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  • Broncos vs. Bills: A Clash of Titans – Can Denver Tame the Dual-Threat Juggernaut Josh Allen?

    Broncos vs. Bills: A Clash of Titans – Can Denver Tame the Dual-Threat Juggernaut Josh Allen?

    ENGLEWOOD, Colo. — The stage is set for a heavyweight clash this Sunday as the Denver Broncos, riding high on the best pass-rushing season in franchise history, prepare to take on the formidable Buffalo Bills and their cannon-armed quarterback, Josh Allen, in an AFC wild-card matchup. Buckle up, because this showdown promises to be a test of wills—might versus might, speed against strength—against the backdrop of playoff intensity. nnIn the Bills’ opening game of the season against the Arizona Cardinals, Allen showcased his incredible pocket awareness. Down by a touchdown, he faced a blitzing linebacker, yet instead of faltering under the pressure, he ducked, danced, and delivered a strike to running back James Cook—resulting in a pivotal 25-yard gain that shifted the tide of the game. “This is one of those games where you really can’t rush selfish,” said Broncos sack leader Nik Bonitto, who notched 14 sacks this season—an impressive feat that harks back to the days of Von Miller.nnThe Broncos’ defense, boasting a collective 63 sacks from 16 players, has become a well-oiled machine, with collaboration and synergy being the secret sauce to their success. Each player has risen to the occasion, contributing to the highest sack total since 2018. “You try to cage him in because everybody knows when he gets outside the pocket, he’s really dangerous,” Bonitto added, underscoring the need for discipline and teamwork in their quest to contain Allen.nnBut let’s get real—keeping Allen in check is no small task. With his 6-foot-5, 237-pound frame and a combination of speed and agility that could leave any linebacker in the dust, Allen is a dual-threat. The quarterback has learned to navigate the tightrope between chaos and brilliance—his ability to read defenses and adjust has led to a career-low in sacks taken, just 14 this season. The Broncos will have to bring their A-game if they’re going to get to him. nn“Josh is so mobile and so strong that it’s really hard to bring him down,” noted Broncos defensive end Zach Allen, who—despite sharing a last name—has no connection to the Bills’ signal-caller. As the game looms, defensive coordinator Vance Joseph finds himself in a strategic balancing act—blitz heavily versus playing it safe? The Broncos blitzed on 37 percent of opponent dropbacks, ranking fourth in the league, but against a quarterback as adept as Allen, one misstep could lead to explosive plays.nnThe Broncos recognize the need for a focused effort, especially in the secondary, where cornerback Pat Surtain II prepares for the challenge that arises when Allen extends plays. “What I watch on film is that guys will be covered, but his scrambling ability and his second-play ability are key for us,” Surtain emphasized, highlighting the importance of being patient and relentless. “When he extends plays, that’s where he really becomes a playmaker.”nnMoreover, Allen’s ability to throw on the run—averaging 8 yards per attempt when outside the pocket—adds another layer of complexity for Denver. The Bills’ offensive line, arguably the best Allen has played behind during his time in Buffalo, provides him with a sheltered environment to unleash his cannon of an arm. With pressure allowed on only 34.5 percent of opponent blitzes, stopping Allen from gaining momentum will require a multifaceted approach.nnAnd let’s not forget the ground game—the Bills became the first team in NFL history this season to boast over 30 rushing and passing touchdowns, a testament to the balance introduced by their offensive coordinator Joe Brady. This presents yet another challenge for a Broncos defense that has significantly improved its run defense, setting the stage for an exhilarating duel of strategy and execution.nnAs the anticipation builds, the mindset within the Broncos’ camp remains resolute. “We’re not going to back down to anybody,” Bonitto proclaimed, embodying the fierce spirit of a team that relishes the underdog role. With every snap, every tackle, and every calculated risk, the Broncos aim not just to face Allen—but to face him down—knowing that the stakes are high, and the reward could be the start of a storied playoff run.

  • Yan Couto: The Unsung Hero Ready to Ignite Your EA FC 25 Ultimate Team!

    Yan Couto: The Unsung Hero Ready to Ignite Your EA FC 25 Ultimate Team!

    Braziian defender Yan Couto is rumored to be making waves in the EA FC 25 Ultimate Team as a new NumeroFUT player—thanks to a leak from none other than X/FUT Sheriff, a source that’s gained plenty of trust among fans for its track record. While the digital pitch is filled with superstars like Antoine Griezmann and Eder Militao, Couto’s potential arrival adds a refreshing layer to the game—one that may not scream ‘overpowered’ but certainly packs a punch in the right circumstances.,At just 22 years old, Couto is establishing himself as a noteworthy figure in Borussia Dortmund’s roster. His base overall rating of 80 may not turn heads immediately, but this Brazilian right-back is the definition of an unsung hero—a player whose skills could elevate the game to new heights if given the right tools. Leaks suggest a potential upgrade to an 89-rated card with key attributes that could see him flourish as a Wing-Back. Imagine the exhilaration, the rush of nailing those tackles, and pushing the ball up the flank while your opponents scramble to catch up. This isn’t just speculation; it’s a tantalizing glimpse of what could be.,Couto’s playing style is largely defined by his speed and dribbling—skills that fit seamlessly into the evolving FC IQ system. As he maneuvers past opponents with the agility of a cat, defenders are left grasping at shadows. The speculation surrounding his card also hints at the Jockey+ PlayStyle—an attribute that could give players a leg-up against nimble dribblers and electrifying attackers. It’s this kind of tactical advantage that makes the game thrilling; every match becomes a chess game where every move counts and hasty decisions can tilt the balance.,Indeed, the second batch of NumeroFUT players is shaping up to be a spectacle, promising not just fan favorites but also hidden gems—like Couto—that could redefine gameplay. As X/FUT Sheriff has noted, “the lineup could bring exciting options to EA FC 25.” With heavyweights like Militao and Griezmann flanking the ranks, the anticipation for this fresh batch is already palpable, especially with Team of the Year looming closer on the horizon.,In a gaming landscape often dominated by the usual suspects, Yan Couto represents the thrill of the unexpected—a player who might not be the headline grabber but has the potential to be your secret weapon. With the hype around his predicted card rising, fans are left in eager anticipation. If Couto’s leaked stats hold true, we could be looking at a formidable addition for any EA FC 25 squad—one that combines tactical prowess with the excitement of beating the odds. Get ready to sharpen those tactics; a new contender is on the brink of entering the game!

  • Anita Bryant, Singer and Crusader Against Gay Rights, Dies at 84

    Anita Bryant, Singer and Crusader Against Gay Rights, Dies at 84

    Jim Abrahams, ‘Airplane!,’ ‘Naked Gun’ and ‘Hot Shots!’ Master of Mirth, Dies at 80

    Anita Bryant, the pop singer and Oklahoma beauty queen who gained fame by convincing America that a “breakfast without orange juice is like a day without sunshine” before seeing her popularity plummet as she railed against gay rights, has died. She was 84.

    Bryant died Dec. 16 at her home in Edmond, Oklahoma, her family announced.

    A brunette who personified wholesomeness, Bryant was crowned Miss Oklahoma in 1958 and finished second runner-up in the 1959 Miss America pageant. She landed on the Billboard Hot 100 with “Till There Was You” from Broadway’s The Music Man in 1959 and with “In My Little Corner of the World” and “Paper Roses,” which made it to No. 5, a year later.

    After marrying disc jockey Bob Green in 1960 and settling down in Miami Beach, Bryant released a string of albums, earned Grammy nominations in 1968, ’71 and ’73, was a frequent guest on variety and talk shows and traveled for six years with Bob Hope on his USO tours, making trips to entertain the troops in Vietnam.

    One of Bryant’s biggest fans was President Lyndon Johnson. So taken by her rendition of “Battle Hymn of the Republic” during the Super Bowl halftime show in 1971, he asked her to sing it at his funeral, and she did so in 1973.

    Bryant appeared in commercials for Coca-Cola, Kraft, Holiday Inn and Tupperware but became a household name after signing on as spokesperson for the Florida Citrus Commission in 1968. For more than a decade, she poured glass after glass of orange juice in dozens of nationally aired TV spots while singing “Come to the Florida Sunshine Tree.”

    However, Bryant’s reputation was put to the test in 1977 after she organized a “Save Our Children” movement to repeal a Miami-Dade County ordinance prohibiting discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation. A born-again Christian, she did not want gay people teaching schoolchildren.

    “I got involved only because they were asking for special privileges that violated the state law of Florida, not to mention God’s law,” Bryant told Playboy in a 1978 interview. “You know, when I was a child, you didn’t even mention the word homosexual, much less find out what the act was about. You knew it was very bad, but you couldn’t imagine what they tried to do, exactly, in terms of one taking a male role and the other taking a female role. I mean, it was too filthy to think about and you had other things to think about. So when I finally found out all the implications, it was a total revelation for me.”

    As word spread of her crusade, Bryant gathered support from North Carolina Sen. Jesse Helms and Virginia pastor Jerry Falwell, and six months after its passage, the ordinance was repealed by a vote of more than 2 to 1. Bryant then expanded the fight to other cities and states, and with her help, Falwell in 1979 created the Moral Majority movement for religious conservatives that denounced the LGBTQ community, abortion rights supporters and others.

    Ultimately, Bryant would pay a price. Gay rights activists targeted her and launched a nationwide boycott of Florida orange juice. Bars stopped serving screwdrivers, replacing them with a mixture of vodka and apple juice called the Anita Bryant cocktail.

    Bryant told Playboy that she lost about a half-million dollars in concert bookings as her public appearances became magnets for gay-rights protesters and a deal to host her own TV show. She also became a punchline for comedians, and the Florida Citrus Commission dumped her in 1980.

    Bryant holds the dubious distinction of being perhaps the first recipient of a protest pie. She was speaking out against homosexuality during a 1977 news conference in Des Moines, Iowa, when she was creamed in the face by Thom Higgins, an activist from St. Paul, Minnesota. “At least it’s a fruit pie,” she quipped before saying a prayer for her attacker.

    Anita Jane Bryant was born on March 25, 1940, in Barnsdall, Oklahoma. At age 2, as she started singing at a local Baptist church, her parents — Warren, who worked in the oil fields, and Lenora — divorced. She and her late younger sister, Sandra, moved in with her maternal grandparents. In 1948, after her folks remarried, she performed at a local radio station and was baptized.

    The family moved to Oklahoma City in search of bigger opportunities for Bryant, and she won a contest that led to her own weekly TV show in 1952, then cut her first record a year later. Her parents divorced again, and her mother took the girls to Tulsa.

    Bryant attended Will Rogers High School, sang in school and church choirs and starred in a regional production of South Pacific. While appearing on a local TV variety show, she was spotted by a talent scout for Arthur Godfrey and went on to take first prize on his Talent Scouts CBS program.

    After graduating from high school in 1958, she signed a contract with Carlton Records and released her first single, the pop tune “Dance On.” She won the Miss Tulsa contest and was crowned Miss Oklahoma before losing to Mississippi’s Mary Ann Mobley in the Miss America pageant, then joined Don McNeill’s Breakfast Club, a Chicago-based ABC radio show.

    In 1970, she published an autobiography, Mine Eyes Have Seen the Glory.

    When Green and Bryant divorced in 1980, she lost support from conservatives who said she was no longer a suitable role model. “There were those who said, ‘You’ve written all these books about family togetherness and we’re not supporting you anymore. We’re not into buying your books and records anymore,’ ” Green said in a 2007 profile for the Miami Herald.

    “Blame gay people? I do,” Green said. “Their stated goal was to put [Bryant] out of business and destroy her career. And that’s what they did. It’s unfair.”

    After her divorce, Bryant focused on Christian music and charity work through the Anita Bryant Ministries International, a nonprofit she had established in 1967.

    She married the late Charles Dry, a former astronaut test crewman who had been her childhood sweetheart, in 1990. They made several attempts to resuscitate her career, but ventures such as the Anita Bryant Theatre in Branson, Missouri; a show bearing her name in Eureka Springs, Arkansas; and the Anita Bryant Music Mansion in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee, failed, resulting in owed bills and unpaid taxes.

    Bryant occasionally resurfaced, most noticeably as herself in the Michael Moore documentary Roger & Me (1989), but mainly stayed out of the limelight.

    Meanwhile, she had become a pop culture punchline, with The Carol Burnett Show, Saturday Night Live, The Gong Show, The Golden Girls, Will & Grace and the movie Airplane! making fun of her. She also was lampooned in Anita Bryant’s Playboy Interview, a 2016 play that was based on her 1978 magazine piece, and in the 2018 musical The Loneliest Girl in the World.

    A long-planned biopic, written and directed by Chad Hodge, was reported in May 2019 to be in the works, with Ashley Judd to star as Bryant.

    Survivors include her children, Robert Jr., Gloria and twins William and Barbara; two stepdaughters; and seven grandchildren.

    “I’m not a goody two-shoes. I know now I’m a human being, just like anybody else,” Bryant told Playboy. “If it weren’t for Jesus Christ in my heart and life, I probably would have married several times. I probably would have slept around with guys and whatever. I always say that I’m just a sinner saved by grace.”

  • Alec Baldwin Files Civil Rights Lawsuit Against Santa Fe Officials Over ‘Rust’ Prosecution

    Alec Baldwin Files Civil Rights Lawsuit Against Santa Fe Officials Over ‘Rust’ Prosecution

    Ted Farnsworth, Architect of Failed MoviePass Plan, Pleads Guilty to Defrauding Investors 2 days ago

    Alec Baldwin has filed a civil rights suit against the district attorney and other officials in Santa Fe, N.M., alleging that he was wrongfully prosecuted for manslaughter in the accidental shooting of “Rust” cinematographer Halyna Hutchins.

    In the 73-page complaint, Baldwin accuses D.A. Mary Carmack-Altwies, special prosecutor Kari Morrissey, and investigators on the case of a series of abuses, including eliciting false testimony and withholding exculpatory evidence.

    “Defendants, while acting under the color of law, conspired to procure a groundless indictment against Baldwin and to maliciously bring about or advance Baldwin’s trial and conviction, thus violating Baldwin’s constitutional rights by their improper use of the criminal process,” the lawsuit states.

    Baldwin filed the suit two weeks after the state attorney general refused to pursue an appeal of a judge’s order dismissing the case, thus ending the prosecution. Among the defendants are the 1st Judicial District Attorney’s Office and the Santa Fe County Board of Commissioners.

    “Criminal prosecutions are supposed to be about the search for truth and justice, not to pursue personal or political gain or harass the innocent,” said Baldwin’s lawyers, Alex Spiro and Luke Nikas, in a statement. “Kari Morrissey and the other defendants violated that basic principle, over and over, and trampled on Alec Baldwin’s rights. We bring this action to hold the defendants accountable for their misconduct and to prevent them from doing this to anyone else.”

    Baldwin went on trial in Santa Fe last July. He was accused of involuntary manslaughter, on the theory that he willfully violated the gun safety rules for movie sets when he pointed a Colt .45 at Hutchins and pulled the trigger. Unbeknown to anyone on the set, the gun was loaded with a live .45-caliber round, which killed Hutchins and wounded director Joel Souza.

    The case was dismissed three days into the trial, after Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer ruled that the special prosecutor had improperly withheld evidence from the defense.

    Shortly after the trial, Spiro sent letters to Morrissey and to Sheriff Adan Mendoza advising them to preserve evidence given “the potential for future litigation based on your actions in connection with Mr. Baldwin’s prosecution.”

    Baldwin’s attorneys repeatedly argued that he should never have been charged, saying it was not his job to verify that the gun was loaded only with dummy ammunition.

    In the weeks and months leading up to the trial, they also vociferously complained that Morrissey had withheld evidence that should have been turned over in the discovery process.

    During the trial, the defense uncovered that Morrissey had not disclosed a cache of bullets that had been turned over to investigators in March. That evidence could have been relevant in understanding how live ammunition made its way onto set.

    Morrissey argued that she believed the bullets did not match the live rounds from the “Rust” set, and therefore she had no obligation to turn them over. But when the judge cut open an evidence envelope in open court, she discovered that three of the bullets did share the same characteristics as the fatal round.

    Marlowe Sommer dismissed the case with prejudice — meaning it could not be refiled — finding the state “highly culpable” for failing to turn over the evidence.

    Carmack-Altwies, the elected D.A. in Santa Fe, has defended Morrissey, a private attorney whom she appointed to handle the “Rust” cases. But the attorney general’s office was sharply critical of Morrissey, saying that appealing the judge’s decision would have been “untenable” given the judge’s “blistering assessment of the special prosecutor’s gross mishandling of the case at trial.”

    “Perhaps if the District Attorney had selected someone with more direct experience as a prosecutor this outcome could have been avoided,” the attorney general’s spokesperson said last month.

  • Sesame Street’s New Season Features SZA, Renee Rapp, Noah Kahan, More

    Sesame Street’s New Season Features SZA, Renee Rapp, Noah Kahan, More

    Peter Yarrow, Singer With Folk Legends Peter, Paul & Mary and Co-Writer of ‘Puff the Magic Dragon,’ Dies at 86 2 days ago

    Very few television programs have the iconic history of musical guests that Sesame Street does: Over the years it’s featured everyone from Stevie Wonder to Tony Bennett, Erykah Badu to the Fugees, Patti Labelle to R.E.M., and clever interpretations like odes to the letter U from both One Direction (“What Makes U Useful”) and Smokey Robinson (“U Really Got a Hold on Me”), and opera singer Marilyn Horne trilling an operatic version of “C Is for Cookie,” and much more.

    That legacy continues in the show’s 55th season, which launches on Max with Renee Rapp on Jan. 16 and follows with SZA, Noah Kahan, Michael B. Jordan, Samara Joy, Chris Stapleton, Jonathan Van Ness and Billie Jean King joining for songs and other segments. The full schedule appears below; episodes release every Thursday. The season be available on local PBS stations across the country and on the free PBS Kids Video app Fall 2025.

    According to the announcement, Season 55’s curriculum will focus on emotional well-being, helping children learn accessible strategies to comprehend and cope with big feelings through fun, lighthearted, relatable, and engaging stories.

    “New episodes of Sesame Street will help young viewers understand and express their feelings, learn new mindfulness practices, and as always, have a blast with their favorite furry and funny friends,” said Sal Perez, the show’s executive prodiucer. “Whether it’s taking a volcano breath when angry, learning to give yourself a hug when frustrated, or wiggling it out when disappointed, we are empowering children with the strategies to help build resiliency and the foundational skills for emotional well-being.”

    “This season’s emotional well-being curriculum was developed in response to the growing mental health crisis affecting children globally,” said Dr. Rosemarie Truglio, Sesame Workshop’s Senior Vice President of Curriculum & Content. “Focusing on emotion awareness and social connection skills, children will learn that all feelings are important and that we all experience big feelings, as well as how to navigate social scenarios with friends, families, and the wider community.”

    Feature episodes include: Beachball Bop (Thursday, January 16), where Elmo learns how to do volcano breaths after he feels angry; Abby Taps Into Kindness (Thursday, April 10), where Abby learns what it means to be kind to yourself to overcome frustration, all with the help of her friends; Happy Bert Day (Thursday, July 24), where Ernie is excited to throw Bert a big, loud party for Bert’s birthday, but Bert gets frustrated as he wants to celebrate his birthday with a quiet puzzle – can lion breaths help them both feel better?; and New School Scaries (Thursday, September 4), where Cookie Monster, feeling nervous about going to a new cooking school, enlists his friends to help him prepare.

    Sesame Street is underwritten in part by Beaches Resorts and Google.

  • Lily Allen Says She’s ‘Really Not in a Good Place’ and That She’s Been ‘Spiraling and Spiraling’

    Lily Allen Says She’s ‘Really Not in a Good Place’ and That She’s Been ‘Spiraling and Spiraling’

    Lily Allen Says She’s ‘Really Not in a Good Place’ and That She’s Been ‘Spiraling and Spiraling’

    Becca Longmire

    January 9, 2025 at 2:43 PM

    Lily Allen is planning to take a break amid her ongoing mental health struggles.

    On the Thursday, Jan. 9 episode of her BBC podcast Miss Me? with co-host Miquita Oliver, Allen, 39, admitted she’s “finding it really hard to be interested in anything” at the moment while discussing the fact she hadn’t seen Sunday’s 2025 Golden Globes.

    “I’m just so… I’m really not in a good place,” the “Not Fair” singer told Oliver.

    She continued, “I know I’ve been talking about it for months, but I’ve been spiraling and spiraling and spiraling and it’s got out of control.”

    “I tried, I mean, I came to the Christmas lunch, the Miss Me? Christmas lunch, and I had a panic attack and had to go home. I went to see something at the theater the other night with my [friends] Carlo and Claire, and I had to leave at halftime,” Allen shared.

    Related: Lily Allen Says She Sometimes Feels ‘Ashamed’ of Not Having Academic Qualifications

    The mother of two — who married husband David Harbour, 49, in 2020 — continued, “I just can’t concentrate on anything except the pain that I’m going through.”

    “It’s really, really hard,” she added, confirming she was going to be taking a bit of a break.

    “I’m going away next week. You’re not gonna hear me for a few weeks, listeners,” Allen said, denying “vicious rumors” claiming she’d relapsed and was going to rehab, clearly getting emotional on the show.

    Allen’s reps didn’t immediately respond when contacted by PEOPLE.

    The musician, who has been sober for five years, has spoken openly about being free from drugs and alcohol.

    The daughter of actor and comedian, Keith Allen, told the U.K. newspaper The Times in a November interview, “I think that addiction runs deep in my family, so self-medicating was going to be on the cards. For me, it didn’t really feel like an ‘if,’ it was a ‘when.’ “

    “The journey of sobriety isn’t singular, and it isn’t linear. So if sharing my own experiences and struggles helps even just one person process what they’re going through, then it’s all worth it,” the star, who is an ambassador for the British addiction charity Forward Trust, told the outlet.

    Allen has also been open about her mental health struggles on her podcast, sharing on the Dec. 16 episode that she’s been having difficulty eating for the past three years, which she’d kept hidden from her therapist.

    “I’ve been going through a tough time over the last few months and my eating has become a real issue,” she said on the show.

    Related: Lily Allen Says She Makes ‘More Money’ from Selling Feet Photos Than ‘Having Nearly 8 Million Listeners on Spotify’

    Allen, who previously said she suffered from bulimia in 2011, said on the Dec. 16 podcast episode that she didn’t necessarily lie in therapy, but she’d been unintentionally leaving aspects of her life out during her sessions.

    “It’s just because it hasn’t seemed at the top of the list of the important things that I need to talk about,” she said, adding elsewhere on the podcast, “I’m really not in a great place mentally at the moment.”

    Never miss a story — sign up for PEOPLE’s free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

    If you or someone you know is struggling with an eating disorder, please go to NationalEatingDisorders.org.

    If you or someone you know needs mental health help, text “STRENGTH” to the Crisis Text Line at 741-741 to be connected to a certified crisis counselor.

    Read the original article on People

  • Cillian Murphy Won’t Appear In 28 Years Later But May Return In Future Sequels

    Cillian Murphy Won’t Appear In 28 Years Later But May Return In Future Sequels

    Squid Game Season 2 Ending’s Major Death Is More Tragic With This New Detail Revealed By Star This article covers a developing story. Continue to check back with us as we will be adding more information as it becomes available.

    Cillian Murphy won’t appear in 28 Years Later, but may return in future sequels.

    In a new interview with Empire, producer Andrew Macdonald confirmed that Cillian Murphy doesn’t actually appear in 28 Years Later, though he may return for future sequels. However, Murphy is involved as an executive producer. Read Macdonald’s full comments below:

    [On] this, we wanted him to be involved and he wanted to be involved. He is not in the first film, but I’m hoping there will be some Jim somewhere along the line. He’s involved at the moment as an executive producer and I would hope we can work with him in some way in the future in the trilogy.

    More to come…

    Source: Empire

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    28 Years Later Not Rated Horror

    28 Years Later follows a group of survivors living on an isolated island nearly three decades after the rage virus outbreak. Venturing into the quarantine zone of the mainland, they uncover dangerous secrets and transformations among both the infected and other surviving factions.

    Release Date June 20, 2025 Main Genre Horror Franchise(s) 28 Days Later Cast Jodie Comer , Aaron Taylor-Johnson , Jack O’Connell , Alfie Williams , Ralph Fiennes , Joe Blakemore , Celi Crossland , Geoffrey Newland , Erin Kellyman , Chi Lewis-Parry , Nathan Hall , Angus Neill , Edvin Ryding , Cillian Murphy Director Danny Boyle Producers Andrew Macdonald , Cillian Murphy Writers Danny Boyle , Alex Garland Prequel(s) 28 Days Later, 28 Weeks Later Expand

  • Otto Schenk, Opera Director and Bulwark of Tradition, Dies at 94

    Otto Schenk, Opera Director and Bulwark of Tradition, Dies at 94

    A prominent practitioner of the historically grand productions that were once fashionable at the Met, he was especially well known for his stagings of Wagner.

    Otto Schenk, the prolific Austrian director whose lavishly traditional productions for the Metropolitan Opera and the Vienna State Opera thrilled generations of music lovers, died on Thursday at his home on Lake Irrsee in Austria. He was 94.

    His death was announced by his son, the conductor Konstantin Schenk.

    In a statement on its website, the Vienna State Opera’s general director, Bogdan Roscic, said Mr. Schenk “was able to draw on the intellectual and artistic wealth of the entire history of theater and communicate it brilliantly to a wide audience.”

    In Austria, Mr. Schenk’s renown as an actor, particularly as a comedic performer, arguably eclipsed his reputation as a director. But his international reputation rested largely on the operas he produced in a career that spanned almost six decades.

    In the United States, his opulent stagings of Richard Wagner’s operas from the late 1970s to the early ’90s garnered him lasting recognition. Many, including “Parsifal,” “Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg,” “Tannhäuser” and, perhaps most famously, the four-part operatic cycle “Der Ring des Nibelungen,” are available on home video.

    Along with the Italian director Franco Zeffirelli, Mr. Schenk was one of the most prominent practitioners of the historically grand productions that were fashionable at the Met under the long tenures of the general managers Rudolph Bing and Joseph Volpe. In Europe, he remained popular as a bulwark of tradition against stage directors — including many of his own generation — who brought modern and avant-garde sensibilities to theater and opera.

    When Peter Gelb succeeded Mr. Volpe at the Met in 2006, he recruited a new crop of directors to bring more contemporary ideas to the house. Revivals of Mr. Schenk’s 16 productions for the Met — a record for a director — became increasingly infrequent.

    In 2014, during a revival of Mr. Schenk’s 40-year-old production of Richard Strauss’s “Arabella,” a headline in Vanity Fair urged readers, “See Otto Schenk’s Masterpieces at the Met Opera While You Still Can.” The same year, The New York Times reviewed several of the director’s still-popular productions at the Vienna State Opera. “Mr. Schenk, who seems to be losing his place at the Met,” the critic James R. Oestreich wrote, “evidently retains his grip at home.”

    This renewed appreciation for Mr. Schenk seemed inseparable from the backlash against the Met’s 2012 “Ring” cycle, a tech-heavy staging by Robert Lepage. That production replaced Mr. Schenk’s cycle, which Anthony Tommasini, The New York Times’s chief classical music critic, called “a lushly romantic and reverentially traditional staging.”

    Reviewing the Lepage cycle for The New Yorker, Alex Ross wrote, “Pound for pound, ton for ton, it is the most witless and wasteful production in modern operatic history.”

    How The Times decides who gets an obituary. There is no formula, scoring system or checklist in determining the news value of a life. We investigate, research and ask around before settling on our subjects. If you know of someone who might be a candidate for a Times obituary, please suggest it here.

    Learn more about our process.

    Mr. Schenk’s “Ring” was both critically lauded and an audience favorite — from 1986, when the Met inaugurated the cycle with “Die Walküre,” the second opera in the tetralogy, which was presented in full in the 1989-90 season. Over the next two decades, the Met revived it six times. All three cycles presented during the 2008-9 season were sold out.

    At the time Mr. Schenk was tapped to direct the “Ring,” it was common for leading opera companies, especially in Europe, to present Wagner’s works in updated or abstract stagings. Mr. Schenk, working closely with James Levine, the Met’s longtime music director, insisted on playing by the composer’s rules: He preserved the work’s mythic and primordial setting and presented the epic almost like a living picture book, while making the most of Romantic sets by the German stage designer Günther Schneider-Siemssen, a frequent collaborator.

    “In this era of daringly trendy reinterpretations of the ‘Ring,’ there ought to be room for a brilliantly untrendy one,” Donal Henahan wrote in a 1987 Times review of “Das Rheingold,” the first opera in the cycle. Reviewing the same production for The Times three years later, Allan Kozinn concluded, “Whether one agrees with this Urtext approach or thinks it is time to move on, one must grant that as naturalistic stagings go, the Met’s is a beauty.”

    While Mr. Schenk’s “Ring” had its share of detractors — Martin Bernheimer of The Los Angeles Times called it both reactionary and naïve — it was generally considered a triumph of traditional dramaturgy and stagecraft.

    In 1990, the production’s four installments were shown on public television in the United States. “That adds up to 17 hours of 19th-century opera in prime time,” The Times reported of the “staggering” effort, which required a television crew of 30 that worked for about a month at the opera house.

    The broadcast, which was later released on video, became a reference recording for a generation of Wagnerians. Many of the featured singers, including James Morris, Hildegard Behrens, Jessye Norman and Siegfried Jerusalem, became identified with their roles; Mr. Levine, the music director, was invited to lead the cycle at the renowned Wagner Festival in Bayreuth, Germany, between 1994 and 1998. And the video recording helped imprint Mr. Schenk’s grand tableaus in the minds of “Ring” lovers for decades to come.

    Otto Schenk was born on June 12, 1930, in Vienna. His father, Eugen, was a notary who had converted from Judaism to Roman Catholicism. His mother, Georgine, was a saleswoman and store manager at the Julius Meinl coffee company in Trieste, which was then part of the Austro-Hungarian empire. They met during World War I, when Eugen was stationed there.

    After the Anschluss in 1938, Eugen’s marriage to an Aryan woman protected him from deportation or worse, but he and his family faced discrimination. He was stripped of his job because of his Jewish origins, and young Otto was thrown out of a junior branch of the Hitler Youth.

    “Suddenly, we were a Jewish household,” Mr. Schenk recalled in a 2020 memoir. Experiencing and witnessing persecution intensified his interest in Jewish culture.

    “I became interested in the forbidden ‘Jewish music’ of Gustav Mahler, and Offenbach’s Barcarole became my anthem. Later, I began reading Heinrich Heine, Karl Kraus, Arthur Schnitzler, Franz Werfel, and Stefan Zweig, and I discovered the visual worlds of Max Liebermann and Marc Chagall,” he wrote.

    “Above all, however,” he continued, “it was Jewish humor that became the plaything of my youth and has remained a pillar of my work to this day.”

    After the war, Mr. Schenk spent two semesters at the University of Vienna studying law before switching to the prestigious Max Reinhardt Seminar to train as an actor. He graduated in 1951 and began acting and directing at several of the city’s smaller playhouses. He quickly worked his way up to the Burgtheater, Austria’s leading theater.

    Throughout a long acting career that also encompassed television and film — he lent his voice to the elderly widower Carl Fredricksen for the Austrian release of the 2009 Disney-Pixar animated feature “Up” — he always came back to the theater.

    During his most active years at the Met, Mr. Scheck between 1988 and 1997 also led the Theater in der Josefstadt, the Viennese playhouse where he had cut his teeth early in his directing career and where he had his longest association as an actor. He appeared in dozens of roles there starting in 1954, including Antonio Salieri in “Amadeus,” Bottom in “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” Vladimir in “Waiting for Godot” and Volpone. His last performance there was as Firs, the senile servant in Anton Chekhov’s “The Cherry Orchard,” in 2021.

    In 1956, he married the actress Renée Michaelis, whom he met while studying at the Max Reinhardt Seminar. She died in 2022. In addition to their son, Konstantin, he is survived by grandchildren. His older sister, the athlete Bianca Schenk, died in 2000.

    Mr. Schenk’s career in opera began in 1957 with a production of Mozart’s “Die Zauberflöte” at the Salzburg State Theater. Five years later he won wide recognition directing Alban Berg’s unfinished “Lulu” at the Theater an der Wien, a production conducted by Karl Böhm and starring Evelyn Lear. It was the Austrian premiere of a work now considered one of the 20th century’s operatic masterpieces.

    In 1964, Mr. Schenk became a house director at the Vienna State Opera, where his “Lulu” was also performed starting in 1968. He was prolific, averaging a new production per year until the late 1980s.

    His bejeweled 1968 staging of Richard Strauss’s “Der Rosenkavalier” and his severe 1970 “Fidelio,” both of which were conducted by Leonard Bernstein at their premieres, are among his six productions still in the company’s repertoire. (In 2014, half a century after his debut there with Leos Janacek’s “Jenufa,” Mr. Schenk directed his final production there, of Janacek’s “The Cunning Little Vixen.”)

    Mr. Schenk’s international star rose rapidly. He furnished productions for La Scala in Milan, the Royal Opera House in London and Germany’s leading companies in Hamburg, Berlin and Munich. At the Salzburg Festival in Austria, he directed operas and plays as well as acting onstage. For many summers he appeared as the devil, a brief yet scene-stealing role, in Hugo von Hofmannsthal’s “Everyman,” a Salzburg Festival tradition.

    Mr. Schenk made his Met debut in 1968 with Puccini’s “Tosca,” at the instance of the production’s star, the Swedish dramatic soprano Birgit Nilsson. “Traditionalists must have been pleased,” said Harold C. Schonberg, the Times’s chief classical music critic. “It was a good, old-fashioned production, with solid and realistic sets, a general air of gloominess, handsomely costumed.” The production was a hit, and the company revived it eight times over the next decade.

    Mr. Schenk’s first Wagner outing at the Met came in 1978 with “Tannhäuser.” That production, which featured sets by Mr. Schneider-Siemssen, was last seen during the 2023-24 season and was as notable for its formidable cast as for the climate protest that erupted on opening night.

    After his “Ring,” Mr. Schenk returned to the Met for two additional Wagner operas, “Parsifal” in 1991 and “Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg” in 1993, setting a high bar for aesthetically heightened literalism on the opera stage. “Otto Schenk has again made a case for traditionally staged Wagner at the Met, following the composer’s detailed direction,” the Times’s Edward Rothstein wrote of the “Meistersinger” premiere.

    When Mr. Schenk directed Donizetti’s “Don Pasquale” in 2006 as a vehicle for Anna Netrebko, the Russian star soprano, he announced that it would be his final Met production.

    Mr. Schenk defended his unwaveringly traditional approach to opera. “The rendezvous between old works and the present day is what’s exciting,” he said in an interview with the Austrian broadcaster ORF that aired for the 150th anniversary of the Vienna State Opera in 2019. “But if you stick the contemporary on top of old works it doesn’t make the whole thing modern. The text of ‘Lohengrin’ still sounds old-fashioned, even if the performer sings it while wearing a modern costume.”

  • ‘American Primeval’ Review: Hopeless on the Range

    ‘American Primeval’ Review: Hopeless on the Range

    Taylor Kitsch and Betty Gilpin star in a Netflix mini-series about the brutal, brutal West.

    In the catalog of the modern western, a lot of space is given to stories focused on what is assumed to have been the sheer miserableness of life on the frontier. Viscous carpets of mud. Frigid snowscapes. Scalpings. Rapes. The sibilant impact of arrows puncturing flesh.

    The eye-catching Netflix mini-series “American Primeval” (premiering Thursday) contains all of those in its six episodes, and more horrors besides: marauding wolves gnawing through cabin walls; a whipping by a sadistic militiaman; encounters with crazed and arrogant Frenchmen. It has a particular fetish for bloody animal carcasses, which are hung, skinned, drained and boiled with regularity. The odors are unimaginable.

    Mark L. Smith, who created and wrote “American Primeval,” has an affinity for the western as a bad dream; he and Alejandro G. Iñárritu wrote the revenge saga “The Revenant,” which revolved around a mauling by a grizzly bear. It’s as if Smith’s fascination with the endurance shown by those who took on the Old West leads him to create endurance tests for his audiences.

    Like “The Revenant,” “American Primeval” is loosely based on actual events, in this case the Utah War of 1857-58, when settlers belonging to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints formed militias and took up arms, gingerly, against the United States. Historical figures like the frontier entrepreneur Jim Bridger (Shea Whigham), who was also a prominent character in “The Revenant,” and the Latter-day Saints leader Brigham Young (Kim Coates) have large roles.

    It’s a period when settlers, displaced tribes and the United States Army all skirmished for land and authority in the recently established Utah Territory. And Smith wants to use it as a stage for something sprawling and meaningful — the latest pronouncement on how savage the supposedly civilized become when the chips are down. An Army captain played by Lucas Neff supplies the mandatory poetic narration: “I have come to believe that these lands possess forces that we civilized are not able to defend against.”

    What you need to make a revisionist-epic western work, though, is some real poetry — at least a hint of the kind of vision that informed “The Searchers” or “The Return of a Man Called Horse” or “McCabe and Mrs. Miller,” works that “American Primeval” apes but can’t echo.

    The director Peter Berg manages the gunfights and trail rides proficiently, and the cinematographer Jacques Jouffret (“Into the Wild”) provides a washed-out, blue-gray look that is handsome if not particularly distinctive for this kind of story. The aerial shots of wintry mountain vistas are monotonous yet unfailingly pleasing.

    But after some vivid early scenes when a mother and son, Sara and Devin Rowell (Betty Gilpin and Preston Mota), ride into the harrowing squalor of Bridger’s outpost seeking a guide to take them farther west, “American Primeval” is mostly dead on the page. There’s not enough excitement in the ideas, and there’s not enough thought in the storytelling.

    What’s left is the sometimes orgiastic brutality — no different from the violence in the kind of low-rent entertainment “American Primeval” wants to separate itself from — and the manifold formulas of the western. With the exception of Whigham’s puckish, entertaining Bridger, the trappers, soldiers, bounty hunters and militiamen feel like extras from one Sam Peckinpah film or another. The Shoshone and Paiute characters, meanwhile, are solemnly noble or dangerously impassioned but invariably humorless.

    The clichés compound as the Rowells head into the mountains with a reluctant guide, Isaac Reed (Taylor Kitsch, who starred in Berg’s wonderful series “Friday Night Lights”), and a runaway Native American girl, Two Moons (Shawnee Pourier, who is the show’s most expressive performer even though her character is mute).

    This bunch is carrying a lot more baggage than just blankets and hardtack, and its weight falls on the weary viewer. Sara, in particular, has issues that have followed her west from Pennsylvania and put her and Devin in constant danger. Unfortunately for Gilpin, the script works this out in ways that make Sara seem less like an imperiled 19th-century woman on the run than an exasperating and dangerously clueless Karen.

    Kitsch’s skill at playing bottled-up anguish and ardor is what his role should call for, but Isaac is a strong-and-silent caricature, too hollow to give Kitsch very much to communicate. It doesn’t help that the story is overstuffed and overcomplicated, circling back and forth from the fugitives’ flight to the jockeyings of the settlers and the Army to the plight of the Shoshone. (A clearer understanding of the geography, and a fuller explanation of the historical context, would help, but neither is provided.)

    A tighter focus on either the relationship between Sara and Isaac or on the Utah War might have allowed for a more coherent emotional and thematic arc, though at half the length. As it is, Smith juices the story in the later episodes by going weird (those Grand Guignol Frenchmen) and by breaking with the historical record in ways that may bemuse the average viewer but will likely displease any Latter-day Saints who have made it that far.

  • ‘Quiet on Set’ producer tackles Diddy abuse allegations in new docuseries: See the trailer

    ‘Quiet on Set’ producer tackles Diddy abuse allegations in new docuseries: See the trailer

    In a press conference, the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York revealed shocking allegations against Sean “Diddy” Combs.

    As Sean “Diddy” Combs’ legal fate hangs in the balance, several of his accusers are coming forward in a new docuseries to further detail his alleged abuses.

    Investigation Discovery released a trailer for its upcoming docuseries on the embattled music mogul, “The Fall of Diddy,” on Thursday. The four-part series, helmed by “Quiet on Set” producer Maxine Productions and Rolling Stone Films, will feature “exclusive, never-before-heard accounts and never-before-seen archival footage” illuminating the “harrowing allegations of violent behavior and illegal activity” recently leveled against Combs.

    “Spanning Combs’ decades-long impact on music and popular culture, from his early days as a talented creative to his 2024 arrest, the docuseries uncovers the insidious and terrifying allegations of sexual assault, abusive behavior, violence and other disturbing claims that lay beneath his success,” Investigation Discovery said in a press release.

    Combs, who was arrested in September on charges of racketeering, sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution, remains in custody at the Special Housing Unit in Brooklyn’s Metropolitan Detention Center. A trial for the Grammy-winning rapper, who’s denied all accusations against him, is set to commence on May 5.

    Combs’ alleged misconduct came under scrutiny in November 2023 when ex-girlfriend and “Me & U” singer Casandra “Cassie” Ventura accused Combs of rape, sex trafficking and physical abuse in a lawsuit that was promptly settled one day after Ventura filed. The lawsuit spurred multiple civil suits alleging rape and sexual assault by the hip-hop mogul, as well as pair of federal raids.

    The docuseries will include interviews with more than 30 Combs’ associates, ranging from former friends and colleagues to individuals who worked directly for Combs, such as former Danity Kane member D. Woods.

    Thalia Graves and Rodney “Lil Rod” Jones Jr., both of whom have sued Combs for alleged sexual assault, appear in Thursday’s trailer. Graves, who claims Combs and his bodyguard “viciously raped her” in 2001, says in the clip: “I always believed that I was the only victim.”

    Jones, who worked as a producer on Combs’ “The Love Album: Off the Grid,” alleged in his February 2024 lawsuit that the rapper “forcibly touched” him and accused Combs and his associates of participating in “a sex-trafficking venture.”

    “There’s a lot of people like Puffy in the music business,” Jones says in the trailer. “Exposing Puffy means exposing them.”

    The ID series is not the only TV exposé on Combs’ alleged abuses. Streaming service Peacock will be releasing a documentary special, “Diddy: The Making of a Bad Boy,” on Tuesday.

    “The Fall of Diddy” will premiere in two parts on Jan. 27 and Jan. 28 at 9 p.m. ET on Investigation Discovery. Episodes will also be available to stream on Max.