How Broadway鈥檚 New Rupert Murdoch Play Ink Became an Onstage Tabloid | 半岛体育

半岛体育

Opening Night How Broadway鈥檚 New Rupert Murdoch Play Ink Became an Onstage Tabloid Stars Jonny Lee Miller and Bertie Carvel and the company of Manhattan Theatre Club鈥檚 Ink reveal the logic behind the play on 半岛体育鈥檚 red carpet live.
Jonny Lee Miller and Bertie Carvel Joseph Marzullo/WENN

As you watch James Graham鈥檚 play Ink unfold onstage, the drama about Rupert Murdoch鈥檚 takeover and transformation of The Sun newspaper in 1969 plays out with comedy, absurdism, and even musical numbers. The play opened April 24, as the final Broadway offering this season at Manhattan Theatre Club, and has already been extended twice鈥攖hrough June 23.

鈥淲hat I love that Rupert has done and James has done is they've made a piece that's in the style of a tabloid,鈥� Robert Stanton, who plays The Sun鈥檚 creative director Bernard Shrimsley, told 半岛体育 live on the opening night red carpet. 鈥淚t鈥檚 vulgar, it鈥檚 tawdry, it鈥檚 glitzy, it鈥檚 fun. I think it therefore gets under your skin so when things turn very dark in Act 2 it takes you by surprise because you鈥檝e fallen in love with these characters.鈥�

Read Reviews for the Rupert Murdoch Drama Ink on Broadway

Stanton and his fellow castmates, including stars Bertie Carvel (who plays Murdoch) and Jonny Lee Miller (who plays The Sun editor Larry Lamb), spoke with 半岛体育 about the Olivier-winning Ink in the video below.

鈥淭he Sun newspaper has a very comic, anarchic identity in that period鈥攊n particular in England,鈥� said director Rupert Goold of the style and his vision. 鈥淚t draws on Monty Python, Goon Show, almost like pop art in a very British way so that was an obvious reference point. But it's also a gang show. The whole show is made by this whole group of people working at The Sun newspaper.鈥�

鈥淔or whatever reason I quite like setting plays in institutions and jobs and offices and using that to make sense of something bigger,鈥� said Graham, who began work on the show years ago as a commission for the Almeida Theatre Company in England. 鈥淭he thing we kept being aware of, this was pre-Brexit, pre-Trump, was the re-emergence of populism. That was the reason to go back as an origin story to the beginning of something that I feel like we're living in the legacy of.鈥�

Photos: MTC's Ink Opens on Broadway

 
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