me feel super relaxed. It was one of those things where you either go 100 percent or you just shouldn’t do it at all. The hardest part about it was letting go of being self-conscious and just wild.”


Lamenting the lack of “big, strong roles” for women, Hall said she’s in full support of the type of non-traditional casting that “Hamilton” and other musicals have embraced.


“There aren't enough big, strong roles for women. They exist out there, but there’s just not enough,” she said. “I’m waiting for someone to plan non-traditional gender casting for an entire show.”


And so are we, Lena.


Lena Hall performs in “Oh! You Pretty Things” at New York’s Café Carlyle through June 25. Head here for more details. 

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Meet The Man Replacing Lin-Manuel Miranda In 'Hamilton'

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History has its eyes on you, Javier Muñoz.


On Thursday, "Hamilton" maestro Lin-Manuel Miranda announced that July 9 will mark his final performance (for the time being) as the titular founding father in the stage production, reports The Associated Press. Miranda originated the role in 2015 at the Public Theater, before the musical transitioned to Broadway to become an international phenomenon, earning a slew of Tonys in the process. 


Replacing Miranda is his "Hamilton" alternate, Muñoz, who plays the lead role twice a week at the Richard Rodgers Theatre. Muñoz also took the reins from Miranda when he departed his first production, "In the Heights." 


He will begin regularly playing Alexander Hamilton on July 9. 


But fear not Hamiltonians! Miranda made sure to emphasize that just because he's taking some time off, it doesn't mean he's throwing away his shot. 


"I think this is a role I'm going to be going back to again and again. I plan to revisit this role a lot," he said, according to USA Today


Miranda played coy, however, when asked whether the rest of the cast plans to stay on after his departure, telling reporters that he "wouldn't begrudge anyone who moved on" and  "wouldn't begrudge anyone who chose to say."


The five-time Tony award winner went on clear up some confusion about the shake-up on Twitter Thursday morning in his signature poetic style. In seven tweets, he broke down what fans of the musical can expect for the future and urged everyone to keep calm and "Ham" on.


Read his tweets below: 


































Understood? 




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This Young Dancer’s Improv Street Performance Will Leave You Breathless

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For one captivating minute, the bustling streets of Italy froze as an elegant dancer broke into what appeared to be a spontaneous performance.


The graceful young woman joined a violinist already busking on the streets for tips, after some prodding by a man filming.


“Come on!” the man tells her in Arabic. “Let’s go, I’m filming! Come on, do it for me!”


After some bashful glances, she gives a graceful spin and then begins to move with the musician as he performs Yann Tiersen’s "Comptine d'un autre été -- l'apres-midi."





A version of the video was uploaded to Reddit Wednesday.


A screen grab posted to Imgur showed a Facebook conversation between the Reddit user and a man identified as Assad Baransi, who first uploaded the video to Facebook and YouTube last July. The video's filming location is listed as Trieste, in northeast Italy.


In the online conversation, Baransi encouraged the video’s viewing, stating, “Share [with all the] world and please tell them that the Palestinian people [are] teaching life.”


Requests for comment from Baransi and the woman who appears to be dancing in the video were not immediately returned to The Huffington Post Thursday.

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The Heartbreaking Story Behind This Newborn Photo

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Kim Stone has been photographing newborns for 15 years, but nothing could prepare her for the emotional experience she had with a recent shoot.


Earlier this month, Stone photographed her neighbor's granddaughter, Aubrey. "The grandmother had booked the session for her daughter, explaining that the baby’s dad had been tragically murdered by someone he thought was a friend," the photographer stated in a blog post


"The sweet mom is an emotional wreck," Stone added. "She wanted to use Dad’s motorcycle gear; something he loved."



Stone shared a lovely photo from the shoot on Facebook, where it received over 344,000 likes and 76,000 shares.


"Her Daddy loved his motorcycle," the photographer wrote in the caption, adding, "He always wore protective gear. He wanted to make sure he was safe. He couldn't take any chances with a new baby girl on the way. But he will never hold his baby girl."


On April 28, baby Aubrey's father, Hector D. Ferrer, was fatally shot by a friend, leaving his pregnant fiancée, Kathryn Williams, to raise their unborn child as a single mom. A friend set up a GoFundMe page to help support the family in the aftermath of the loss.


With Stone's viral photo of Aubrey, the photographer said she wants to provide peace for the family. "My hope is that Kathryn and Aubrey find comfort in knowing the world is praying for them," she told The Huffington Post.


Stone also said that Kathryn sent her this message when the photo started receiving so much attention. "I will screenshot the page in a few weeks, and I'll print it off for her to show her the WORLD prayed and wept for her and mommy and daddy," the mom said. "That daddy made an impact even after he was gone and that would be his dream. Every prayer from another is one less weight for me to carry ... It's one more piece of peace I have and one less tear I shed."


It's a beautiful symbol of hope in the midst of terrible heartbreak.


Keep scrolling for more photos of baby Aubrey.



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'Wicked' Will Soon Be Defying Gravity On A Big Screen Near You

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Get ready, "Wicked" fans, because Elphaba and Glinda are coming to a big screen near you. 


That's right -- Universal Pictures has just announced that the film adaptation of the Tony-winning musical is set to hit theaters on Dec. 20, 2019, just in time for Christmas. 


Stephen Daldry, the man behind "Billy Elliot," is set to direct with Marc Platt acting as producer. Stephen Schwartz and Winnie Holzman, the pair who wrote the music and lyrics for the Broadway production, will pen the film's screenplay. 


As of press time, there have been no casting announcements, but we can only hope that Idina Menzel and Kristin Chenoweth are included in some way. Both Menzel and Chenoweth earned Tony nominations for their roles, as Elphaba and Glinda respectively, in 2004 (Menzel took home the statue), and it would be absolutely wonderful to see them on screen together. 




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20 Hilarious Comics That Get Real About Fatherhood

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From chasing after kids to completely giving up on privacy, dads know that parenting is no picnic. But there are many occasions for humor and lightness.


In honor of Father's Day, we put together a roundup of hilarious and heartwarming dad-themed comics. Enjoy the fatherly fun below:



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Why Lady Pop Stars Have No Time For Slacker Anthems

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You can be highbrow. You can be lowbrow. But can you ever just be brow? Welcome to Middlebrow, a weekly examination of pop culture. Sign up to receive it in your inbox weekly.






It was the fall of 1999. 


"Late night / Come home / Work sucks! / I know," the lyrics of Blink-182's "All the Small Things," the most punk thing I'd heard to date in my young life, blasted from "Total Request Live" on the living room television. 


"You don't know!" My older sister, six years my elder, yelled, either coming home from or heading off to an endless-feeling shift at the local CVS, land of nubby gray carpeting and plastic name tags. "You can't know until you start working," she added. I had to wait about two more years until I could truthfully claim of deeply knowing the specific pain of monotonous hours, awkward customer interactions and malfunctioning registers all for a measly paycheck -- and even then, my after-school job was hardly the most excruciating of its kind.


What we do for a living is often considered one of the most fundamental facts about us, like it or not. "What do you do?" is a classically American opening line for small talk. So much of our ethos is wrapped up in the original dream: You work hard, make a name for yourself and then live happily ever after. But there's a flip side to that coin: long commutes, 80-hour weeks, backbreaking labor, the nagging feeling that you signed away your soul when you agreed to a job. Music, long an outlet for catharsis, has been a natural conduit for these frustrations. See: "Working Man Blues," "Manic Monday," "A Hard Day's Night," "Career Opportunities," "Take This Job and Shove It."


The most recent additions to the "work" oeuvre, though, aren't lambasting the effort of a job like Mark Hoppus and co. did above. They're embracing it. Two songs topping the charts offer strikingly similar choruses; both Rihanna's "Work" and Fifth Harmony's "Work from Home" repeat "work, work, work, work" over and over, at varying tempos, transforming from a noun into a directive of sorts. Fifth Harmony even dons hard hats, sledgehammers, tape measures, etc. to take over a construction site for their single's video, evoking the sweat-inducing, muscle-flexing effort that line of work entails -- and capitalizing on the many innuendos a construction site provides. Here, the women are clearly in control, both of their bodies and the blueprints at hand. 





As J.C. Pan on Fader put it, "This is possibly the first time that two songs in Billboard’s Top 10 have had nearly identical refrains, and given that pop hits in the run-up to summer have been more likely to invoke parties and vacations, it’s even more curious that said refrain is simply the repetition of the word 'work.'" Pan argues that this confluence is a mirror of our national anxieties about employment -- we're working harder and longer than ever with little certainty about what rewards that effort might reap. "Now, the only certainty we have regarding work is that we must get up day after day to do it," Pan concluded.


Rihanna's and Fifth Harmony's latest hits are using "work" in a broader sense, focusing more on the effort it takes to get intimate with another human being than putting in hours at the office. Still, both carry the notion that work is a prerequisite for reward. The latter's single uses plenty of work-related lingo to hammer home the theme, with references to night shifts, promotions and time sheets. And when "work" plays in one's ears repeatedly, it's difficult to avoid conjuring images of long hours and intense meetings. 


Zooming out to look at pop songs from the last decade or so -- in particular, those from female artists -- hustle is king. Consider Beyoncé's infamous question and answer: "Who run the world? Girls," or Fifth Harmony's unsubtle "BO$$," that champions "Michelle Obama / Purse so heavy / Gettin' Oprah dollars." And we'd be remiss to neglect Britney Spears' call to arms in "Work Bitch," where the pop singer offers the sage advice that if one desires a hot body, a Bugatti, a Lamborghini, or a life sippin' martinis, they'd "better work, bitch." They'd better!


They're fun, motivational songs. One can imagine pushing through their last mile in a workout to "Run the World," or punching the air as "BO$$" plays in the background to get amped for a tough interview. When one doesn't feel particularly "bossy," a song can step in and provide a confidence boost where there once was none. 


And maybe we need a boost: women consistently make 79 cents to a man's dollar in this country, and the number shrinks even more when the sample size includes only Latina or black women. Women hold just 4 percent of CEO positions at S&P 500 companies and there are under 1 percent of black CEOs at Fortune 500 companies.


These "hustle" messages can feel like a product of anxieties about workplace performance -- not to say that any one group is underperforming, but that societal factors can contribute to a feeling of underperforming. In short, a member of the minority (be it due to gender, race, or another factor) in the workplace may feel undue pressure to over-perform in order to feel worthy of their position, pressures that a white, male individual of the same experience and age may not feel.


In a study conducted by Essence about black women's experiences in a white-dominated workplace, the magazine found "that scores of us are so worried about being perceived negatively that we hide our authentic selves in the workplace, choosing instead to tone down our appearance, soften our demeanor and hold back in our conversations." Knowing this, the importance of empowering hustling anthems feel even more important. Sure, it's just music, but these songs are also instances of women being unapologetic about their ambition — a notion that has yet to be fully embraced by society as a whole.


You won't hear Beyoncé offering up a "work sucks / I know," anytime soon, because in this economy, to be employed as a woman, more notably as a woman of color, is to feel the pressure of having to be the best. If we need Britney, Beyoncé, Rihanna, Fifth Harmony and co. to cheer us on until there's better gender and racial parity in the workplace, we're happy to sing along and watch them work, work, work, work, work over the male slacker anthems of yesteryear.


Follow Jillian Capewell on Twitter: @jcapejcape

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Ricky Martin Says 'BREAK YOUR SILENCE,' Calls For Gun Control After Orlando

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The Orlando massacre has "proven that gun laws MUST change in this country," according to Ricky Martin.


The singer took a stand on gun control in an op-ed titled "I Will Never Cease To Fight For Love," published via Univision on Wednesday. Martin, who is openly gay and a father to twins, expressed his personal grief over the shooting.


"The tragedy that occurred in Orlando hurts me in so many ways," he wrote. "It hurts me as a man, as a human being, and as a gay person, because so many of the victims were brothers and sisters of the LGBT community. I am in pain, I am sad, I am angry."


The Puerto Rican star went on to discuss several facets of the "senseless act" and what led a gunman to open fire Sunday during Latin night at Pulse, a queer nightclub, killing 49 people and injuring dozens more. He also asked people to choose love over "hate, racism, and bigotry" in the aftermath of the tragedy.


Turning to the topic of gun violence in the United States, the singer then broke down why he felt current gun laws were antiquated and need to be reformed. 



Today, too many people continue to defend the indefensible. There are a series of issues in play here, but the United States of America has an undeniable problem with gun violence. How many more lives need to be lost before we do something about lax gun laws? How can a person previously tied to terrorism and interviewed by the FBI on several occasions be permitted to work as a security guard and still have the ability to legally purchase guns? How can we continue to stand by an amendment ratified in 1791 to justify an incomprehensible proliferation of firearms in the U.S? You know what else was permitted in 1791? Slavery, dueling as a way of settling arguments, consensual sex with children above 10 in most states (Delaware was 7), wife beating as a valid exercise of a husband's authority over his wife, and the list of absurdities goes on and on. Today, we know better as a society. We are more civilized. As President Obama stated, “To actively do nothing is a decision as well.” People continue to say it is their right to bear arms. What about our right to feel safe?



He went a step further and implored readers to act and use their power as constituents to make change happen.  


"I ask you to BREAK YOUR SILENCE and call each and every one of your congressman -- those you elected into power to represent you and your ideals -- 10 times each day until they act," Martin wrote. "Set a timer if it helps, but make the calls."


Martin's written plea came on the same day Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) embarked on a filibuster aimed at forcing Congress to act against gun violence. Murphy, with the help of other Democrats, held the Senate floor for nearly 15 hours and left only after leaders promised him at least two votes on gun bills. 


The singer ended his op-ed, saying he'd continue to speak out against hate for the sake of his sons. 


"I refuse to accept that this is the world my children will inherit," Martin wrote. "I will never cease to fight for love."


Read his full op-ed here

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How An Unexpected Cameo Became The Funniest Joke In 'Finding Dory'

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In "Finding Nemo," we watched Marlin and Dory canvass the ocean in search of the titular clownfish. Six months later -- according to the timeline of the new sequel, "Finding Dory" -- it's the amnesiac Dory who is MIA, seeking the parents she lost at a young age. A flash of recollection links Dory's origins to what she calls the "jewel of Morro Bay, California." Off she goes, zipping through Pixar's majestic tides.


Eventually, Dory lands at the base of a marine-life institute that resembles SeaWorld, albeit a more politically correct version, as inspired by the unsettling 2013 documentary "Blackfish." Upon arriving, the scene pans up at the aquatic amusement park, and four unexpected words boom from its loudspeakers: "Hello. I'm Sigourney Weaver."


Weaver is the nautical mecca's spirit guide. We hear her dulcet voice on loop, touting mottos like “rescue, rehabilitation and release.” Dory and the other fish consider Weaver a benevolent overlord. They trust her recordings will steer them though trouble. 



At a recent "Finding Dory" press screening, the movie's biggest laughs occurred the first time Sigourney Weaver announced herself. The specificity of her name, coupled with the knowledge that most kids will have no idea why their parents are chuckling at her presence, makes this recurring joke shine. By the time Dory is referring to her as "my friend Sigourney," it's become the movie's signature gag. Sigourney Weaver is a character, but only in the eyes of these fish.


In a sense, it's amazing the joke exists at all. The film's creators were convinced it wouldn't make the final cut. Thinking it might be too "weird," they kept waiting for one of their Pixar associates to tell them to nix the bit from the script.


Andrew Stanton, the co-director and co-writer of "Finding Nemo" and "Finding Dory," and producer Lindsey Collins concocted the Sigourney quip early in the writing process. Stanton and Collins enjoyed working with Weaver on 2008's "WALL-E," in which she voiced the Axiom's computer. "WALL-E" opened one year after Weaver narrated the American edition of "Planet Earth," and the same year she lent her voice to a documentary at a San Francisco planetarium. Anyone familiar with Weaver's environmental soothings would find her role in "Finding Dory" somewhat tongue-in-cheek, making the actress a natural fit for the sensei of a progressive marine-life facility. And if you only know Weaver from "Alien" and "Avatar," it's just funny to hear her name echoing through Dory's misadventures without Dory understanding who she is.



Once Stanton and Collins thought of Weaver, they decided she should pop up repeatedly in "Finding Dory." If you squint, it's a cuter variant on the Mariska Hargitay stunt in the Mike Myers flop "The Love Guru."


"We had such a luxury of time that we ended up putting in a lot of jokes that we assumed weren’t going to last, but we tried them anyway because we’re like, 'Why not?" Collins said. "We had more and more opportunities to use that joke, and it just kept going and it got funnier."


But Stanton didn't want to pitch the idea to Weaver until they were certain it would make the movie. Less than a year ago, once they realized they wouldn't be asked to expunge the joke after all, Stanton approached Weaver about the cameo. She was game. Had Weaver passed, they would have replaced her with a "generic voice." Now you'll find "Sigourney Weaver as Sigourney Weaver" listed in the closing credits.


"I did say to her, 'Kids are going to know your name better than anything you’ve ever done before because of this,'" Stanton said. (Weaver's rep said she was unavailable to comment for this article.)


Ellen DeGeneres, who reprises her role as Dory, said the audience at last week's Los Angeles premiere giggled every time Weaver repeated her name. And Collins has enjoyed hearing the joke in editions of the movie that are translated for non-English-speaking regions. 


"I haven’t talked to her, but I’m sure she’s very, very happy with that," DeGeneres said. "It really was a smart move for whoever thought of her to put her in there, and it was smart for her to take it."


"Finding Dory" opens June 17.

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