Lea Michele believes that “it is sad” that it is rumored that she cannot read or write, sad and male chauvinist

Lea Michele believes that “it is sad” that it is rumored that she cannot read or write, sad and male chauvinist

Lea Michele gave an in-depth interview to the New York Times. The actress, who just landed the role of her life and will eventually play Fanny Brice in the Broadway musical “Funny Girl”, he was not excluded from any of the conversations that have recently erupted around him. The funniest of them is the one in which some argue that Michele cannot read or writea rumor that has delighted many on social networks and that said interpreter does not laugh. Michele replies with all the seriousness of the world stating that consider “sad” what is said of her, sad and male chauvinist.

Lea Michele believes that “it is sad” that it is rumored that she cannot read or write, sad and male chauvinist

“I went to the filming of ‘Glee’ every day and always knew my lines. And then it turns out there’s a voice I can’t read or write? It’s sad. Really is. I often think that if I were a man many of these things would not happen”. Beyond this Michele-inspired comic detail, the actress also reacts to a much less light-hearted argument: the allegations of many of her “Glee” co-stars. In her day there were excuses in which Michele acknowledged that he acted in such a way as to damage several co-stars of the aforementioned series. Samantha Ware pulled the blanket out and continues today to defend that Michele abused her power as the protagonist of the aforementioned television drama, turning the shoot into an ordeal. Behind her, Heather Morris blurted out that yes, it was “unpleasant” work with her “much”. “For the way Lea treated others, with that disrespect for as long as he’s done it, I think he deserves the spotlight on it”.

Michele now assures that that storm inspired a “intense period of reflection” and now he really understands “the importance and value of being a leader”. “[Ser una buena líder] It doesn’t just mean walking in and doing a good job when the camera is rolling, but also when it isn’t. And it wasn’t always the most important thing to me. I work very hard and leave no room for mistakes. That level of perfectionism, or that pressure to be perfect, gives me a lot of blind spots.”says the actress insinuating that her rigorous approach to acting is the cause of her bad treatment of her peers.

Smoke bomb

After the terrible reviews provoked the departure of Beanie Feldstein, who originally played the legendary role that has now fallen into the hands of Michele; there was another commented out. Jane Lynch announced that she would not continue in “Funny Girl” once Feldstein closed her stage in that musical.. Lynch, who was also part of the cast of “Glee”, thus fueled the drama with his farewell him, a sauce which he later tried to end by stating that “to worship” to Michele. “He will make this role his own. I’m so happy that he gets the chance to play that role in real life and not just “Glee”.”. So Lynch alluded to Michele’s character in “Glee,” Rachel, a young woman obsessed with Barbra Streisand whose ultimate dream was to play Fanny Brice on stage.

Source: E Cartelera

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Top Trending

Related POSTS