#TimCurry

2025-11-19

Ted Tocks Covers

Baby Love

Originally posted on November 19, 2023

On this day sixty years ago The Supremes became the first all female group to hit #1 on the U.K. singles charts.

#thesupremes #marywilson #dianaross #FlorenceBallard #BerryGordy #brianholland #LamontDozier #eddieholland #LaToyaJackson #donnyosmond #grahamnash #timcurry

tedtockscovers.wordpress.com/2

2025-11-18

Why The 1990 IT TV Miniseries Is The Best Adaptation Of The Stephen King Novel

fed.brid.gy/r/https://www.fang

2025-11-09

Prime Video Subscribers Have To Check Out Ridley Scott’s Creepy ’80s Fantasy Movie

This post contains spoilers for “Legend.”  Ridley Scott kicked off his career with an astounding trifecta of films: his…
#NewsBeep #News #Headlines #fairytales #Latvia #LordofDarkness #LV #MiaSara #PrincessLili #RidleyScott #TimCurry #TomCruise #universalpictures
newsbeep.com/238088/

Playbill: Luke Evans to Play Frank-N-Furter in Rocky Horror Show on Broadway – Playbill

Broadway News
Luke Evans to Play Frank-N-Furter in Rocky Horror Show on Broadway

Tony winner Sam Pinkleton will direct the revival of the Richard O’Brien cult classic.

By Diep Tran, October 29, 2025

Luke Evans Fred Duval/Shutterstock

We see you shiver with antici….pation. Well wait no longer, because the Broadway revival of The Rocky Horror Show has revealed who will play Frank-N-Furter: Luke Evans (who played Gaston in the 2017 Beauty and the Beast film). Richard O’Brien‘s The Rocky Horror Show will begin previews March 26, 2026, ahead of an April 23 opening night at Studio 54. The show is a limited engagement through June 21. Additional casting is to be announced.

Evans’ screen credits include The HobbitClash of the Titans, and Nine Perfect Strangers. He’s also appeared onstage in London in RentMiss Saigon, and Avenue QRocky Horror will mark his Broadway debut.

Said Tony-winning director Sam Pinkleton (Oh, Mary!) in a statement: “I’m giddy to crack this untamable classic open with the razor-sharp Luke Evans at the center. And I hope to do at Studio 54 what The Rocky Horror Show has done for people around the world for decades—open a dimension to another possible reality. It seriously is the honor of a lifetime to bring the freakiest people I’ve ever met into the freakiest theatre I’ve ever been in to revisit the freakiest show there’s ever been. No pressure, of course. Rocky Horror is, to me, a sublime, ridiculous, giant-hearted act of love—a trashy little musical that means so many things to generations of tender weirdos with mascara streaming down their faces. I hope we can make something joyous, unfathomable, straight from outer space and I can’t wait to welcome, really WELCOME you into the slimy tentacles of Studio 54.”

The production has also announced its creative team. Rocky Horror will feature choreography by Ani Taj (Dead Outlaw), music direction and orchestrations by Kris Kukul (Beetlejuice), set design by Tony Award nominee dots (Oh, Mary!), costume design by David I. Reynoso (Water for Elephants), lighting design by Tony winner Jane Cox (Appropriate), sound design by Tony winner Brian Ronan (Beautiful), and hair and makeup design by Alberto “Albee” Alvarado (The Outsiders).

Said creator O’Brien in a statement: “It is music to my ears to hear that a cast of very fine actors is on its way to NYC in order to play let’s dress-up and make-believe, sing and dance and uplift the hearts of all those who enjoy the gift of free-thinking and the pleasure of love. Break out the fishnets and let’s have a party.”

READ: Richard O’Brien on 50 Years of The Rocky Horror Show and Its Impact on the Queer Community

The Rocky Horror Show first premiered in London at the Royal Court Theatre (Upstairs) on June 19, 1973. It moved to several other locations, and ran a cumulative 2,960 performances, closing in 1980. The musical follows a straight-laced couple, Brad and Janet, who stumble upon a spooky house on a rainy night, and become attracted to the strange denizens who live within—particularly Frank-N-Furter, a gender non-conforming mad scientist. The show’s rock-influenced score include the crowd-pleasing songs “Sweet Transvestite, “The Timewarp,” “Dammit Janet,” and “Touch-a, Touch-a, Touch-a Touch Me.”

Editor’s Note: Read the rest of the story, at the below link.

https://playbill.com/article/luke-evans-to-play-frank-n-furter-in-rocky-horror-show-on-broadway

#2025 #America #Broadway #Education #Film #Films #FrankNFurter #History #Libraries #Library #LibraryOfCongress #LukeEvans #Movies #NewProduction #Opinion #Playbill #TheRockyHorrorPictureShow #TimCurry #UnitedStates

2025-10-31

There are two groups of people in the world:

  1. Folks who have never heard of, or seen, Tim Curry in 1986's "The Worst Witch"

  2. Folks who have.

Welcome to group two.

youtube.com/watch?v=PUhuPn8_d0Q

#TimCurry #TheWorstWitch #Halloween

2025-10-31

Well folks.

It's today.

Today is THE day...

...where anything can happen.

(Years ago I called this the finest hour of #TimCurry and that wasn't even based on the full performance, it was based on a description of it and some screenshots. Then I actually saw it and I doubled down.) #Halloween #music youtu.be/SSZYVFc6BqI

2025-10-31

Thesis:
you can not only measure time in units of lenghts, but also in people

Proof:
name the moment you realised you are bisexual - Tim Curry

#bisexual #TimCurry #Halloween

2025-10-31
James Huff :prami_pride:macmanx@social.lol
2025-10-28

“In 50 years on screen, #TimCurry, star of ‘The Rocky Horror Picture Show,’ ‘Clue’ and ‘It,’ has played roles campy, comical, and menacingly sinister, yet his most inscrutable role is still Tim Curry. The actor talks with Turner Classic Movies host Ben Mankiewicz about his memoir ‘Vagabond’ (which is decidedly not a Hollywood tell-all); the stroke he suffered in 2012, and learning how to speak again; and why he never sought to curry stardom.”

youtube.com/watch?v=RFo79ktWy8c

People.com | Celebrity News, Exclusives, Photos and Videospeople.com@web.brid.gy
2025-10-27

Tim Curry Walked Out of a “Rocky Horror” Screening After a Fan Called Him Out for Being an 'Imposter'

fed.brid.gy/r/https://people.c

(((Cindy Weinstein)))CindyWeinstein@zirk.us
2025-10-26

"[Tim Curry] struggled with finding the voice for Dr. Frank-N-Furter in the original theatrical run of “Rocky Horror,” cycling through German, American and generically European accents before realizing that the power-hungry mad scientist from a different planet required the performatively posh tones of someone trying to sound like the Queen of England."

salon.com/2025/10/24/tim-curry

#TimCurry
#Memoir
#RockyHorror

Extended interview: Tim Curry – YouTube – CBS Sunday Morning – October 19, 2025

8,202 views, Oct 19, 2025

Extended Interviews | CBS Sunday Morning
In 2012 actor Tim Curry suffered a stroke, after which he had to relearn how to speak. In this web exclusive, the steadfastly private Curry talks with Turner Classic Movies host Ben Mankiewicz about his memoir “Vagabond,” and his life, career, and medical story. “CBS News Sunday Morning” features stories on the arts, music, nature, entertainment, sports, history, science and Americana, and highlights unique human accomplishments and achievements. Check local listings for “CBS News Sunday Morning” broadcast times

Continue/Read Original Article Here: Extended interview: Tim Curry – YouTube

#2025 #BenMankiewicz #Film #FilmCareer #Films #History #Interview #Libraries #Movies #Television #TheRockyHorrorPictureShow #TimCurry #YouTube

Tim Curry
Curt Johnson - Indie Geniusindiegenius
2025-10-19

Movie TV Tech Geeks Stephen King’s Most Iconic Horror Miniseries Is Surging Through Letterboxd in Time for Halloween dlvr.it/TNmK9j

RTL Nieuwsrtlnieuws
2025-10-17

𝗧𝗶𝗺 𝗖𝘂𝗿𝗿𝘆 (79) 𝘇𝗼𝘂 𝗴𝗿𝗮𝗮𝗴 𝘄𝗲𝗲𝗿 𝗺𝗲𝘁 𝗧𝗵𝗲 𝗠𝘂𝗽𝗽𝗲𝘁𝘀 𝘄𝗶𝗹𝗹𝗲𝗻 𝘄𝗲𝗿𝗸𝗲𝗻

Als het aan Tim Curry ligt, draait hij nog eens een film of serie met The Muppets. Dat zegt de 79-jarige acteur, die in 1996 te zien was in Muppet Treasure Island, in een interview met The Guardian.

rtl.nl/boulevard/artikel/55339

‘Risky is the best way to be’: Tim Curry on sexuality, surviving a stroke – and 50 years of stardom – Tim Curry – The Guardian

Tim Curry – The big interview

‘Risky is the best way to be’: Tim Curry on sexuality, surviving a stroke – and 50 years of stardom

From Rocky Horror to the Muppets, Curry’s extraordinary career made him world-famous. Then, a stroke left him paralysed. The actor talks about his cocaine years, his friendship with David Bowie – and the moment his mother came at him with a knife.

By Chris Godfrey, Tue 14 Oct 2025 02.00 EDT

Curry in Home Alone 2: Lost in New York, 1992. Photograph: Landmark Media / Alamy

‘It’s difficult not to see it as a kind of finale,” says Tim Curry of his memoir, Vagabond. That he’s written it at all is a surprise. Curry has always liked the comfort of privacy – my efforts to persuade him to do an interview with the Guardian began more than five years ago. At 79, he still prefers looking forward, too, which is how he has covered so much ground in his career.

Boundless energy has been the actor’s hallmark. He once exerted so much while filming the murder mystery comedy Clue – in which he plays the frantic, sharp-tongued butler Wadsworth – that a nurse who took his blood pressure on set told him he was at risk of having a heart attack.

His most famous screen role remains his 1975 breakthrough, as The Rocky Horror Picture Show’s perplexing sex symbol, Dr Frank-N-Furter. But he has played many irresistible villains; for me, he will always be Pennywise the clown from the terrifying 1990 miniseries of Stephen King’s It. His stage performances in The Pirates of Penzance in 1982 and Spamalot in 2007 were both nominated for Olivier awards. And he has voiced dozens of characters, endearing himself to a generation of millennials as explorer Nigel Thornberry in the cartoon classic The Wild Thornberrys.

Whatever the role, Curry oozes heart and joie de vivre, his grin dancing between menace and joy. Has any actor ever had more fun than he did as Long John Silver in Muppet Treasure Island?

“I’m very aware that I’m lucky,” he says. “I’m astonished actually at how ambitious I’ve been. I didn’t think of myself as ambitious at all.”

Comedy has been important for him as a performer. But more recently it’s become a “coping mechanism”, too. In 2012, at 67, he had a severe stroke, leaving his left side paralysed. He is grateful that he didn’t lose his speech. Making other people laugh is clearly a thrill for him – his conversation is full of cutting remarks, punchlines and exemplary voice work. How did his stroke change his outlook on life? “The day before I had the stroke, I smoked three packs of Marlboro Reds,” he says. “I won’t be doing that again!”

Between the stroke and the pandemic, Curry had what he describes as “an appalling amount of time to reflect”. Vagabond is the result, a witty page-turner, full of life. Come for the career, stay for the celebrity encounters: impromptu dinners with David Bowie after stage performances of The Rocky Horror Show; working through bowls of cocaine at Studio 54 with Truman Capote and Andy Warhol (Carly Simon, also present, did not partake); and a hilariously catty encounter with Donald Trump on the set of Home Alone 2: Lost in New York (we’ll get to that, don’t worry).

There are omissions. Affairs of the heart or bedroom, he writes, “are – respectfully – none of your fucking business”.

“I tried to be as absolutely truthful as possible,” he says. “I couldn’t see the point of doing it otherwise, really. It gave me energy, I must say. That was great. It was partly, I think, the energy of a new playground.”

Curry is a self-confessed showoff. When he was a child, he says, his chuckle revving up, “it sounds awful, but I thought I kind of had it, and I was just waiting to be discovered”. His father was a chaplain in the Royal Navy, and his earliest memories are of singing in the choir at church services. The music was good – “the Methodist hymn book has got some cracking tunes” – but the admiration his performances inspired was just as appealing.

He was a precocious voice artist. His mother had spent time living in the US and would delight Curry by launching into a thick New York accent. It didn’t take him long to nail it himself and to develop his own repertoire of accents, which he’d deploy to try to make her laugh. After mastering the voice of a local grocer, he would sneak out and knock on the front door, announcing himself from behind it with some great flattery for her, much to her fury when she realised she’d been fooled.

Tim Curry (from article, no credit visible)…

Curry was born in 1946, in Cheshire,and lived the nomadic life of a military brat. Every 18 months or so, the Curry family (his mother, father and beloved older sister, Judy) would move to a different British seaside town, before settling in Plymouth when Curry was 11.This peripatetic lifestyle made it difficult for him to foster friendships, but he remembers it fondly. It gave him a lasting adoration of the coast (“the sea is terribly important to me. The British sea anyway. The colder the better”) and set him up for a life of moving from place to place, never getting too attached (hence, his book’s title, Vagabond). He never felt lonely, especially at home. “There was no lack of personality in the house. So you had to fight for air, you know?”

Curry adored his father, who he describes as a good Christian man – empathetic, selfless – who wanted to do good and who never imposed his faith on his children.

Was he ever tempted to follow his father into the ministry? “No, not at all.” Did any of the principles seep in? “I’m not particularly God-fearing, but I respect it very much. I think the values did, because Methodists are encouraged to live life simply and see it simply. And I think I’ve pretty much kept to that.”

When Curry was 11, his father had a stroke. Weeks later, while being treated in hospital, he contracted pneumonia and died. “It was kind of oddly way too dramatic,” says Curry. “I didn’t know how to behave really, because I knew it was going to be incredibly formative.”

Curry’s father was 49. “A baby,” he says. “I couldn’t reconcile it as being the truth.” He tried to support his mother and be the man of the house, “but it wasn’t a very convincing portrayal, I believe. Nobody was buying it.”

After his father died, his mother became irritable – volatile, even. She could be cruel (she found the idea of her daughter dating hilarious, Curry writes, as she didn’t think his sister Judy was pretty) and frightening. “I’m being a bit cautious about this, because I did in the first draft include a very brief passage where she came at me with a knife in the kitchen,” he says. “I think she was actually bipolar because she could just explode.” Curry processed his fear of his mother through his work: her expressions of rage manifested in Pennywise and Cardinal Richelieu in the Three Musketeers; as Dr Frank-N-Furter, he thought of her as he emerged from a refrigerator wielding the axe with which he’d just murdered Meat Loaf.

Rage manifested … as Cardinal Richelieu in the Three Musketeers in 1993.
Photograph: Disney / Allstar

Curry went away to boarding school on a scholarship, when he was 10 – “brutally early”, he writes where he was targeted by bullies due to his boisterous demeanour, disregard for authority and eccentric interests (he collected butterflies). Not to mention what he describes as his best weapon: the English language. “I had a smart mouth, you know, and I used to have to pay for it quite often.” But he found allies in some teachers and choirmasters, who fostered his love of music and theatre.

Continue/Read Original Article Here: ‘Risky is the best way to be’: Tim Curry on sexuality, surviving a stroke – and 50 years of stardom | Tim Curry | The Guardian

#2025 #50YearsOfStardom #America #Books #Cocaine #DavidBowie #Film #Films #FrankNFurter #History #HomeAlone2 #IT #Libraries #Library #Movies #Muppets #ScienceFiction #Sexuality #Stroke #Television #TheGuardian #TheRockyHorrorPictureShow #TheThreeMusketeers #TimCurry #UnitedStates #VagabondBook_ #YouTube

Curry in Home Alone 2: Lost in New York, 1992. Photograph: Landmark Media/AlamyTim Curry
What song is Tom Listening To?TomsMusic
2025-10-15
Album art from the album FernGully...The Last Rainforest (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by Tim Curry

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