Ryan Murphy Making Broadway Musical ‘The Prom’ Into a Netflix Movie Event

Ryan Murphy Making Broadway Musical ‘The Prom’ Into a Netflix Movie Event

The Prom

Ryan Murphy is turning Broadway’s hit The Prom into a Netflix movie event, he announced following a special charity performance on Tuesday.

RELATED: Feel-Good New Musical ‘The Prom’ Wears a Big Heart on Its Puffy Sleeve – REVIEW

Wrote Murphy on Instagram: “THE PROM is one of the most uplifting, heartfelt and special musicals I have ever seen on Broadway. It’s truly an original that celebrates the underdog and says in a loving spectacular way that LGBTQ rights are human rights. I feel a special connection to it because it’s set in Indiana, and that’s where I grew up, too. I’m thrilled to announce I’m turning it into a MOVIE EVENT for Netflix, and I’m bringing producers @billdamaschke and @dori.berinstein and the amazing creative team with me — Tony Award winner Casey Nicholaw, Tony Award winner Bob Martin, Tony award nominee @sklarbar73 and Tony Award nominee @Chadbeg. See it first at the Longacre Theatre. It has a musical score that will leave you singing for days, a hilarious and moving book and some of the most showstopping direction, choreography and performances I’ve ever seen on Broadway. @theprommusical”

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THE PROM is one of the most uplifting, heartfelt and special musicals I have ever seen on Broadway. It’s truly an original that celebrates the underdog and says in a loving spectacular way that LGBTQ rights are human rights. I feel a special connection to it because it’s set in Indiana, and that’s where I grew up, too. I’m thrilled to announce I’m turning it into a MOVIE EVENT for Netflix, and I’m bringing producers @billdamaschke and @dori.berinstein and the amazing creative team with me — Tony Award winner Casey Nicholaw, Tony Award winner Bob Martin, Tony award nominee @sklarbar73 and Tony Award nominee @Chadbeg. See it first at the Longacre Theatre. It has a musical score that will leave you singing for days, a hilarious and moving book and some of the most showstopping direction, choreography and performances I’ve ever seen on Broadway. @theprommusical

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As you may recall, The Prom also made history bringing the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade’s its first same sex kiss.

The post Ryan Murphy Making Broadway Musical ‘The Prom’ Into a Netflix Movie Event appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.


Ryan Murphy Making Broadway Musical ‘The Prom’ Into a Netflix Movie Event

These pics will make you feel like you were at Miami Beach Pride but without the sunburn

These pics will make you feel like you were at Miami Beach Pride but without the sunburn
The sun was hot and so were the people strutting the beach with that Miami swagger, glistening with sunblock and glitter.

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#NYHAAD: HRC Foundation’s Director of HIV & Health Equity on the Work to End HIV

#NYHAAD: HRC Foundation’s Director of HIV & Health Equity on the Work to End HIV

For HRC Foundation’s HIV and Health Equity Director J. Maurice McCants-Pearsall, community engagement is the foundation of the work to end HIV.

“We have to go out into the community and listen to what they have to say — and far too often LGBTQ people of color are left out of that equation,” McCants-Pearsall said. “We must make sure there are safe spaces for people of color to go where providers are culturally responsive to patients that they serve.”

April 10 is National Youth HIV and AIDS Awareness Day, an annual observance to raise awareness of the disproportionate and unique needs of young people in the effort to combat the spread of HIV. This day is an important opportunity to bring young people into the conversation about the urgency of this work, said McCants-Pearsall.

“We have to combat the stigma surrounding HIV, and we need to ensure that everyone can access equitable services and care,” McCants-Pearsall said. “What are young people’s needs? Are we going to where they are and listening to their feedback?”

Despite declining HIV infection rates in the U.S., the Centers for Disease Control reported that youth ages 14 to 24 continue to be at a high risk of acquiring HIV, making up 21% of all new HIV diagnoses in the U.S. — with African American and Latinx men comprising a majority of those diagnoses. The CDC also found that a staggering 51% of young people living with HIV do not know their status, in large part due to inadequate HIV educational resources for young people.

“When I was growing up, there were no resources or services available — not just in my local community but for my community in general. Most of the services that did exist only existed in white spaces or other spaces that I wasn’t privy to,” McCants-Pearsall said. “And then, on top of that, I grew up in a Black middle-class family where community-based stigma often makes it hard to talk to family members and friends about these issues. That’s what pushed me into this field.”

McCants-Pearsall began his career in public health at the Thurgood Marshall College Fund where he developed the CDC Ambassador Program, which was designed to introduce students at HBCUs to careers in public health. He comes to HRC after serving in the Philadelphia Department of Public Health where he was project manager in the AIDS Activities Coordinating Office, working on HIV-related programming for Black and Latinx communities.

“As this administration continues to roll back the clock on all the progress that we have made in the last three decades, we have to teach each other how to get involved,” McCants-Pearsall said. “From working at the grassroots level to reaching out to your Congress members and local representatives, there is a way for everyone to make a change.”

Be a part of the conversation on social media using the hashtag #NYHAAD. To learn more about the HRC Foundation’s work on HIV and AIDS, click here.

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