#Lucie-Mae Sumner
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Another bunch of photos from the LND concert.
#norm lewis#celinde schoenmaker#Matthew Seadon-Young#courtney stapleton#nic greenshields#charles brunton#Lucie-Mae Sumner#love never dies#phantom of the opera#the phantom of the opera
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Hello lovely helpers!! I hope you’re having a nice Valentine’s Day! Can I please ask for some female (and non binary) faceclaims between 18-40 who can play the sisters of a Lyndsy Fonseca faceclaim, please? Thank you so much in advance <3 :)
happy valentine's day! the answer is under the cut.
bella ramsey (19) – bella is genderfluid and uses any pronouns!
talia ryder (20)
maddie ziegler (20)
zoe colletti (21)
ava allan (22)
landry bender (22)
mackenzie foy (22)
brenna d’amico (22)
maisie peters (22)
milly alcock (22)
thomasin mckenzie (22)
bailee madison (23)
kiernan shipka (23)
danielle rose russell (23)
katelyn nacon (23)
alva bratt (24)
ryan simpkins – (24) ryan is nonbinary and uses they/she pronouns!
maya hawke (24)
eliana jones (25)
nicole maines (25) – nicole is a trans woman!
maisie williams (25)
kristine froseth (26)
lorde (26)
madison davenport (26)
katherine langford (26)
ella purnell (26)
kaitlyn dever (26)
haley lu richardson (27)
liv hewson (27) – liv is nonbinary and uses they/them pronouns!
emma mackey (27)
emma corrin (27) – emma is nonbinary and uses they/them pronouns!
liana liberato (27)
natalia dyer (28)
danielle campbell (28)
bridgette lundy paine (28) – bridgette is nonbinary and uses they/them pronouns!
margaret qualley (28)
emilija baranac (28)
liz gillies (29)
barbara palvin (29)
alycia debnam carey (29)
emily rudd (29)
india eisley (29)
daisy ridley (30)
er fightmaster (30) – er is nonbinary and uses they/them pronouns!
gracie gillam (30)
katie stevens (30)
theo germaine (30) – theo is nonbinary and uses they/them pronouns!
kaya scodelario (30)
jessica barden (30)
willa holland (31)
spencer locke (31)
kacey rohl (31)
lauren berlin (32)
eliot sumner (32) – elliot is nonbinary and uses they/them pronouns!
rachel brosnahan (32)
dominique provost-chalkley (32) – dominique is nonbinary and uses they/them pronouns!
sarah hyland (32)
cassie scerbo (32)
meghann fahy (32)
dakota johnson (33)
lucy hale (33)
allie bertram (33)
phoebe tonkin (33)
riley keough (33)
emma stone (34)
nico tortorella (34) – nico is genderfluid and uses they/them pronouns!
mae whitman (34)
allison wiliams (34)
anna popplewell (34)
heida reed (34)
evan rachel wood (35)
aidy bryant (35)
megan fox (36)
emilia clarke (36)
ruby rose (36) – ruby is genderfluid and uses she/they pronouns!
marie avgeropoulus (36)
alexandra daddario (36)
anna kendrick (37)
tatiana maslany (37)
crystal reed (38)
claire foy (38)
jaimie alexander (38)
rebecca ferguson (39)
tammin sursok (39)
felicity jones (39)
sophia bush (40)
cobie smulders (40)
gillian jacobs (40)
meghan ory (40)
lauren cohan (41)
bridget regan (41)
krysten ritter (41)
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Press Review: I Should Be So Lucky at The Alexandra Theatre
The wedding is off, but the honeymoon is on! After Ella (Lucie-Mae Sumner) is left at the alter by fiancé Nathan (Billy Roberts), she decides to still go on her honeymoon to Turkey, accompanied by her family and friends. With guidance from video projections of THE Kylie Minogue in a large mirror, her broken heart starts to heal after meeting the handsome waiter Nadeem (Matthew Croke). Nathan…
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hello! first of all, i'd like to add that i'm extremely appreciative of how you continue to repost awareness about palestine to this day and how you haven't been afraid to toss aside one thing to uphold the blog's main purpose. if that makes sense, haha. as for a request, i'm wondering if you have any face claims that could fit a woman or nonbinary person that looks as though they have the vibes of being in a modern-day band, please? i have no preference for ethnicity, and the fcs should be able to pass as 30 or under i think! and i'd be happy with fcs who are actors or are musicians themselves, though appropriate resources are always perfect. thank you so much!
Mae Whitman (1988) - is pansexual - Jack.
FKA twigs (1988) African-Jamaican / English, Spanish.
BbyMutha (1989) African-American - is non-binary and bisexual (they/she).
Eliot Sumner (1990) - has said that they did not believe in gender labels and did not identify with a particular gender (they/them).
Sarah Kameela Impey (1991) Indo-Guyanese / British - We Are Lady Parts.
Lucie Shorthouse (1991) Ugandan, Irish / English - We Are Lady Parts.
Sky Ferreira (1992) Ojibwe, Cree, Chippewa Cree, Cheyenne, Brazilian of Portuguese and Possibly Other descent, Galician Jewish, Bukovina Jewish, Irish, Scottish, English, and French - has Chronic Lyme Disease.
Faith Omole (1992) Black British - We are Lady Parts.
Mads Paige (1992) - is non-binary.
Katie Gavin / MUNA (1992) - is queer.
Rhian Teasdale / Wet Leg (1992/3)
Taylor Momsen (1993)
Naomi McPherson (1993) West Indian and Irish - is queer and nonbinary (they/them).
Jup do Bairro (1993) Afro Brazilian.
Naomi McPherson (1993) - is queer.
Park Gyu Young (1993) Korean - Sweet Home.
Nemahsis (1994) Palestinian.
Hester Chambers / Wet Leg (1994)
Ryan Destiny (1995) African-American, 1/4 Irish.
Yseult (1994) Cameroonian.
Dua Saleh (1994) Sudanese - is trans non-binary (they/xe) and gay.
Josette Maskin / MUNA (1994) Jewish - is queer and nonbinary (she/they).
Liniker (1995) Afro-Brazilian - is a genderfluid trans woman (she/her).
Kehlani (1995) African-American, French, Blackfoot, Cherokee, Spanish, Mexican, Filipino, Scottish, English, German, Scots-Irish/Northern Irish, and Welsh, as well as distant Cornish, Irish, and possibly Choctaw - is a non-binary womxn and a lesbian.
Nat Puff / Left at London (1996) - is a non-binary trans woman, has ADHD, PTSD, borderline personality disorder and OSDD-1b, and is also autistic.
Juliette Motamed (1997) Iranian - We Are Lady Parts.
Rico Nasty (1997) African-American / Puerto Rican.
Kaiit (1997) Papuan / Gunditjmara, Torres Strait Islander - non-binary (she/he/they).
MegaGoneFree (2001) African American - is non-binary and pansexual (she/they).
Stella Quaresma / Flo (2001) Black British.
Jorja Douglas / Flo (2002) Black British.
Renée Downer / Flo (2002) Black British.
SuperKnova (?) Korean - is a genderfluid trans woman (she/her).
Amy Love / Nova Twins (?) Iranian and Nigerian.
Georgia South / Nova Twins (?) Jamaican and Australian.
Bobbi Lanea Tyler / Flyana Boss (?) African-American.
Folayan Omi Kunerede / Flyana Boss (?) African-American.
Here you go! And people who don't post about literal genocide need to do better.
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Guys And Dolls @ Savoy Theatre 2016 (#65)
Title: Guys And Dolls
Venue: Savoy Theatre
Year: 2016
Condition: Creasing
Author: Music and Lyrics by Frank Loesser. Book by Jo Swerling and Abe Burrows.
Director: Gordon Greenberg
Choreographer: Carlos Acosta and Andrew Wright
Cast: Sophie Thompson, David Haig, Jamie Parker, Siubhan Harrison, Gavin Spokes, Ian Hughes, Neil McCaul, Nic Greenshields, Cornelius Clarke, William Oxborrow, Lorna Gayle, Carl Patrick, Lucy Jane Adcock, Abigail Brodie, Momar Diagne, Lavinia Fitzpatrick, Selina Hamilton, Frankie Jenna, Jacob Maynard, Genevieve Nicole, Max Parker, James Revell, Giovanni Spano, Jonathan Stewart, Lucie-Mae Sumner, Liam Wrate
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Actor of the Week: Lucy-Mae Sumner
Actor of the Week: @LuiceMaeSumner
Lucie-Mae trained at the National Youth Theatre and the Royal Academy of Music.
Her theatre credits includes: Titanic: The Musical (International tour), Chicago, Quality Street and Travesties (Pitlochry Festival Theatre), Barnum (Menier Chocolate Factory/Chichester Festival Theatre), A Damsel in Distress (Chichester Festival Theatre), Mary Poppins (UK tour/International tour), Guys and Dolls (…
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Marcus Brigstocke, Laura Pitt-Pulford and cast in Barnum – Photo by Nobby Clark
‘There’s a sucker born every minute’ and the same can be said for West End revivals. Some hit their mark, and some are perhaps better left to our memories. In terms of revivals, Barnum is a risky choice. Ultimately, the show lives or dies on the successful casting of the leading man, but also requires an abundance of extravagant circus stunts which set it apart from a typical musical.
Barnum is a semi-biographical production detailing the life of notorious showman, businessman and politician Phineas T. Barnum; known best for founding Barnum and Bailey Circus. From the likes of Joyce Heth, the alleged oldest woman in the world, to General Tom Thumb – Barnum was known for his charisma and unparalleled ability to ‘humbug’ his audiences with hoaxes and human curiosities.
It takes an exceptional performer to portray such an exuberant and larger than life man, and several such as Michael Crawford and Reg Livermore have done so in the past with charisma, magnetism and exceptional physical skill. Marcus Brigstocke is entertaining and endearing during his off-script interactions, however, in many ways, it appears he is still finding his feet – literally.
The joy of live theatre means no two shows will be the same and this is particularly relevant for stunts. That said, as much as audiences expect to see ‘the lift’ in Dirty Dancing or hear the high F in Wicked, a certain level of circus ability is expected of P. T. Barnum.
Laura Pitt-Pulford is exceptional as Barnum’s wife and is the stand-out within the production delivering heart, sincerity and a solid axis to which the spectacle of the show can be anchored. Vocally, her rendition of ‘colours of my life’ is outstanding and you certainly miss the stability she brings to the production when not on stage. Her chemistry with Brigstocke is palpable and the intensity of the emotion in these scenes make for engaging theatre.
The ensemble are unbelievable and the stunts simply jaw-dropping. The technical complexity of the tumbling and acrobatics executed within Paul Farnsworth’s elegant, yet aesthetically stimulating, circus-themed arena, are riveting.
The final scene of the production demonstrates why Brigstocke was cast in the role. In this moment his conviction is clearly visible, and his delivery is indisputably moving. As the underlying metaphor and truth of the piece are revealed, Brigstocke delivers a sincerity and vulnerability that rounds out the production, and the character, beautifully.
A tall order and no easy feat for cast or crew, when all is considered, Barnum is an exciting and heartfelt show. Perhaps not quite the full package that has been delivered in the past, yet few could deny that this is a stirring production brimming with larger than life stunts and some truly spectacular moments… and that’s no humbug!
Review by Cassandra Griffin
Barnum tells the story of P.T. Barnum, the Greatest Showman on Earth, who combines razzle-dazzle with charm and brass to sell “humbug” to cheering crowds. A joyful and moving musical portrait of the nineteenth century’s greatest show-biz legend, Barnum is a colourful, dynamic spectacle full of circus, side-show legends, toe-tapping songs and immense heart.
CAST Marcus Brigstocke, Danny Collins, Eamonn Cox, Tupele Dorgu, Rosie Fletcher, Harry Francis, Ainsley Hall Ricketts, Courtney Hows, Bethany Huckle, Kelsey Jamieson, Preston Jamieson, Philip Marriott, Dominic Owen, Meghane Poulet, Laura Pitt-Pulford, Celinde Schoenmaker, Lucie-Mae Sumner, Owen Winship.
CREATIVES Direction – Gordon Greenberg Choreography – Rebecca Howell Set & Costume Design – Paul Farnsworth Circus Direction – Scott Maidment Hair & Wig Design – Richard Mawbey Magic Consultants – Chris Fisher & Chris Cox Lighting Design – Philip Gladwell Sound Design – Gregory Clarke Orchestrations – Chris Walker Musical Direction – Alex Parker
Barnum Music by Cy Coleman Lyrics by Michael Stewart Book by Mark Bramble
25th November – 3rd March 2018 Approximate running time: 2 hours and 15 minutes, including one interval. http://ift.tt/TzBIt3
http://ift.tt/2kelYiU London Theatre 1
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SOLD 🎭 Avenue Q @ New Wimbledon Theatre 2014 (#15)
Title: Avenue Q
Venue: New Wimbledon Theatre
Year: 2014
Condition: Creasing to back cover
Author: Music and Lyrics by Robert Lopez and Jeff Marx. Book by Jeff Whitty
Director: Cresside Care
Choreographer: Cresside Care
Cast: Stephen Arden, Richard Morse, Jessica Parker, Tom Steedon, Lucie-Mae Sumner, Jacqueline Tate, Ellena Vincent, Greg Airey, Will Hawksworth, Emily-Jane Morris, Etisyai Philip
FIND ON EBAY HERE
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