News

Kimberly Belflower will adapt her Tony-nominated Broadway play, while stage star Sadie Sink will executive produce.
Tina Fey and Marc Platt are set to produce the adaptation of Kimberly Belflower's Broadway play "John Proctor is the Villain" ...
The hit Broadway play John Proctor is the Villain will extend for a third and final time by one week, with the new closing ...
Wicked producer Marc Platt is teasing what’s next for the film’s story in the forthcoming second movie, along with recalling his initial hesitation to divide the screen adaptation of the ...
Film and theater Producer Marc Platt and wife Julie have made a $1 million gift to MCC Theater, one of Off Broadway's leading not-for-profit companies, for the development and production of new ...
Superstar producer Marc Platt, namesake of the Platt Performing Arts House and 1979 College graduate, has worked in television, film and on Broadway — but his roots are at Penn. Responsible for ...
Marc Platt on the NINE set in Italy in 2008. Photo by David James. During his New York years, Platt interned with Nelle Nugent and partner Elizabeth McCann, considered the top producers on Broadway.
Marc Platt Wanted Just One WICKED Movie with an Intermission- 'That Was One Battle I Lost' Wicked: For Good hitting theaters on November 21, 2025.
Marc Platt, a three-time Oscar nominee for producing Best Picture contenders “Bridge of Spies,” “La La Land” and “The Trial of the Chicago 7,” produced his son’s breakout performance ...
Marc Platt, a dancer who crisscrossed the country in the 1930s with the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo before bringing his buoyant charm to such musicals as the original Broadway production of ...
EXCLUSIVE: If Marc Platt is fretting over the long-shot odds of Bridge Of Spies winning the top Oscar, you wouldn’t know it from the tone of his voice during a phone conversation on Super Bowl ...
Marc Platt can spend Monday basking in the warm reviews for his excellent “Grease: Live” effort on Sunday, though the executive producer did notice one thing go wrong — and no, it wasn’t ...