Jonathan Bailey attends the New York special screening of WICKED presented by Universal Pictures at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City at Museum of Modern Art on November 14, 2024 in New York City. (Photo by Roy Rochlin/Getty Images for Universal Pictures)

'Wicked' Put Jonathan Bailey in the Spotlight, but Mum's Still the Word on his Private Life

READ TIME: 4 MIN.

There's little doubt culture is having its "Wicked" moment. Universal's $150 million musical, which is well on its way to making back that cost plus plenty more, shattered box office expectations, according to Variety. Its first weekend grossed114 million from 3,888 theaters over the weekend in North America, with an additional $50.2 million at the international box office, bringing its global tally to $164.2 million. It marks the biggest worldwide opening for a film based on a Broadway show, supplanting another Universal musical, "Les Miserables," with $103 million in 2012.

And it is only the first half. Its second part, due out in a year, is also budgeted at $150 million.

While everyone knew that co-stars Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande have the singing chops to pull of their respective roles of Elphaba and Galinda, it is Jonathan Bailey as their mutual love interest, the dashing Prince Fiyero, who has surprised many with his considerable singing and dancing skills. Just prior to taking his best-known role as the hunky bachelor Anthony Bridgerton in Netflix's "Bridgerton," Bailey won a Laurence Olivier Award (the London stage's equivalent to the Tony Award) for his performance in the gender-switched revival of "Company." In the show he sang Sondheim's super-difficult "Not Getting Married Today" that in this production is sung by a man who gets the pre-wedding jitters just prior to his scheduled marriage to his boyfriend. The switch and the authenticity of a queer man singing the role made the moment all the more touching.


Watch Jonathan Bailey sing "Not Getting Married Today" from "Company"

But while his "Company" character is open about his relationships and feelings, in real life, according to a report in Parade Magazine, Bailey keeps them tightly under wraps. The closest he has come to opening up about if he is seeing anyone came in an interview a year ago in The Standard about his role on the Showtime series "Fellow Travelers". (He won the Critics' Choice Award for Best Supporting Actor in a Miniseries and earning a Primetime Emmy nomination for his performance.)


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