New Photo - Fans Are 'Tearing Up' Over 'Legendary' Actress' Heartfelt Moment With Audience Member After Injury

Fans Are 'Tearing Up' Over 'Legendary' Actress' Heartfelt Moment With Audience Member After Injury Sammi BurkeAugust 1, 2025 at 1:05 AM Photo by: Weiss Eubanks/NBCUniversal via Getty Images Fans Are 'Tearing Up' Over 'Legendary' Actress' Heartfelt Moment With Audience Member After Injury o...

- - Fans Are 'Tearing Up' Over 'Legendary' Actress' Heartfelt Moment With Audience Member After Injury

Sammi BurkeAugust 1, 2025 at 1:05 AM

Photo by: Weiss Eubanks/NBCUniversal via Getty Images

Fans Are 'Tearing Up' Over 'Legendary' Actress' Heartfelt Moment With Audience Member After Injury originally appeared on Parade.

Jean Smart's dedication to her loving fans has left some feeling rather emotional after a video of the Hacks star signing autographs, seemingly from a wheelchair, went viral following her return to her Broadway play, Call Me Izzy, after a knee injury.

In a stage door clip uploaded to TikTok by a recent attendee, the Hollywood legend could be seen sitting behind a table with her leg propped up, engaging with fans who, one by one, made their way down a line to chat and get her signature on their Playbills. However, one fan requested she sign their arm with her Deborah Vance signature to get it tattooed, leading to an "adorable" and "wholesome" reaction that even had one fan "tearing up" in response.

Smart was so committed to getting it perfect that she even hauled herself up out of her seat with a little help from her crew, admitting that she was "nervous" to get it right, and fans were in awe of the commitment.

"I love that she realized the gravity of this being permanent and felt anxious to get it right," one gushed. "It says so much about her as a human☺️."

"Something about her yelling 'OH MY GOD IM NERVOUS!!!' makes me like her more," another admitted. "So human and real lmao."

"she was genuinely moved by this!!" someone else observed. "it's like when kids get their teacher's signature or quote tattooed. nothing is more powerful."

She was also praised for being so "accommodating to sign at the stage door after being injured," with one assuming that "Most people would have left."

"What an ICON!" another agreed. "We must protect Jean Smart at all costs!!"

"Jean Smart is the total package. Always has been, always will be. 😍," someone else declared, with another agreeing that she's "one of the classiest and kindest women ever!"

"Why do I always tear up when I see her?!?" another fan wondered. "Jean is a true gem! I just love her!"

Another hoped that the actress knows just "how legendary and amazing she is."

Related: Film Legend, 66, Makes Bold Statement on Aging—and Meryl Streep, 76

Fans Are 'Tearing Up' Over 'Legendary' Actress' Heartfelt Moment With Audience Member After Injury first appeared on Parade on Aug 1, 2025

This story was originally reported by Parade on Aug 1, 2025, where it first appeared.

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Fans Are 'Tearing Up' Over 'Legendary' Actress' Heartfelt Moment With Audience Member After Injury

Fans Are 'Tearing Up' Over 'Legendary' Actress' Heartfelt Moment With Audience Member After Injury...
New Photo - Jenna Ortega Thinks Social Media Makes It 'Harder to Find a Sense of Self' for the Younger Generation

Jenna Ortega Thinks Social Media Makes It 'Harder to Find a Sense of Self' for the Younger Generation Ingrid VasquezAugust 1, 2025 at 12:29 AM Ethan Miller/Getty Jenna Ortega Jenna Ortega stars as Wednesday Addams on Wednesday The actress talked about why she believes the show resonates with a young...

- - Jenna Ortega Thinks Social Media Makes It 'Harder to Find a Sense of Self' for the Younger Generation

Ingrid VasquezAugust 1, 2025 at 12:29 AM

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Jenna Ortega

Jenna Ortega stars as Wednesday Addams on Wednesday

The actress talked about why she believes the show resonates with a younger audience in a new interview

She also addressed how she thinks social media is affecting today's world

Jenna Ortega believes Wednesday has resonated with audiences for more reasons than one.

The actress, 22, who stars as the titular character, told the BBC in an interview published on Wednesday, July 30, that she believes the Netflix show has found success because it explores themes of "where we find our sense of community now."

"I wasn't around in the 70s, but I hear stories of people knocking on their neighbors' doors, and the bikes going all throughout the city, and just expecting to meet someone at a certain time on a certain location," she said.

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Ortega believes that nowadays people are not talking in person, instead "interacting and finding their community online" — something she said "can be very isolating."

Jonathan Hession/Netflix

Jenna Ortega as Wednesday in episode 202 of Wednesday

The Beetlejuice Beetlejuice star said that social media makes people exposed to "so many voices and so many opinions."

"Much more than you would typically be, or that humans are kind of meant to be exposed to," she said. "So I think it's harder to find a sense of self. Young people are struggling to find, 'What makes my voice stand out? What is it about me in this world and this society today that gives me a sense of purpose or control or authority?' "

During an appearance on The Interview podcast with The New York Times last August, Ortega opened up about the negative experiences she's had with social media, particularly when she was a kid.

"I hate AI," she said at the time. "... Did I like being 14 [years old] and making a Twitter account because I was supposed to, and seeing dirty edited content of me as a child? No. It's terrifying. It's corrupt."

Michael Loccisano/WireImage

Jenna Ortega attends Hurry Up Tomorrow World Premiere on May 13, 2025 in New York City

"It's wrong. It's disgusting," added Ortega. "...Here's the problem, though. We've opened Pandora's box. Well, it is what it is. It's out there now. We're gonna have to deal with the consequences."

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Season 2, part 1 of Wednesday will debut on Netflix on Wednesday, Aug. 6, followed by part 2 on Wednesday, Sept. 3. Season 1 of Wednesday is available to stream in full on Netflix.

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Jenna Ortega Thinks Social Media Makes It ‘Harder to Find a Sense of Self’ for the Younger Generation

Jenna Ortega Thinks Social Media Makes It 'Harder to Find a Sense of Self' for the Younger Generation Ingrid V...
New Photo - Mikal Bridges agrees to 4-year, $150 million extension with New York Knicks

Mikal Bridges agrees to 4year, $150 million extension with New York Knicks Leocciano CallaoJuly 31, 2025 at 5:51 PM New York Knicks forward Mikal Bridges has agreed to a fouryear, $150 million extension, ESPN's Shams Charania reported Thursday.

- - Mikal Bridges agrees to 4-year, $150 million extension with New York Knicks

Leocciano CallaoJuly 31, 2025 at 5:51 PM

New York Knicks forward Mikal Bridges has agreed to a four-year, $150 million extension, ESPN's Shams Charania reported Thursday.

SNY initially reported the 28-year-old was eligible for a maximum four-year, $156 million extension. But, per Charania, Bridges took a slight discount to help New York's roster-building efforts.

The Knicks had a window from July 6 to June 30, 2026, before Bridges was set to enter free agency, to secure a new contract with him. The new deal includes a player option for 2029-30 and a trade kicker, according to Charania.

Bridges initially found his way to New York across the East River when he landed in Brooklyn from Phoenix in exchange for Kevin Durant. He spent five seasons with the Suns before getting traded to the borough south of Manhattan.

The former Villanova Wildcat averaged 26.1 points per game in 27 games for the Nets upon his arrival and 19.6 points per game after starting in all 82 games the following season.

Bridges was traded to the Knicks last offseason for Bojan Bogdanović, five first-round draft picks and a second-rounder. The move reunited Bridges with his former college teammates, Josh Hart and Jalen Brunson.

In his first season in blue and orange, Bridges proved to be a dynamic role player for the Knicks, averaging 17.6 points, 3.2 rebounds and 3.7 assists per game. His defense also shined in the Knicks' playoff run before they eventually fell to the Indiana Pacers in the Eastern Conference finals. Bridges averaged 15.6 points, 4.5 boards, 0.9 blocks and 1.7 steals per game in this year's postseason.

Bridges' extension comes after the Knicks hired Mike Brown to replace Tom Thibodeau as their head coach. The team has also added reinforcements in free agency by signing Guerschon Yabusele and Jordan Clarkson.

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Mikal Bridges agrees to 4-year, $150 million extension with New York Knicks

Mikal Bridges agrees to 4year, $150 million extension with New York Knicks Leocciano CallaoJuly 31, 2025 at 5:51 PM Ne...
New Photo - MLB trade deadline: Rangers acquire pitcher Merrill Kelly from Diamondbacks, who continue sell-off

MLB trade deadline: Rangers acquire pitcher Merrill Kelly from Diamondbacks, who continue selloff Ian CasselberryJuly 31, 2025 at 5:38 PM The Arizona Diamondbacks' selloff continued Thursday with starting pitcher Merrill Kelly being traded to the Texas Rangers, ESPN's Jeff Passan reported.

- - MLB trade deadline: Rangers acquire pitcher Merrill Kelly from Diamondbacks, who continue sell-off

Ian CasselberryJuly 31, 2025 at 5:38 PM

The Arizona Diamondbacks' sell-off continued Thursday with starting pitcher Merrill Kelly being traded to the Texas Rangers, ESPN's Jeff Passan reported.

Kelly, who turns 37 on Oct. 14, provides another reliable arm for the Rangers' veteran starting rotation, joining Jacob deGrom, Patrick Corbin and Nathan Eovaldi. He has been the D-backs' most consistent starter this season, compiling a 3.22 ERA over 22 starts with 121 strikeouts in 128 2/3 innings.

The Rangers' starting pitchers have the best ERA in MLB at 3.16, led by deGrom (10-3, 2.55 ERA) throwing like the ace who won NL Rookie of the Year and two Cy Young Awards with the New York Mets. Corbin (3.78 ERA) has experienced a career resurgence after struggling the past five seasons with the Washington Nationals. And Eovaldi (9-3, 1.49 ERA) has been one of the best starters in baseball the past six seasons.

Texas (57-52) is a postseason contender, tied with the Seattle Mariners for second in the AL West, five games behind the Houston Astros. The Rangers and Mariners are also tied for the AL's third wild-card playoff berth, 2.5 games ahead of the Cleveland Guardians and three ahead of the Kansas City Royals and Tampa Bay Rays.

In exchange for Kelly, who can be a free agent after the season, the D-backs will receive Triple-A left-hander Kohl Drake, Double-A arm Mitch Bratt and Single-A pitcher David Hagaman. Drake, 25, was ranked as the Rangers' No. 5 prospect by MLB.com, while Bratt, 22, was No. 9 and Hagaman, 22, was No. 13.

Kelly was a late bloomer as an MLB pitcher, an eighth-round pick by the Tampa Bay Rays in 2010 after he was drafted the previous two years by the Baltimore Orioles and Cleveland Guardians but didn't sign. He played nine years in the minors before making his major-league debut with the D-backs in 2019.

In his seven-year MLB career, Kelly has a 3.74 ERA and 62-50 record, averaging 8.2 strikeouts and 2.7 walks per nine innings. He's two seasons removed from his best year in 2023, when he registered a 3.29 ERA and 12-8 record in 30 starts, adding 187 strikeouts in 177 2/3 innings.

Kelly was the fourth regular to be dealt from Arizona leading up to the MLB trade deadline. First baseman Josh Naylor began the D-backs' trade season by going to the Seattle Mariners last week. That was followed by outfielder Randal Grichuk being traded to the Kansas City Royals and third baseman Eugenio Suárez also going to Seattle on Wednesday night.

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MLB trade deadline: Rangers acquire pitcher Merrill Kelly from Diamondbacks, who continue sell-off

MLB trade deadline: Rangers acquire pitcher Merrill Kelly from Diamondbacks, who continue selloff Ian CasselberryJuly ...
New Photo - Todd Marinovich, former phenom QB-turned-cautionary tale, steps out from under his own myth in new book

Todd Marinovich, former phenom QBturnedcautionary tale, steps out from under his own myth in new book Jay BusbeeJuly 31, 2025 at 8:08 PM Todd Marinovich, seen in a 2017 photo, tells his side of his infamous football story in his new book, 'Marinovich: Outside the Lines in Football, Art, and Addictio...

- - Todd Marinovich, former phenom QB-turned-cautionary tale, steps out from under his own myth in new book

Jay BusbeeJuly 31, 2025 at 8:08 PM

Todd Marinovich, seen in a 2017 photo, tells his side of his infamous football story in his new book, 'Marinovich: Outside the Lines in Football, Art, and Addiction.' (Jeff Gritchen/Digital First Media/Orange County Register via Getty Images) (MediaNews Group/Orange County Register via Getty Images via Getty Images)

The bond between fathers and their athletic-genius children is a complex, fragile and often treacherous one. If the father pushes too hard, the child rebels. If the father doesn't push hard enough, the child might never reach their astronomical potential. And either way, the traditional protective and nurturing role of the father becomes transactional rather than emotional. When fathers take an active interest in their children's athletic development, approval and support are conditional; blasting all those reps and showing up big at game time are what's mandatory. The resulting generational wreckage can last much longer than any career ever could.

Before Tiger Woods and his father Earl, before Venus and Serena Williams and their father Richard, and long before the feel-good tale of Home Run Derby champ Cal Raleigh and his pitching pop, there came Todd Marinovich and his father Marv — the ultimate sports-dad cautionary tale. Nationally famous long before he graduated high school, Todd Marinovich became the grim answer to the question: What if you attempted to genetically engineer an NFL quarterback?

The answer, in Marinovich's case, was chaos, chaos that still echoes today more than three decades later.

Marinovich, a Southern California quarterback who played his college ball at USC and took snaps in the NFL for the Raiders, crashed and burned shortly into his NFL career, a victim of his own bad choices and — most everyone assumed — the immense pressure his father Marv placed on him practically from birth.

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The truth, however, is far more complex and, to Marinovich's mind, far more favorable to Marv, who died in 2020. Marinovich — once dubbed the "Robo QB," or, even less charitably, "Marijuanavich" — has at last put his own story, in his own words, into print. "Marinovich: Outside the Lines in Football, Art, and Addiction" documents, in painful detail, the battles that the onetime quarterback and present-day artist fought throughout his career and continues to fight even now — with addiction, with perception, with himself. It's a harrowing but ultimately impressive and inspiring look at reconciling a public image with personal belief.

"My most fundamental flaw was both a tremendous blessing and a horrible curse, but it was my reality," he writes. "Without the zeal accompanying obsession, who knows if I would've succeeded in football? Someone else could have been the first college sophomore in history to declare for the NFL Draft. Yet, on the flip side, there wouldn't have been a soul-crushing dozen arrests, five incarcerations, and over seven trips to rehab."

There's a reason, then, that he begins the book with this epigram: "This book is an act of self-love after decades of self-defiance." (Disclaimer: Marinovich and this writer share an agent.)

For Marinovich, now 56, training began virtually at birth. His father, a former strength coach with the Raiders, developed a relentless regimen designed to maximize Todd's potential and hone his discipline. But early in his autobiography, Marinovich makes sure to draw a line in the sand:

"No one pushed me into football, least of all my dad, Marv," he writes. "I chose it. Any suggestions to the contrary were lies offered freely by the media to manufacture a Greek tragedy."

And yes, the media dove deep into the Marinovich story, starting long before he suited up for USC. Even as a high schooler, Marinovich was drawing national attention.

"That was a really trippy time for me, because I was so shy going into high school," he told Yahoo Sports recently. "And then articles were talking about my diet, like I was a freak show — 'He's never had a Big Mac!' It just wasn't true. I was healthy, and I ate healthy, but, you know, living in America, you're going to have a Big Mac."

Todd Marinovich (center) signs his Letter of Intent to attend USC with parents Marv (left) and Trudi, on Feb. 10, 1988 in Mission Viejo, California. (Photo by Bob Riha, Jr./Getty Images) (Bob Riha Jr via Getty Images)

During this time, Marinovich honed his ability to remain cool under pressure. An immensely talented basketball player, he played in dozens of hostile gyms, sinking last-second shots to win games in front of rabid crowds. It's the kind of training you can't teach, you just have to experience.

"I felt really comfortable when the time was running out that I want the ball," he recalls. "Not everybody wants the ball when time's running out. And that's OK. Just give it up, just pass it to the guy that does."

As much as he loved basketball, however, Marinovich loved football even more. Speaking today, he notes that there's an almost otherworldly component to the game when it's functioning at its highest.

"It's truly spiritual," he says. "It's 11 of us who are out there at once. It's so special when everyone has just got your back. All you've got to do is handle your guy, don't let the guy down next to you. You're looking at guys in the eye, and they know that you are not going to let them down. You're going, I'm going to die trying not to let you down, bro."

At his finest, Marinovich was something to behold at quarterback. He threw for 9,914 career yards in high school, a mark that was a national record at the time. (It's since been nearly doubled.) Marinovich threw for 2,477 yards his senior year, more than contemporaries John Elway, Jim Kelly or Dan Marino did in theirs. In two years at USC, he crafted some instantly indelible memories — a last-second drive to beat Washington State in 1989, a triumphant 45-42 victory over rival UCLA in 1990.

Those were good days for Marinovich and anyone in the Marinovich business. He was winning nationwide acclaim and shaking off his shyness to become a fixture on the L.A. party scene. He counted Charlie Sheen and Flea among his friends, and he was an unmistakable redheaded presence wherever there was a party to be had.

"There were some really amazing next-level times that I had before it got really bad," he laughs, "and that's just, that's all I'll say."

But the cracks were already starting to show. He engaged in an on-camera shouting match with his head coach in what was then called the John Hancock (now Sun) Bowl on the last day of 1990. A few weeks later, he was busted for cocaine possession, but still got selected in the first round of the 1991 NFL Draft.

He saw little NFL action, playing in just eight regular-season games, with one playoff appearance, over parts of two seasons. He threw for eight touchdowns and nine interceptions, plus a zero-TD, four-INT game against the Chiefs in a 1991 wild-card game. He dodged NFL investigators, often with grimly comical results — he would use teammates' urine to pass drug tests, but got popped when one of his teammates gave him urine while drunk at four times the legal driving limit.

After multiple failed drug tests and failed attempts at rehab, Marinovich was suspended for the 1993 season, and never played in the NFL again. He attempted to catch on with the Canadian Football League, the Arena Football League and other organizations, but nothing stuck. Eulogies for his career pointed the finger at Marv, but Marinovich is adamant that the blame belongs on himself, and only himself.

"Marv was a thorny scapegoat, as he'd delivered the genes and created the environment offering addiction fertile ground," Marinovich writes. "He could be a ruthless tyrant obsessed with perfection, but ultimately, his criticism was child's play. The most damaging voice came from within. At the height of addiction, I needed drugs to silence my mind as much as others require air."

These days, Marinovich lives on the Big Island of Hawaii, hanging out with his dog and creating art. (Check out his work on Instagram.) Creating art isn't a bad life, he admits.

"Art takes me away," he says. "I can escape into a place that … it's hard to describe, but time is non-existent in this place, and there's a flow to it. It's kind of similar to athletics, there's a flow to athletics. But with art, there are no rules, and in football, there are."

Todd Marinovich remains one of football's great what-ifs. But even though his NFL career was a spark at best, he still tries to look back on his days at quarterback with pride.

"For me, it's truly about the experience," he says. "And I had some just beautiful, amazing — all the adjectives — experiences that the game has given me, and I'm grateful for it."

"Marinovich: Outside the Lines in Football, Art, and Addiction," by Todd Marinovich with Lizzy Wright, goes on sale Aug. 5.

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Todd Marinovich, former phenom QB-turned-cautionary tale, steps out from under his own myth in new book

Todd Marinovich, former phenom QBturnedcautionary tale, steps out from under his own myth in new book Jay BusbeeJuly 3...
New Photo - Amazon reports solid 2Q results and offers better-than-expected sales view despite tariffs

Amazon reports solid 2Q results and offers betterthanexpected sales view despite tariffs ANNE D'INNOCENZIO July 31, 2025 at 4:34 PM NEW YORK (AP) — Amazon posted higher fiscal secondquarter profit and sales than the yearago period, underscoring the online giant's resilience despite tariff uncertaint...

- - Amazon reports solid 2Q results and offers better-than-expected sales view despite tariffs

ANNE D'INNOCENZIO July 31, 2025 at 4:34 PM

NEW YORK (AP) — Amazon posted higher fiscal second-quarter profit and sales than the year-ago period, underscoring the online giant's resilience despite tariff uncertainty.

The Seattle-based company also offered on Thursday a sales outlook for the current quarter that beat analysts' projections. Still, its shares fell nearly 7% in after-market trading as the company's estimates for operating income for the current quarter were below analysts' views.

The company reported 17.5% growth for its prominent cloud computing arm Amazon Web Services.

The results come even as uncertainty about President Donald Trump's tariffs have challenged companies and consumers. But Amazon and other large retailers have tried to beat the clock by bringing in foreign goods before Trump's tariffs took effect. Amazon, like many other big retailers, also has the clout to negotiate prices with its suppliers and a broad breadth of items.

Amazon's CEO Andy Jassy told investors that while there's lots of noise about the impact of tariffs on retail prices and consumption, he said "it's impossible to know what will happen." That's because, in part, no one knows where tariffs will finally settle, especially in China, he said.

"If costs end up being higher, we will absorb them, but what we can share is what we've seen thus far, through the first half of the year, we haven't yet seen diminishing demand nor prices meaningfully appreciating," he said.

Jassy also touted the diversity of its more than 2 million sellers in its third-party marketplace, all with different strategies of whether to pass on higher costs to shoppers.

Meanwhile, Amazon is one of the biggest players in the race around generative artificial intelligence.

Like other tech companies, it has increased investments in the technology and is spending billions to expand data centers that power AI and cloud computing. The company is also investing in its own computer chips and those developed by Nvidia. It has also expanded its own AI models and integrated generative AI into other parts of its business.

In March Amazon began testing AI-aided dubbing for select movies and shows offered on its Prime streaming service. A month earlier, the company rolled out a generative-AI infused Alexa.

Jassy anticipates generative AI will also allow Amazon to reduce its corporate workforce in the next few years.

The company is also making big investments in expanding its delivery network to bring faster delivery to customers in less densely populated areas across the U.S. Jassy told investors Thursday that the service is available in 1,000 of the more than 4,000 smaller cities, towns and rural communities targeted by year-end. He noted the early response has been "positive," with customers shopping more frequently and purchasing household essentials.

Amazon earned $18.16 billion, or $1.68 per share, for the quarter ended June 30. That's up from $13.49 billion, or $1.26 per share, in the year-ago period.

Revenue rose to $167.7 billion from $147.9 billion a year ago.

The company's sales figure excluded the impact from Amazon's Prime Day event, which ran from July 8 to July 11. For the first time, Amazon held Prime Day over four days instead of two.

Analysts expected earnings per share of $1.33 on sales of $162.19 billion for the quarter, according to FactSet.

The company said it expects sales for the current quarter of between $174 billion and $179.5 billion. Analysts expected $173.27 billion for the current quarter, according to FactSet.

However, Amazon said that operating income is expected to be between $15.5 billion and $20.5 billion for the third quarter, compared with $17.4 billion in the third quarter of 2024. Analysts expected $19.5 billion for the current quarter, according to FactSet.

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Amazon reports solid 2Q results and offers better-than-expected sales view despite tariffs

Amazon reports solid 2Q results and offers betterthanexpected sales view despite tariffs ANNE D'INNOCENZIO July 31...

John Stamos Replaces Josh Gad in Cynthia Erivo's "Jesus Christ Superstar "Production Madison E. GoldbergJuly 31, 2025 at 10:55 PM Neilson Barnard/Getty; Michael Kovac/Getty Josh Gad; John Stamos John Stamos will replace Josh Gad in Jesus Christ Superstar after Gad contracted COVID Stamos will play K...

- - John Stamos Replaces Josh Gad in Cynthia Erivo's "Jesus Christ Superstar "Production

Madison E. GoldbergJuly 31, 2025 at 10:55 PM

Neilson Barnard/Getty; Michael Kovac/Getty

Josh Gad; John Stamos

John Stamos will replace Josh Gad in Jesus Christ Superstar after Gad contracted COVID

Stamos will play King Herod in the play opening on Aug. 1

Cynthia Erivo will play Jesus, with Adam Lambert as Judas

John Stamos is stepping onto the stage to replace Josh Gad in Jesus Christ Superstar after the Frozen star contracted COVID.

Stamos, 61, will take on the role of King Herod in the live production at the Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles on Friday, Aug. 1. Cynthia Erivo stars as Jesus opposite Adam Lambert as Judas in the musical, according to the Hollywood Bowl and Playbill.

"Well… this weekend just got Biblical," the Full House alum wrote in an Instagram post. "I'm stepping in as King Herod in Jesus Christ Superstar at the @HollywoodBowl, starring the brilliant @cynthiaerivo . King @Joshgad unexpectedly got hit with COVID (feel better soon, brother!)and while I didn't push him down the stairs, I am grateful for the chance to step into the gold lamé," the post read.

"This is an honor. A dream. And also a little insane because… I just stepped off a plane from @thebeachboys tour in Spain and have less than 24 hours to pull this off. Wish me luck. And let's rock the Bowl," the post, shared on Thursday, July 31, read.

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On Wednesday, July 30, Gad, 44, confirmed through an Instagram statement that he will miss the musical's opening weekend.

"It is with enormous heartbreak that I inform you all that unfortunately, I have contracted a virus known as COVID (remember that one little bastard from season one of 'earth really sucks right now?'?" Gad wrote in all caps.

John Stamos/Instagram

John Stamos Replaces Josh Gad in Jesus Christ Superstar

Gad said "out of an abundance of caution" as well as "respect for my cast," he would not be in Jesus Christ Superstar unless he tested negative in the next 48 hours.

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"It truly breaks my heart, but I can assure you all that this is going to be one of the greatest things you will ever see," he continued.

Jesus Christ Superstar was written by Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice. It began as a concept album in 1970, before debuting on Broadway the following year. The musical was adapted into a movie in 1973, a made-for-TV movie in 1999 and a 2018 live NBC special that starred John Legend and Sara Bareilles.

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John Stamos Replaces Josh Gad in Cynthia Erivo's “Jesus Christ Superstar ”Production

John Stamos Replaces Josh Gad in Cynthia Erivo's "Jesus Christ Superstar "Production Madison E. Goldberg...

 

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