Mandy Patinkin steps down from Broadway's 'Great Comet' amid diversity firestorm
Tony-winning actor Mandy Patinkin dropped out of the Broadway show âNatasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812â on Friday, after an announcement that he would be replacing African American actor Okieriete "Oakâ Onaodowan in the role of Pierre was met with anger online.
Patinkin, who had been scheduled to join the cast for a limited run beginning Aug. 15 through Sept. 3, explained his decision on Twitter, saying that he âwould never accept a role knowing it would harm another actor. I hear what members of the community have said and I agree with them. I am a huge fan of Oak and I will, therefore, not be appearing in the show.â
The show's creator, Dave Malloy, subsequently also took to Twitter to explain the reason Patinkin had been asked to join the cast--the show was in desperate financial shape and needed a name actor to keep ticket sales up--and apologize for missing the âracial optics of it.â
Onaodowan, who was in the original cast of âHamilton,â had replaced Josh Groban in the role of Pierre and is scheduled to continue to perform through August 13, after which, he stated on Twitter, Friday, he will not return to the show.
In a string of mid-afternoon Tweets Malloy wrote, âPlease donât give Mandy grief. Heâs devastated. I am not sure that the show has a future now.â He concluded by announcing that he was signing off to have whiskey or ice cream, or âlikely both.â
It is not unusual for a struggling production to reach out to a big name star to boost sales, but post-âHamiltonâ and #Oscarssowhite demand for more inclusive representation on stage and screen has put a spotlight on casting and a wave of controversies that has swept through social media in recent years.
The debate can cut both ways, as ev idenced by the recent uproar following the Edward Albee estateâs decision to deny rights to the play "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolfâ after a director in Portland decided to cast the role of Nick (who is described as blonde-haired and blue-eyed in the script) with an African American actor.
Each case is unique. When it comes to âThe Great Comet,â it seems that most people feel that the producersâ decision to put the bottom line first hurt both Patinkin and Onaodowan.
Cynthia Erivo, who won a Tony last year for her role in the revival of "The Color Purple,â summed up those feelings in a tweet on Wednesday, when the original news of the casting broke.
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