Musical Version of 'True Blood' in the Works

Musical Version of 'True Blood' in the Works

What would be better than a revival of True Blood? What about a musical revival of True Blood? The show's creator has suggested that we could be in for just such a treat in the future. Read on for details.


Via Deadline.

True Blood fans rejoice. You may be getting a fix of the vampire fantasy story in musical form.

Speaking at a 10th anniversary screening of the pilot episode at Vulture Festival in Los Angeles on Sunday, creator Alan Ball gave details of the rumored musical version coming from composer Nathan Barr, which Ball says he’s heard is “pretty good”.

“It tells the story of vampires coming out of the closet,” Ball said. “Ultimately it really departs from the book, because people aren’t ready, and they’re too bigoted and they end up going back in to the closet.” He said the project, which Barr first announced in 2014, is currently being workshopped, but didn’t reveal whether he will have any sort of involvement.

Ball also dropped another surprise when he talked about the original show. It turns out Benedict Cumberbatch, Jessica Chastain and Jennifer Lawrence were almost cast.

“Benedict Cumberbatch came and read for Bill,” he said of the role that eventually went to Stephen Moyer. And that’s not all. Jessica Chastain read for what would be Anna Paquin’s role of Sookie Stackhouse. But perhaps most juicy was the news that Jennifer Lawrence was almost a were-panther in Season 3.

“She was great,” Ball said of Lawrence, “but all the women in the room, because she was going to be Jason’s girlfriend, and she was 17 at the time, were like, ‘No that’s gross.’”

Ball also talked about the casting of Rutina Wesley as Tara Thornton. “We had actually cast another actress,” he said, “and we shot the pilot with her in it. But HBO said, ‘We don’t really buy that girl,’ and we said, ‘Yeah we should have done it with Rutina Wesley.’ So we went back and re-shot those scenes.”

Ball said that people often characterized Tara as an “angry black woman”, which clearly bothered him. “Whenever people say, ‘Why are black women angry?’ I say, ‘Well because they’re women, and their black, and this is a totally misogynist and racist country, and why wouldn’t you be angry?”

Of course it was only fitting that Ball paid tribute to Nelson Ellis, who tragically passed away last year. When Ellis came on screen for the first time in the episode, Ball sighed and said, “That breaks my heart. He was so amazingly talented.” Ball recalled that Ellis mostly ad-libbed his first scene. Although that wasn’t standard practice on the show, Ball was so impressed, he stood back and let him do it, he said.

Get the rest of the story at Deadline.


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