
In ‘Sunset Boulevard,' Tom Francis Writes His Own Story
Onstage, in Jamie Lloyd's coruscating Broadway production of Andrew Lloyd Webber's 'Sunset Boulevard,' his brooding features projected onto a 23-foot-tall screen, Francis looms large. But even here on Roebling Street, the actor, who stands 6-foot-2, with shoulders that would not demean a musk ox, was not exactly small. Francis is nominated for a Tony Award, and to see him pictured alongside his fellow nominees in the leading actor in a musical category is to believe that he could take any of them in a bar fight, maybe more than one at once.
His 'Sunset Boulevard' co-star Nicole Scherzinger described him succinctly. 'He is a man,' she said in a phone interview. But, she was quick to emphasize, Francis is also a sweetheart, 'a 25-year-old teddy bear.'
In 'Sunset Boulevard,' Francis stars as Joe Gillis, a dead-behind-the-eyes screenwriter who becomes entangled, in an asphyxiating way, with an aging queen of the silents. Here is the New York Times critic Jesse Green's take: 'Francis, as Joe, does shutdown-cynical-corpse very well.' Yet in person, Francis, who wields those shoulders lightly, is boyish, candid, eager, almost unable to believe his good fortune.
And yes, that good fortune requires him to remain onstage for nearly every moment of a two-and-a-half-hour mega musical, except when he is leading the cast — in wind, in rain, amid tourists — through a portion of the Theater District as he sings the title number outdoors. He ends the show in his underwear, sunken-eyed and covered in blood.
It's physically exhausting, he'll admit that, but on a deeper level, he also finds it restful. That's the calm that comes from performing work he feels he was made to do. The role, which has already won him an Olivier Award, has given him confidence, allowing him to trust his instincts and his powers. Audiences know that Francis is, every inch, a leading man. And now Francis knows it, too.
'Yeah, it's nice to find something that I feel good doing,' he said.
Matcha in hand, Francis swung north, then west toward the East River. His publicist assured me that he had taken up photography and would be shooting while we walked, but owing to nerves or distraction or a desire to focus on the conversation, his camera stayed in his bag. Still, Francis's enthusiasm for the neighborhood, where he lived while filming the final season of the hip Netflix psycho killer drama 'You,' was palpable. He pointed out favorite restaurants and fat robins, and spoke about his love of cycling across the Williamsburg Bridge, the skyline at his back.
'That's the time when I take in the fact that I've got to Broadway,' he said.
Admittedly, Francis's path to Broadway has not been especially circuitous or long. Music has always made sense to him. He is severely dyslexic, though this wouldn't be diagnosed until his late teens, and as a child he struggled in school. But when he played guitar or sang — first with the cathedral choir in his small town in the south of England, then with other choirs — he excelled.
'It was really nice not to be the dumbest kid in the room all the time,' Francis said.
Choral singing led him to youth theater, then to drama school. Onstage, he could forget himself, give himself over to the role. 'You can just switch off and hang out in somebody else's skin for a little bit,' he explained. When Francis said this, earnestly and full of good will, it didn't sound creepy. (The accent helps.)
He graduated from drama school, ArtsEd in West London in 2020, and despite the pandemic, he began to work almost immediately, in a live-capture performance of 'Rent,' a concert version of 'Hair,' and the Tom Jones musical 'What's New Pussycat?' He was then a replacement Romeo in the London production of '& Juliet.' When his contract for that show finished, he thought he might rest for a while, work on some original music. Then his agent told him about an audition for a 'Sunset Boulevard' revival, which Lloyd would direct.
Francis didn't know the show, or the 1950 Billy Wilder movie that inspired it, but he knew Lloyd by reputation and was desperate to work with him. Lloyd, who remembered Francis from 'Rent,' liked what he heard at the first audition. He kept calling him back and back. (Lloyd said there were four auditions; Francis believes there were nine.) But Lloyd didn't really need to see more.
'I just knew in an instant that was Joe Gillis,' Lloyd said in a phone interview. That Francis looked more like a noir hunk than a typical musical theater actor helped. ('He wasn't in any way glossy,' Lloyd said. 'He looked a real guy.') And while Francis isn't naturally cynical — or naturally a baritone — he let the words and music take him there, with a voice that could go barroom smoky or church-bell clear, which convinced Lloyd and, later, Lloyd Webber.
'I mean, he's a really good singer,' Lloyd Webber called to tell me.
FRANCIS WAS JUST 22 during those auditions, and 23 when rehearsals began. Scherzinger, who plays the fading star Norma Desmond, remembered meeting him and thinking: 'He's so young. Then I realized the whole cast was so young. I was like, 'Wow, I really feel like Norma Desmond now, because I feel so old.''
The show opened in London in the fall of 2023 to rapturous reviews. Talk of a New York transfer was immediate. A month into the run, Lloyd came into Francis's dressing room and asked him if he would like to go to New York. Francis had known that Scherzinger was a lock; he hadn't thought that Lloyd would take him as well. But the chemistry between the two of them was undeniable. Offstage, this manifests as a brother-sister closeness. ('He's a good boy, and I love him,' Scherzinger said.) Onstage, it's a lot steamier. Lloyd wanted them both.
Francis didn't have to think about it. 'I was like, 'Hell yes, a thousand times over,'' he said.
The show's Broadway theater, the St. James, was larger than the London one, and the outside jaunt — during which Francis sings the title number while being filmed live — trickier, though Francis insists that the crowds that gather to watch him are typically polite. (Those crowds are more rapacious at the stage door. Francis doesn't mind it. 'It's quite a nice feeling knowing you've made someone's day,' he said.) But the demands of the show wore at him. He sings or speaks for perhaps 90 minutes of it. And toward the close of the show he has to scream, gutturally.
'It's not a sustained note kind of scream, it needs to sound like you've been shot,' he said.
That screaming, combined with a case of laryngitis, made for vocal cord damage, which meant that Francis had to miss a week of performances in November. After that, he adjusted his exercise routines and his diet. A nutritionist told him that he was undereating by about a thousand calories per day. He also became a regular at the trendy day spa Bathhouse. 'Water and steam are my best friends,' he said. It would be natural for a handsome 20-something to want to explore the New York nightlife, but aside from a good restaurant meal, Francis limits his extracurriculars.
Lloyd appreciates that. 'Even with all the temptations in New York, he keeps his feet on the ground and stays focused and disciplined and consistent,' he said. 'It's amazing someone of that age can do that.'
After walking for about an hour, Francis arrived at Marsha P. Johnson State Park, which runs down to the river itself. He sat down on a log and looked out at the Manhattan skyline. 'This city,' he said, 'it just has my heart.'
Yet it's an open question how long Francis will stay here. Scherzinger has known this since the first rehearsal. 'I said we've got to get that face on the screen,' she said. Hollywood has already come calling. The producer Greg Berlanti, having seen Francis in 'Sunset Boulevard' in London, cast him in 'You,' Francis's first television role. He played Clayton, a writer who maneuvers against Penn Badgley's Joe. It doesn't end well. (Francis joked that if he has a type, it's writers who die.)
'We would cast him again in a heartbeat,' Berlanti said. 'He's got strength mixed with vulnerability and mystery.' Francis has since spent a couple of days on the set of the upcoming Noah Baumbach movie, 'Jay Kelly,' and been cast in Peter Berg's World War II project, 'The Mosquito Bowl.'
'I'm ready to go and try something new,' Francis said. 'I really want to have a multifaceted career.'
For now there are the Tony Awards and several more months to go in 'Sunset.' And at the moment there was sun on the water and more sun reflecting on skyscraper windows and a smell from the river that wasn't entirely nice. It all still feels like a dream to him, but it's a dream in which he belongs — here and on Broadway, and just maybe on the Radio City Music Hall stage where the Tonys will be awarded this year.
'I'm equally confused and just proud of myself,' he said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
18 minutes ago
- Yahoo
‘The Simpsons' Upcoming Guests Include Kieran Culkin, Viola Davis, Idris Elba; Matt Groening on How to Liberate Parents from MAGA: ‘Delete Fox News'
Kieran Culkin ('Succession'), Glenn Howerton ('It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia'), Albert Brooks and Cole Escola ('Oh Mary') are among the guest stars stopping by Springfield during the upcoming Season 37 of 'The Simpsons,' the show's producers announced Saturday at San Diego Comic-Con. Also Danny Pudi ('Community'), Adam Pally, Brendan and Domhall Gleeson, together at last! More from Variety 'Star Trek: Strange New Worlds' Teases Puppet Episode for Season 4 'Futurama' Cast, Producers Joke About Their Frequent Cancellations, Tease Upcoming Guests and Storylines 'Bob's Burgers' Reveals Landmark 300th Episode Details, Plus New Halloween and Christmas Installments Also during the panel, 'Simpsons' producers shared a sneak preview of one of this year's 'Treehouse of Horror' Halloween segments. Idris Elba, Michael Keaton and Viola Davis will be guest starring on that episode, which will feature an opening from guest animator Stan Kelly (from The Onion). Among those on stage: creator Matt Groening, executive producers Matt Selman and Mike Price, director Matt Faughnan and consulting producer/director David Silverman. 'I honestly thought 36 was where we were going to end it,' Groening joked. 'No, there's no end in sight. We're going to keep going. We're going to go until somebody dies. When you know who dies, the Simpsons predicts the there will be dancing in the streets. Except President Vance will ban dancing.' What's coming up next is the show's landmark 800th episode, which will air on Fox in February 2026. 'It's a big deal to do 800 shows, and so we're going to be doing two brand new original episodes that night,' Selman said. 'They're top secret for now, but I promise you, they'll be the best 800th episode of anything you've ever seen.' After the recent 'Coldplay' incident, in which the Astronomer CEO and its HR head were caught in a tryst, a deep fake claimed that 'The Simpsons' predicted it. Selman warned fans not to fall for these 'Simpsons predicts the future' memes. 'Who could be so dumb?' he said. 'Of all our 800 episodes we did, that those two dumb white folks — I don't what to call, the takes are done — like, who could think, who has such little reactive intelligence that this is in 'The Simpsons'? And of course, the answer is hundreds and hundreds of millions of people! But when you see something that claims to be a 'Simpsons' prediction, just think for one second. Could that have possibly been on the show? That's all, just think one second and then comment on the thing 'they are magic, they're wizards, they did it again.' Groening joking said he had the counterpoint: 'We are time travelers.' Here were some of his upcoming predictions: ''The Simpsons' predicts Elon Musk will be the first man to land on Mars. Amazingly, he will crash land on Mars. But he will radio back that he is marooned there forever. And most emotionally of all, he will be able to hear the cheering all the way.' Also: 'America will return the Statue of Liberty to France and North America remembers what the word Liberty means.' And most importantly: ''The Simpsons' predicts kids across America will liberate their Republican parents from the cult of MAGA. And here's how you do it. Grab the TV remote, go to menu, go to controls, vertical controls, look for channel list and delete Fox News.' As part of the event, the 'Simpsons' team attempted to play a game that Selman dubbed 'Simpsons Comic-Con Pictionary,' but the technology was not cooperating. Nonetheless, during that segment, guest animators/writers Michael Cusack ('Smiling Friends') and Mike McMahan ('Solar Opposites') came on stage to also talk and ask about 'The Simpsons.' And of course, addressed was the recent surprising uptick in online hot takes about Marge Simpson dying in the show's Season 36 finale. As Selman recently told Variety, she had done no such thing and that what happened in the recent season finale of the series was not canon, since 'there is no canon,' he said at the time. ''The Simpsons' doesn't even have canon!' 'She's like in every episode,' Selman said at the panel. 'There's a new economy of headlines that try to trick you. I call it 'trick bait.' The million headlines saying 'Simpsons' kills Marge, and then even those articles admit it, of course, 'they didn't do we just wanted you to read our headline.' So again, just a little ounce of thinking after you read something make your lives a little better.' Best of Variety New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week 'Harry Potter' TV Show Cast Guide: Who's Who in Hogwarts? Final Emmy Predictions: Talk Series and Scripted Variety - New Blood Looks to Tackle Late Night Staples
Yahoo
18 minutes ago
- Yahoo
CC Sabathia and his family have a bumpy ride to Cooperstown
COOPERSTOWN, NY (AP) — For CC Sabathia, getting elected into the Baseball Hall of Fame was much easier than actually getting to the Hall of Fame. Sabathia, whose career spanned 19 seasons with the Cleveland Indians, Milwaukee Brewers and New York Yankees, was voted in on his first year of eligibility. Getting to Cooperstown for Hall of Fame weekend activities to be capped by his induction Sunday proved a tad more difficult. 'It was an adventure,' Sabathia said Saturday. Sabathia, wife Amber and their four children left their Alpine, New Jersey, home at about 4 p.m. Thursday. They traveled in two vehicles as is their family custom and were about 75 miles (120 kilometers) into their 177-mile trip when things got interesting. 'We stopped to get food. Everything's going great,' Sabathia said. 'We tried to get on the on-ramp on (Route) 17 and the car just stopped. I was behind her (Amber). Most of the time when we're driving, I'm gone. I'm never driving behind her, but for some reason I was taking my time riding behind her.' Sabathia had a clear view of what was happening. They called for assistance. The family piled into Sabathia's car and returned home to grab another vehicle as a tow truck towed their broken-down Escalade back to Alpine. The Sabathias arrived in Cooperstown at about midnight. What should have been a drive of about three hours became an eight-hour journey. 'It was pretty funny. I was taking pictures. My kids were doing TikToks and Amber was in the back like the super serious person she is getting everything done,' Sabathia said. 'People were honking at us and recognizing us on the side of the road. It was fun for us. 'For her it was a nightmare.' The Sabathias, including Amber, will certainly be all smiles Sunday. ___ AP MLB:


CNET
19 minutes ago
- CNET
Today's NYT Connections Hints, Answers for July 27, #777
Looking for the most recent Connections answers? Click here for today's Connections hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Mini Crossword, Wordle, Connections: Sports Edition and Strands puzzles. Today's NYT Connections puzzle slyly threw a couple horror movie titles in there, but they don't get their own category. Need help figuring out what word goes where? Read on for clues and today's Connections answers. The Times now has a Connections Bot, like the one for Wordle. Go there after you play to receive a numeric score and to have the program analyze your answers. Players who are registered with the Times Games section can now nerd out by following their progress, including number of puzzles completed, win rate, number of times they nabbed a perfect score and their win streak. Read more: Hints, Tips and Strategies to Help You Win at NYT Connections Every Time Hints for today's Connections groups Here are four hints for the groupings in today's Connections puzzle, ranked from the easiest yellow group, to the tough (and sometimes bizarre) purple group. Yellow group hint: A breeze! Green group hint: Happenings in nature. Blue group hint: Teachers work here. Purple group hint: April Fool's Day brings these. Answers for today's Connections groups Yellow group: "Nothing to it!" Green group: Outdoor events. Blue group: Words before "school." Purple group: Associated with tricks. Read more: Wordle Cheat Sheet: Here Are the Most Popular Letters Used in English Words What are today's Connections answers? The completed NYT Connections puzzle for July 27, 2025, #777. NYT/Screenshot by CNET The yellow words in today's Connections The theme is "Nothing to it!" The four answers are child's play, easy, no sweat and piece of cake. The green words in today's Connections The theme is outdoor events. The four answers are block party, festival, picnic and tailgate. The blue words in today's Connections The theme is words before "school." The four answers are elementary, grade, grammar and primary. The purple words in today's Connections The theme is associated with tricks. The four answers are con game, Halloween, Hearts and magic show.