“Listen Up… Summer Tour ‘13” - Twitter Press
I’ve also gotten to spend a lot of time with Chord Overstreet and Blaine and Sam’s relationship has been really fun. Our little bromance is just as real off-screen as it is on-screen and we’ve been very thankful. We sent a little something to the writers at the end of the season thanking them for really developing our characters and giving us a chance to really get to know each other and play.
Darren Criss (via babynightbird)
What a treat that was. She’s textbook darling. She’s been through a lot in her life and is no stranger to media attention and the pitfalls that that entails. She’s very graceful, generous, friendly and just burst of energy and delight. Everybody was so obsessed with her.
Darren Criss on working with Patty Duke. (The Hollywood Reporter)
[Jan’s] mother instincts come out with Blaine and she and Liz want to give these boys some of the first-hand history of what it was like to be gay in the ’60s and ’70s…
These women don’t want to impose themselves on Blaine and Kurt, they just want to give them a hint of what has been and how far we’ve come — and how far we still have to go
Patty Duke (via darrencriss-news)
'Glee's' Darren Criss Previews Blaine's Planned Proposal
Wedding bells certainly seem as if they could be ringing in Glee’s fourth season finale as Blaine is definitely caught up in the wave of excitement washing over the country as same-sex marriage continues to inch closer to being legal in all 50 states.
During the Fox musical’s penultimate hour of the season, Blaine (Darren Criss) went so far as to ask Burt (Mike O’Malley) permission to marry his son, Kurt (Chris Colfer). What he didn’t count on, however, was for Burt to continue being the voice of reason and warn the teenager that there’s no reason he should rush the relationship, as they’re too young for marriage.
Despite the common sense talk, the promos for the fourth season finale, fittingly titled “All Or Nothing” as the proposal and Regionals are both prominent story lines, Blaine seems to be marching ahead with his plan — asking BFF Sam (Chord Overstreet) to be his best man and ring shopping where he meets the likes of Patty Duke.
The Hollywood Reporter caught up with Criss to preview Blaine’s big move and how the season will end for one of Glee’s most beloved (on and off again) couples.
There’s a cliffhanger with Blaine which is pretty interesting.
Chord Overstreet on the season finale. [Source] (via darrencriss-news)
Several cast members from Glee — Darren Criss, Naya Rivera and Amber Riley — earned their own raucous cheers, as they performed an acoustic song each. Riley’s rendition of Christina Aguilera’s “Beautiful” was a particular hit.
Katy Perry, Usher and Michelle Obama Rock In Inauguration for Military Families (via darrencriss-news)
Jessica Alba, Heidi Klum, Neil Patrick Harris, Emily VanCamp and Darren Criss were all in attendance at Wednesday’s Staples Center show.
Madonna Dedicates L.A. Performance to Child Activist Shot in Pakistan (via darrencriss-news)
‘Glee’s’ Ryan Murphy: ‘I Have a Really Renewed Passion’ for the Series
The co-creator of the Fox musical talks with THR about the fourth season’s back-to-basics approach with stories grounded in reality and less “razzmatazz,” as well as his passion to bring the show’s fresh faces out on tour.
It may be early in its rebooted fourth season, but Glee is back to its roots.
The Fox musical answered one of the new fall season’s biggest question last week, unspooling its split-location format and introducing a loyal army of Gleeks to four fresh new faces as the series repopulates McKinley’s halls and spices up Rachel’s love life in New York.
The massive change has reinvigorated co-creator Ryan Murphy and the rest of the writers to tap into what once made the show a breakout: plots grounded in realistic stories about the underdog in high school. Ratings for the premiere, which saw Lea Michele’s Rachel get off to a bumpy start in New York with her tough dance teacher (Kate Hudson), illustrated that the beloved musical — which in its third season found itself a target for critics — was not just back butcreatively stronger. ”It’s very nice to hear people say nice things about the show again, I won’t lie about it,” Murphy tells The Hollywood Reporter. Further proving the point is Thursday’s “Britney 2.0,” Glee’s second Britney Spears tribute episode, which THR screened early. The hour, which like the first, revolves around Heather Morris’ lovable dingbat Brittany S. Pearce, is grounded in reality.
This was really long so let me sum up for anyone not reading it:
