The Stars of ‘Chess’ Know the Score | Nicholas Christopher, Broadway’s Grand Master | Lea M…


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Nicholas Christopher, Broadway’s Grand Master

The actor Nicholas Christopher—brawny, bald, with a perpetually cocked eyebrow that brings to mind Yul Brynner—strode through the aisles of Tashkent Supermarket in Brighton Beach one afternoon. He surveyed the Russian delicacies: beef tongue, Olivier salad, “herring under fur” (shavings of beets and egg). “It feels like a time capsule of Old Russia,” he said. “The grannies walking around—you’d better get out of their way, otherwise they will just knock you over.”

Christopher has been making pilgrimages to Brighton Beach since this summer, after he was cast in a Broadway revival of the musical “Chess.” The show, by Tim Rice and ABBA’s Benny Andersson and Björn Ulvaeus, flopped on Broadway in 1988, when its Cold War setting was contemporary, but it retained a cult following. Christopher plays Anatoly Sergievsky, a Soviet chess champion who faces off against an American (Aaron Tveit), with a woman caught between them (Lea Michele). Christopher’s character has shades of the grand masters Viktor Korchnoi and Anatoly Karpov. The problem: Christopher knew little about chess, or about being Russian.

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Lea Michele Returns to Broadway and Supports Veterans at Stand Up for Heroes

When Lea Michele steps onto the stage at New York’s Imperial Theatre this fall, it’s more than just another performance. It’s a homecoming three decades in the making. Michele, acclaimed for her dynamic presence on Broadway and television, is returning to the very venue where her passion for acting first took flight at the age of eight. That first role in “Les Misérables” was more than a childhood memory—it was the spark that set her life’s trajectory.

Now, at 39, Michele reflects on the whirlwind of experiences that followed. “I love this. I want to do this for the rest of my life,” she recalls feeling as she watched her earliest shows from the audience. The Imperial Theatre, steeped in history and sentiment, serves as both backdrop and character in her journey. Upon her recent arrival, a staff member greeted her with a simple, heartfelt phrase: “Welcome home.” Those words encapsulate what this moment means to her—a full-circle reunion with her artistic origins.

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