Jessica Chastain, Daniel Radcliffe, and More Welcome Us Back to Broadway
Photography by Emma Summerton
Styled by Gro Curtis
Some Broadway stars hype themselves up with K-pop. Some opt for jazz. Jessica Chastain prefers the sound of nothing—a void before she's thrust into the claustrophobic world of Henrik Ibsen's A Doll's House. "That feels quite Nora to me," she says, "to sit in silence."
The Oscar winner may find that quiet is hard to come by in New York these days. For the first time since COVID-19 put live theater on an indefinite pause three years ago, venues from Broadway to Brooklyn are bursting with a pre-pandemic sort of life. There have been captivating, progressive reinventions of classics like Sweeney Todd and Death of a Salesman, and bold new productions like Kimberly Akimbo and Ain't No Mo’. There have been downtown sensations—comedian Kate Berlant, turning the one-woman show on its ear—and Midtown miracle workers like Lea Michele, Funny Girl's greatest star. There's been a Cinderella who's good (Phillipa Soo in Into the Woods) and a Cinderella who's not so good (Linedy Genao in Bad Cinderella).
Ibsen's masterpiece famously ends with the sound of a door slamming. But these 20 buzzy performers are open and ready to be back in business. "If you take the walls off a theater, you would think it's a madhouse," says Corey Hawkins, who smolders opposite Yahya Abdul-Mateen II in Topdog/Underdog. "You would think you’re looking into a psych ward. I mean, you are. But it's all for the love of the craft." —Hillary Busis
"At Juilliard, Andrei Belgrader told me, ‘A great thing to do right before you go onstage—even if you don't believe it—is to stick your arms out in the air and go, I’m a genius. Then walk onstage. Because it’ll create that energy within you.’ "
"Before every show, I have to see the audience. So, I take a little peek and that lets me know that we got some people in the house. They probably see me look, but I don't care because they forget about it as soon as I step onstage."
"It actually is insane what we do, I think. But we’re fortunate to be able to do it because we’re artists. We’re crazy, and we’re sensitive about our shit."
"Every night, I sing one song from the show at home before going to the theater. It's usually ‘The Greatest Star,’ and lately I’ve been singing it for my son. He just sits in the bed and gives me a thumbs-up…and it really makes the night for me."
"I don't believe in lucky rituals, but the only thing that I’m really superstitious about is saying ‘Macbeth’ in a theater. Never do that, ever."
Before a show, for luck, "I like to rub Daniel Radcliffe's head."
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"I didn't really have many Broadway idols. I got to theater very late. But later on when I got to Carnegie Mellon, that is where I discovered Billy Porter. Billy hired me for my first job right out of school. I love him so much."
"You know when you’re doing eight shows a week, every single day you wake up, even on your day off, you’re thinking about your next show. It's like being a professional athlete; you’re always gearing up for the next race, the next game."
After a show, "I have a late-night meal, like I’m in Paris or something, around 11 at night, and then listen to music all night long. I turn into a vampire. Go to jazz clubs until about two, three in the morning."
At auditions, "I used to wear shoes that were a size too big and then do a kick in the middle of the song, and then the shoe would go flying off in the wrong direction. I made that like it was a mistake, but it wasn't. It was all planned."
Before a show, "we all get together in what we call the party room, which is the boys’ dressing room. We do like a dance party and catch up on the day and take turns playing our favorite song. It's nice to just check in with everybody."
"One of the fun things about having almost a 20-year career in New York is inevitably I know someone at every performance. Every night, I was catching up with people afterwards, catching up on our lives."
For auditions, "I was always drawn to sad, old-man songs in theater. I would sing ‘Time’ from Tuck Everlasting, ‘How It Ends’ from Big Fish. And that one song from Parade. It's so depressing. But for some reason, I always did those ones."
"My Broadway idol is Stephen Sondheim…because he really taught me how to play with words. I love the songs he wrote for women in particular. My other one is, of course, the Beyoncé of Broadway, Audra McDonald."
"Sometimes I sage my room before a show. I also drink lots of tea and massage my muscles. I like feeling relaxed before a show, so I’ll probably put on spa music and lie on the ground and be zen and zone in on good energy and good vibes."
"In the Heights was the first time I ever saw myself represented onstage. In the first few lines, Lin-Manuel Miranda says, ‘Dominican Republic. I love it. Jesus. I’m jealous of it.’ My mind was blown."
"Before a show, I listen to old-school ’80s funk. Earth, Wind & Fire. A little Aretha, Chaka Khan. Getting in the vibe."
"My go-to vocal warm-up is literally just going, ‘Ah, ah,’ over and over again. I sound like a really annoying bird. I just go, ‘Ah, ah.’ It's like a cat dying."
"I don't sing, and I’ve never auditioned for a play except for high school. But I got Steel Magnolias in high school and here I am."
"I had a weird introduction to this industry, so I did not ever have a period where I had standard monologues ready to go. But I know that one of my dad's, his song was a Tom Lehrer song called ‘The Masochism Tango,’ which is weird to think of your dad doing."
Interviews by Margaret Lin, Hannah Pak, and Ella Ruffel.
Hair products by Hair Rituel by Sisley (Chastain), Kiehl's (all men); makeup products by Gucci (Chastain), Chanel (all other women); nail enamel by Uka; grooming products by Kiehl's. Hair, Renato Campora (Chastain), Eugene Souleiman (all other women); makeup, Kristofer Buckle (Chastain), Kabuki (all other women); manicures, Yuko Tsuchihashi; grooming, Melissa Dezarate; tailors, Maria Del Greco, Joel Gomez; set design, Viki Rutsch. Produced on location by Shiny Projects. For details, go to vf.com/credits.
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From the Archive: Diana and the Press (1998)
Some Broadway stars Balenciaga; Gucci Hortus Deliciarum. JESSICA CHASTAIN / A DOLL’S HOUSE Burberry; Alessandro Vasini. Versace; Tom Ford; David Yurman. YAHYA ABDUL-MATEEN II / TOPDOG/UNDERDOG COREY HAWKINS / TOPDOG/UNDERDOG Louis Vuitton; Tiffany & Co. LEA MICHELE / FUNNY GIRL Ferragamo; Bulgari High Jewelry. Michael Kors Collection; David Yurman High Jewelry; Bulgari High Jewelry. Emporio Armani; Mach & Mach; Van Cleef & Arpels. Valentino; La Perla; Gianvito Rossi. PHILLIPA SOO / CAMELOT; INTO THE WOODS LINDSAY MENDEZ / MERRILY WE ROLL ALONG PATINA MILLER / INTO THE WOODS ANNALEIGH ASHFORD / SWEENEY TODD Brunello Cucinelli. WENDELL PIERCE / DEATH OF A SALESMAN Erdem; Aquazzura; Lynn Paik; Van Cleef & Arpels. VICTORIA CLARK / KIMBERLY AKIMBO Prada; Bulgari High Jewelry. KATIE HOLMES / THE WANDERERS Bottega Veneta. JONATHAN GROFF / MERRILY WE ROLL ALONG Louis Vuitton Men's; David Yurman. Fendi Mens. Loewe. Chanel. JUSTIN COOLEY / KIMBERLY AKIMBO JORDAN E. COOPER / AIN’T NO MO’ LORNA COURTNEY / & JULIET LINEDY GENAO / BAD CINDERELLA Gucci. JEREMY POPE / THE COLLABORATION Rick Owens; Cartier High Jewelry. Saint Laurent by Anthony Vaccarello; Cartier High Jewelry. MARLA MINDELLE / TITANIQUE KATE BERLANT / KATE Dior Men; Dior. DANIEL RADCLIFFE / MERRILY WE ROLL ALONG