Patti LuPone arrives at the 36th Annual GLAAD Media Awards Los Angeles held at The Beverly Hilton Hotel on March 27, 2025 in Beverly Hills, Los Angeles, California, United States. (Photo by Xavier Collin/Image Press Agency)
Broadway loves a backstage bust-up, but the latest skirmish pits two of its most decorated divas against one another in a clash worthy of Gypsy’s Mama Rose. Patti LuPone, the three-time Tony winner famed for her blistering honesty, has reignited a decades-old rift with six-time Tony queen Audra McDonald, branding her “not a friend” in a no-holds-barred New Yorker profile released this week.
The spark? A 2024 sound-bleed spat in which LuPone, then starring in The Roommate, complained about booming cues from Alicia Keys’ Hell’s Kitchen next door. When cast-mate Kecia Lewis labelled those comments “racially micro-aggressive,” McDonald quietly sided with Lewis via a pair of supportive heart-emojis on Instagram. LuPone’s response in this week’s interview was volcanic: Lewis is “no vet,” while McDonald “should know better.”
The feud rewinds to 2000’s concert Sweeney Todd and 2007’s Grammy-winning Mahagonny, where the stars shared the stage without incident. Yet insiders whisper that a professional rivalry brewed as McDonald’s trophy cabinet swelled, eclipsing LuPone’s own haul. Now the tension is back in the spotlight just as McDonald headlines a box-office-busting revival of Gypsy — the very role that netted LuPone her 2008 Tony.
When New Yorker writer Michael Schulman asked LuPone for her verdict on McDonald’s Gypsy, the 76-year-old diva delivered 15 seconds of glacial silence before gazing out the window and purring, “What a beautiful day.” In diva-speak, that’s a dagger.
Within minutes of the article dropping, X (formerly Twitter) was split between cheer-squad and boo-hiss:
“The interview is so balls-to-the-wall funny — I adore Patti LuPone,” swooned one fan.
“31 shows doth not equal class,” snapped another, accusing the star of mean-spirited grandstanding.
Broadway colleagues flooded McDonald’s feed with rose emojis — a playful nod to Gypsy’s anthem “Everything’s Coming Up Roses” — while Lewis received waves of applause from performers Donna Murphy, Alex Newell and Joy Woods.
The timing couldn’t be juicier: McDonald is tipped for her record-extending seventh Tony next month, while LuPone is about to make a cameo in And Just Like That… Season 3 (premiering 29 May) — an HBO payday that ensures her voice will be ringing in living rooms just as awards voters finish their ballots. Meanwhile, LuPone embarks on her A Life in Notes concert tour in February, meaning both icons will be centre-stage — and centre-tabloid — all season long.
Neither McDonald nor Lewis has publicly clapped back, but Broadway insiders suspect a gracious silence from the Gypsycamp while Tony votes are tallied. LuPone, however, shows no sign of holstering her razor-tongued commentary. As one industry wag quipped, “Mama Rose never apologises — she just changes key.”
Whether this feud fizzles or crescendos, one thing is certain: for theatre fans, the off-stage drama is almost as irresistible as the eight-shows-a-week kind. Pass the popcorn — and keep an eye on those acceptance-speech microphones.
Photo Credit: DepositPhotos.com
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