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Lupone patti weighs her alleged tear with McDonald’s Audra.
Lupone, 76, shared in Monday, May 26, New Yorker McDonald, 54, is not a profile, “a friend.” While Lupone has provided further Details of the feudalThe outlet reported that it claimed it happened “long ago.”
When asked to Share her thoughts On the current role of McDonald as Rose in Broadway’s GypsyLupone allegedly stared in silence for 15 seconds. Then she turned to the window and sighed as she said, “For a lovely day.”
Previously, Lupone, for her part, won Tony for playing the same part in the 2008 production while McDonald received his 11th Tony nomination for the role.
The history of Lupone and McDonald dates back more than two decades, with the pair Costarring in the New York Philharmonic Concert version 2000 Sweeney Todd: Fleet Street Devil Barber. (Lupone starred as Mrs. Lovett while McDonald portrayed the beggar woman.)
Seven years later the Deos were part of a La Opera production of Raising and Falling the city of Mahagonny.
Lupone and McDonald’s friendship was mentioned – or lack it – during Monday’s interview when the reporter asked Lupone about her conflict with Keco’s Lewis. Last year lupone starred in the play The -Localist and complain about hear Kitchen hell‘S. Sound queues through a wall.
He was then judged by Seren Hell’s Kitchen Lewis, 59, for calling the musical “too high.” Lewis went on to claim that the comments were “bullying,” “offensive,” “micro -racist” and “rooted in privilege” because she called “high show.”
“Oh, my God,” Lupone said in her Monday profile about the incident. “This is the problem. She calls herself a former veteran? Let’s find out how many Broadway shows has done Kecia Lewis, because she doesn’t know the f *** she is talking.”
Lupone continued, “She’s made seven. I’ve made 31. Don’t call yourself a vet, bitch.” (Profile noted that Lewis has 10 Broadway credits while Lupone holds 28.)
Lupone explained that the noise problem is not “unusual on Broadway,” adding, “this is all the time when walls are shared.” When the reporter noted that McDonald had given “supportive emojis to the video,” Lupone replied, “exactly. And I thought, ‘You should know better.’ That’s typical of Audra.”
Weekly US reach out to a McDonald representative for comments.