Current:Home > MarketsDarren Criss on why playing a robot in 'Maybe Happy Ending' makes him want to cry -WealthRise Academy
Darren Criss on why playing a robot in 'Maybe Happy Ending' makes him want to cry
View
Date:2025-04-17 04:53:10
The personalization of technology is ever-expanding, from the smart device in your house that tells you the weather forecast to the phone app that navigates the best route home from dining out.
For Darren Criss, he's discovering this intersection of humanity and technology in a slightly more intimate way. The Emmy-winning Criss stars in Broadway musical "Maybe Happy Ending," alongside newcomer and fellow Michigan University alumnus Helen J Shen. He plays a "Helperbot" named Oliver whose owner sent him to a retirement home for obsolete robots. In the hallway of his apartment, Oliver meets Claire (Shen), a newer model robot whose battery life is diminishing. Together they escape their apartments in search of one last adventure: witnessing the fireflies in South Korea (where the musical is set) and finding Oliver's original owner.
"I'm playing a non-human so the one thing that I want to do the entire time is cry my eyes out," Criss, 37, tells USA TODAY. "Not because I'm sad, because there is so much resilience to the show. To say that the show is about loss, I think is maybe as misleading as if I was saying that it was a Korean show."
‘Maybe Happy Ending’ review:Darren Criss shines in one of the best musicals in years
Criss, who is half-Filipino, believes the show addresses both love and loss in the "age-old paradigm of 'Is it better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all?'"
Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.
"I think the show really does a good job of answering that," he continues. "These robots are not human. So the one thing that I can't do is really process that in a human way. The only people in the room that can do it is the audience. And with any luck they do.
"For me, every night, I just need like a good like five minutes to cry it out after because the entire show, I'm just gripping on for dear life not to do the one human thing that you want to do the most."
"Maybe Happy Ending" toured Asia before a 2020 production in Atlanta led to Broadway.
Like this production, Criss' starred in a music-forward TV series that championed resilience: "Glee." Criss reflects back on his time as Blaine Anderson fondly.
"It's not something I run away from and it means so much to so many people," he says. "It's like this really fun party that was had many years ago. And so when people reminisce about that party or that big game, it's not like we're talking about something absolutely horrendous. The show's called 'Glee' for God's sake."
veryGood! (85)
Related
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Los Angeles is using AI to predict who might become homeless and help before they do
- Cases affected by California county’s illegal use of jail informants jumps to 57, new analysis finds
- Gov. Glenn Youngkin's PAC raises over $4 million in 48 hours from billionaire donors
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- Splenda is 600 times sweeter than sugar, but is the artificial sweetener safe?
- Flights canceled and schools closed as Taiwan braces for Typhoon Koinu
- Haitian students play drums and strum guitars to escape hunger and gang violence
- The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
- US adds another option for fall COVID vaccination with updated Novavax shots
Ranking
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- 'Ahsoka' finale recap: Zombies, witches, a villainous win and a 'Star Wars' return home
- Arizona to cancel leases allowing Saudi-owned farm access to state’s groundwater
- Feds target international fentanyl supply chain with ties to China
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- 2030 World Cup set to be hosted by Spain-Portugal-Morocco with 3 South American countries added
- San Francisco will say goodbye to Dianne Feinstein as her body lies in state at City Hall
- Kevin McCarthy removed as House speaker in historic vote
Recommendation
Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
Donald Trump drops from the Forbes 400 list of richest Americans. Here's what changed.
EVs killed the AM radio star
Suspect in police beating has ruptured kidney, headaches; his attorneys call for a federal probe
The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
Lawsuit: False arrest due to misuse of facial recognition technology
Committed to conservation, Northwest Connecticut Land Conservancy elects new board president
Scientists determine the cause behind high rates of amphibian declines