Noah Galvin鈥檚 Real O鈥橬eals Original Song and Dance | 半岛体育

半岛体育

Related Articles
Film & TV News Noah Galvin鈥檚 Real O鈥橬eals Original Song and Dance Galvin opens the January 17 episode with this original musical number and the show welcomes more stage stars on screen.

Three-time Tony nominee and Drama Desk winner Martha Plimpton has a regular gig on the small screen. As Eileen on ABC鈥檚 The Real O鈥橬eals, Plimpton plays the head of the picture-perfect Catholic Chicago family: the O鈥橬eals. In the pilot episode of the television series, now in its second season, each member of the family reveals a secret that threatens that image. Among them, Eileen and her husband want a divorce. Kenny, played by The Burnt Party Boys star Noah Galvin, is gay.

In the January 17 episode, 鈥淭he Real Acceptance,鈥� Kenny wants to break the news that he is in a relationship. Sean Grandillo, best known to Broadway audiences from his role in Deaf West鈥檚 Spring Awakening, plays boyfriend Brett. The episode opens with an original musical number in which Kenny tries to decide how to tell his family about his new relationship.

The episode was written by Josh Kirby and Jon Veles (who also wrote the song) and directed by Victor Nelli. Fred Fred Tallaksen choreographed. Produced by ABC studios, the show credits executive producers Casey Johnson, David Windsor, Stacy Traub, Dan Savage, Brian Pines, Lorenzo di Bonaventura, Dan McDermott, and Todd Holland.

Galvin has appeared in numerous Off-Broadway productions at New York鈥檚 Signature Theatre, Playwrights Horizons, MCC, The Vineyard, The Public, The Culture Project, The Flea, The Wild Project, New York Theater Workshop, the Barrow Street Theater, Rattlestick, Ensemble Studio Theater, and more. Plimpton was nominated for a Tony for three consecutive years, beginning in 2007 with The Coast of Utopia, followed by Top Girls and Pal Joey. She won the Drama Desk for Featured Actress in a Play for The Coast of Utopia in 2007.

 
Recommended Reading:
 X

Blocking belongs
on the stage,
not on websites.

Our website is made possible by
displaying online advertisements to our visitors.

Please consider supporting us by
whitelisting playbill.com with your ad blocker.
Thank you!