Rena Effendi for The New York Times Supported by By Alia Malek Alia Malek reported ... holding their loved ones’ photos, demanding to know their fates. When Rami saw a young woman with her ...
Sophocles is suddenly everywhere on the city’s stages. In concurrent shows, Rami Malek is playing Oedipus and Brie Larson is taking on Elektra. By Houman Barekat Reviewing from London At the Old ...
Alexander Cohen, BroadwayWorld: But Oedipus is no muscular warrior. Rami Malek’s beguiling casting shades him as an awkward technocrat shrunk by a baggy grey suit, his skeletal frame barely ...
It’s Rami Malek, looking like he’s been dragged from ... But that makes it almost impossible to actually care about them. Especially since Hickson’s adaptation clings much too tightly ...
Rami Malek’s white-suited Oedipus emerges from the midst, raised on a gleaming stage. It’s fabulous, an absolute vindication of this new production of Sophocles’s great tragedy of self-knowledge, ...
This overcooked, jarring production is the latest iteration of West End star casting and the craze has surely reached a nadir The question of whether Rami Malek can actually act has always hung ...
Standing out is nothing new to Rami Malek. But the Oscar-winning ... During his conversation with the British outlet, Malek reflected on his conflicting self-perception of race growing up in ...
Standing out is nothing new to Rami Malek ... for Malek and LAPD for additional information. During his conversation with the British outlet, Malek reflected on his conflicting self-perception ...
In fact, if it weren’t for the supernova-level pull of Oscar-winning actor Rami Malek, it’s likely that this Oedipus would have felt like one tragedy too many, especially opening in the same ...
Rami Malek revealed that he was once racially profiled by the Los Angeles Police Department. “I got thrown on the bonnet of an LAPD cop car because someone had robbed a liquor store and stolen a ...
Rami Malek and Emma Corrin are going strong. The “Mr. Robot” star, 43, made rare comments about his partner — who uses they/them pronouns — in a new interview with the Guardian.
Rami Malek is recounting his at-times complicated upbringing as an Egyptian-American growing up in Southern California. The “Bohemian Rhapsody” actor, his twin brother Sami and sister Yasmine ...