In theory, I knew that this kind of thing can happen in any family.
Upstanding citizens are always turning out to be secret criminals, and I wouldn't even call
my cousin Alan an upstanding citizen, but it's one thing to know and another thing to understand. Alan, murder, me, what the hell was Alan thinking? From serial productions and the New York Times, I'm Em Gesson, and this is the idiot. Listen, wherever you get your podcast. From the New York Times, I'm Michael Barco, this is the Daily on Sunday.
The general heaviness of this moment, the war, prices, the AI, is not lost on any of us. We cover it every day on the show.
“Joy and relief, I think it's fair to say, are rare.”
But a few weeks ago, I found myself genuinely awash in both of those feelings. I had just left a theater in Midtown, Manhattan, where I had seen something unlike anything I'd ever seen before. A show that insists on creating a new kind of filter, a happier filter, a filter through which ordinary everyday occurrences, literally become a reason to live.
The list began after her first attempt, a list of everything brilliant about the world. Everything was. The show is called every brilliant thing. It just opened up on Broadway, starring Daniel Radcliffe. In it, Radcliffe asks us the audience to work together with him, to tell the place central
story. One. I scream. Two. One of the lights.
Three. More on that than just a moment.
“It turns out, I was relatively late to the phenomenon of the show, which has become”
a kind of global antidote to paint him. It's been translated into dozens of languages, it's been produced in hundreds of communities around the world, in places like Dublin. The list began after her first attempt. Even on HBO.
The list began after her first attempt, a list of everything that was brilliant about the world, everything that was worth living for. And so today, we're going to tell the story of the show, why it is resonated with so many people, and what it tells us about how to live in dark times. It's Sunday, April 26th.
Daniel Radcliffe, welcome to the Daily. Thank you so much for having me. We're thrilled to have you. Thank you. So, every brilliant thing, as you know, is a very complicated show to explain to somebody
who has ever seen it before.
“When somebody asks you, Daniel Radcliffe, to describe the show, what do you say?”
Well, the plot of the show is I play a character who, when they were young, their mother was dealing with very, very serious depression and mental health issues, and so to in an effort to sort of cheer his mom up, he starts making a list of every brilliant thing that he can think of about the world. And brilliant in the context of the show and in British parlance is essentially everything
that's good and wonderful.
Yeah, everything that's, you know, wonderful, great, amazing, joyous about the world.
Yeah. And just to give some examples, Kazoo's, period. Yeah. Kazoo's actually, it's really good oranges. Yeah.
A really good oranges, peeing in the ocean and nobody knows the awkward dance of negotiating with her. It's going to be a hug or a handshake. Yeah. So, then it's sort of about how the making of that list follows him into his teenage
years and then becomes a kind of coping mechanism for him as an adult and a kind of really an extension of just how he sees the world and the sort of ever evolving list-making process. I mind was fizzing. But ever since I was little, I wanted to understand why my mom had done what she had done and here was a possible answer or at least, you know, part of what I am so sorry, Professor, please carry on.
But sure. I left the lecture. You're done. Thank you so much. Thank you.
Thank you.
But the way the play is done, it's this kind of amazing communal experience.
Like it should feel every night like me and the audience are kind of making the play together. Right. So let's talk about that communal experience because audience participation is a huge part of this show. It's improvised, but also kind of not entirely improvised. Before the show even begins, you are out there in the audience.
You're walking around, you're talking with people, you're assigning them roles.
You're looking for audience members to be in this play with you. So talk to me about that. Yeah.
“So there are sort of two levels to the audience participation in this show.”
There's one sort of quite a light lift for people where I give people a card. There has a number on it and some words. And when I shout out the numbers, they shout out those words. Five. Rollerclosers.
Six. Super Mario. Seven. People falling over. And then there is five people who play very significant roles.
They're heavy lifts and they are people that do not know that they will be doing that when they come into the theatre that night. And I have to try and sus out who I would like to use. And then if they would like to be used, we do get, you know, generally speaking, people are sort of fairly amenable to it, but we do get some absolute horror notes from people sometimes. I mean, it's fascinating that you decided to put yourself in the position of being rejected by members of the audience of having these kind of interactions at all.
I mean, you're obviously a very well-known actor, both from your movie work, famously waving the wand as a young boy to your stage work. You want a toony for your performance in merrily. We roll along the musical. In my mind, you've got your pick of a letter. You can do anything you want.
So what made you take on such an unusual play? Well, you know, I read the script and from the moment that it said, you know, the actor starts the show in the audience, greeting people as they come in and assigning roles. I was immediately like, wait, what is this? You know, there's there's nothing else that I've ever read that requires me to have this sort of relationship with an audience that I do.
You know, if anyone comes in with any preconceived notions of me or being sort of star struck or whatever,
I feel like that first half hour kind of breaks that down.
Because you see me running around sweating. You see, you know, it takes the any sort of illusion or romance out of me, I think. You know, one of the parameters for me of the whole show was just how much moisture was, yeah, on your sweat. Yeah, no, my dresser Sandy said to me the other day, she was like, do you want an undershot? And I was like, no, that'll sweat more.
I said, I don't mind people seeing me sweat. It's very evident that I'm running around people know why it's happening.
“It strikes me that the kind of interactions you have to go have in the audience every night.”
They may not be the thing that. Most famous actors would relish. I have to say, I think there's something incredibly liberating for me, eight being able to do this. I don't get to be in a room in the way I am in the room for the half hour before the show ever. I don't get to walk into a huge crowd of room of people with my hat off and no glasses and not trying to, you know,
not trying to hide, which is normally my ammo when I go through the rest of my life. And actually being able to go into room just dot people and say, hi, I'm Dan, so nice to meet you.
Thank you for coming. Here's what the show's about.
It's just something I don't get to do. There's a line actually in the show, which I have one of the many lines that I relate to where I say, I was not shy. I've been trying to stay constant level. And there is something about, I think people think of me as being quite shy. But actually, like, I'm really not.
I love talking to people. It's just that talking to people and being not shy. You know, can have a different knock on effect in the rest of my life. Or actually, this is an environment which is like, I can be both myself and quite valuable and just running around. But also, there's a certain amount of, like, yeah, I don't know, it's hard.
“No, I think I think you're saying that you're getting as much out of these interactions as a week.”
Oh, a hundred percent. Yeah, absolutely. And because sometimes people will amaze you, just they genuinely say something that is so moving and so real. And so unexpected, it moves me to the exact place where the character needs to be without me trying to have to work. To get there.
And now that you've been doing the show for a couple of months, do you have a single favorite interaction with an audience member so far? Yeah, I think, you know, we had, there's one of the characters in the show who is generally played by an older woman. And Mrs. Patterson. Yes. That's the role that I think everybody who sees the play probably fixes on to a degree.
And just to explain, without giving away too too much, Mrs. Patterson is a school counselor gives you and your darker younger days, some really important advice. And it requires you to go into the audience and ask someone to take off their shoe, remove their sock, and use it as a sock puppet. Yeah. And they have to make some real editorial decisions.
Yeah, I mean, what's the first scene with Mrs. Patterson is quite structured and follows, you know,
I generally, we hit pretty much all the same beats in it every night.
The last scene is truly one of the joys of the show is that a lot of differen...
So there is a final scene with Mrs. Patterson where having grown up, I then call on her again to, like, essentially comfort me in a moment of real despair.
“And that we had the woman the other day and she was incredible. And I, you know, when I said to her, I asked Mrs. Patterson, do you remember what I was like as when I was a kid?”
And she said, you were happy sometimes, but you were sad sometimes. And when you were sad, you used to work on your list. And then she said, and when I'm sad, I still work on my list. And I just, like, started cracking. It was so beautiful and so generous of her to, like, reach into her actual experience and talk to me that sort of honestly. And the joy of doing the show is that you were exposed on a daily basis to people's brilliance and their kindness.
And actually that's what I say to people a lot when I'm asking people to join in the show. I say, you don't have to be funny. You don't have to be clever.
If you are those things, that's a great bonus. The only thing you have to be to make the show work is kind. And if you're kind, the show flies. That's beautiful. It's a really, it's a beautiful thing to be on the receiving end of. A lot of the show is genuinely funny. And it's core the show is quite serious. It's a quite serious exploration of depression and of suicide. And I wonder how you get the quotient's right. The quotient that needs to be serious and sober and honor that wavy subject. And the frequent amount of joy and laughter and comedy that's happening.
Yeah, I mean, there is something about trying to model the behavior of somebody who has been through something very dramatic and has dealt with depression, and talking about it from a place of now, being okay or have certainly, you know, have worked on themselves enough to be able to talk about it and laugh and see the funny side even in these dark moments,
“that I think there's something kind of hopefully healing about it. I think that's the beauty of the players that those things do sit alongside each other,”
and that there is hopefully something really cathartic hopefully in this show. It occurs to me that to be a very young actor living a life in the spotlight, needing to disguise yourself as you go about your life, could make a person sad from time to time. And your industry is filled with people who having lived in the public light as much as you have really struggle to make it through to adulthood. So as I watch this role, I did wonder how much any of this at all feels relatable to you.
I don't think there's anybody that could get to 36 years old without having either felt that kind of profound sadness themselves or known people who have experienced that. And actually in some ways, like the helplessness of not being able to lift someone that you love out of their depression is, you know, just as hard as being depressed yourself in a lot of ways.
“It's always very hard for me to figure out how much of what I've felt in my life is directly because of fame or without it.”
You know, I've only ever lived this way, so I can't separate sort of where what's inherent within me is, you know, separate from the facts of my life. There's a line in the show which says one of the brilliant things on the list is reading something which articulates exactly how you feel about something, but lack the words to express yourself. Whenever you do find something like that that says something about the world that you would like to have said yourself,
but would never have been smart enough or bringing it enough to that.
So there's this, there's Swiss Army man, there's a couple of things that I've done that truly are that to me. And this is one of them. So there's a kind of existentialism about the show which is that like, you know, maybe there's no inherent meaning in life, but the meaning we pick up along the way about where we find joy and where we find connection and love, that that is the meaning that we create in it ourselves is something that I think I believe. Religiosity of everyday joy.
Yeah, exactly. Absolutely. And being that that is that being its own reward and the finding of those things being meaning in and of itself. This show draws a very, a very direct line between happiness and the ability to notice new, wonderful things. And I do think that it's sort of a practice that when we were in rehearsal, we were dunking and encouraged us all to like, write new brilliant things down on the wall in case we saw something that, in fact, one of them has ended up as one of the last ones we read in the show.
Maddie, head of a props department, wrote down when the windshield wipers wipe to the beat of the song, which is just like a brilliant, it is a brilliant thing.
I think that it has become sort of a practice of if you just have this frame ...
It has, you know, for me at least it's been something that I have found a real positive way of sort of moving through the world.
Daniel, this show, I'm not breaking any news to you, has been a big hit on Broadway with you and it, but it's been a big hit. A lot of places all over the United States, all over the United Kingdom, South America, Korea, Bangladesh, Kenya, as a person who's lived inside the show.
“Why do you think it has been able to have the kind of impact it has in so many different places?”
No, I mean, I think it's one of the kind of brilliant, oh, God, it's so hard. Sorry. So, as I described the show with that, he's not what. I had the same thing when I was promoting weird out the movie. I just kept saying the word weird all the time. Anyway, so it is one of the, I think the extraordinary things that show managers to do is it finds the universal in the incredibly specific. There is something beautiful about how actually similar we all are and how we all want basically the same things which is connection, love and joy.
Yeah, you know, I'm in the show until late May and then it's carrying on with Maritka Hargate and I'm so happy that the versatility of the monologue will be able to be seen by more people. I hope it has a long life here in New York and I hope it continues to have a life around the world. As it has up until this point and hopefully, you know, the visibility of it being on Broadway can sort of extend that further and further. Yeah, I mean, the thing that I experienced is that everybody who left that theater was in a state of joy.
However, a femoral eye was in a state of joy.
That kind of happy face hurt smiling. Oh my God, amazing thing.
And, and for that, I want to thank you. So you're more than welcome. Thank you for coming and watching it. Thank you for coming into the studio and having this conversation. Thank you so much. We really appreciate it. After the break, we're going to hear from people from around the world who helped make this show the sensation that it's now become. We'll break back.
Hey, I'm Joel. And I'm Juliet from New York Times Games. And we're out here talking to people about games.
“You play New York Times games? Yes, every day. Do you have a favorite?”
Connections? It just makes you think. I feel like it gives me a elasticity. We eat four groups of four. This is actually a pretty cool game. What's your favorite game? The crossword. The crossword.
I did it in my brother. We get says they sometimes. But I don't think I can do that. I feel like I'm learning. I feel like I'm accomplishing something. I like the do do do do do do do do do do do do.
When you finish it. My family does word on me. Have a huge group chat like my grandma does word on like your grandma does word on every day. Yeah, do you have a word on hot take?
“You should start with the word that strategically bad to make it more fun.”
All of these games are so fun because it's like a little five to ten minutes like break. I love these games. Yeah. New York Times Games subscribers get full access to all our games and features. Subscribe now at nytimes.com/games for a special offer.
You're like in the this is never the point.
It was to end on Broadway with a show like this. Over the past couple of weeks. My colleague producer Alex Baron spoke with the creator of every brilliant thing. And a few of the hundreds of actors who have performed it. I'm Duncan McMillan and I wrote the play every brilliant thing.
This is a show that was written. I was asked to do a sort of scratch night thing at a small and theatre. And the idea is you do sort of one off piece of work and it's never seen again. And so I wrote this 20 minute monologue for Rosie Thompson who's this actress wonderful actress to do. But the whole shape of the show.
But it had none of the audience interaction. She was asked to do again. Another small theatre and then another one. I was asked to read it at one place and then another place. And then other people started reading it.
Phoebe Wallabridge was one of the Jarvis Cocker read it. It was this really fun thing. I couldn't see how to turn it into a full night play. And I was sort of really reluctant to do so. I got kind of bored and angered.
I suppose with depictions of suicide and depression as sort of poetic inevitabilities or glamorized or stigmatized. It's much more of an everyday thing.
I think we can all probably relate to if it's said properly.
And then I went to see a Johnny Donahoe who's a UK comedian.
“I've got a chair because I forgot my guitar strap.”
Rock. And the way he uses crowdwork is quite unique. He is so warm and trustworthy. And he sort of loves you. You're good, well for those things in the audience.
I thought, oh, if it can be more like this, I'm up for that. Like you keep the integrity of it being a monologue. But you also you do it in a way which is inclusive and collective and about the audience. So Johnny started doing it in 2013, 2012. That week was tough.
I had to go and see the school councillor who was actually just Mrs. Patterson from the sixth grade. There's stuff in there that is purely him. Mrs. Patterson taking a sock off. Now I'm going to ask you to be Mrs. Patterson, but I don't want you to worry because you don't have to do much about you. I've written that there was a sock puppet and you're giving a sock puppet.
And he was like, I can take the get them to take their sock off.
“And I was like, that's never going to happen.”
And he was like, I can make them take their sock off.
What she would do when you arrived is she would first take off one shoe and then she take off the sock.
The feeling was let's show a collective experience where we're all crying together. We're all laughing together and sharing in the truth of that. Hopefully quite worthwhile and maybe even healing experience. I probably should know it off my heart by this stage. Okay, yeah, I got it.
The list began after her first attempt. A list of everything brilliant about the world, everything worth living for. One ice cream. Two water fights. Three.
Sting up past your better and it being allowed to watch last program. Four. Five. Six.
“I started the list on the 9th of November 1996.”
I started the list on the 9th of November 1986. I started the list on the 9th of November 1987. My name is Mogambin Thiga and I performed every brilliant thing in Nairobi, Kenya. The director I worked with reached out. She said that there was a mental health summit that was coming up.
And they wanted a big finisher. And so she found this play, a brilliant thing. I don't think anyone had expected what was coming.
First of all, we're not in a theatre, we're in a tent.
She's on a concrete basketball court over which they'd put a tent. I came out before the play began. I was saying hi to everyone. I was giving out the numbers. And she's supposed to be getting on stage and I'm like, I actually am on stage right now.
It's begun. It's begun just, you know, click this. And when I call out that number, just call out the number. No one had any idea what we were doing. And when the play began, just a couple minutes in, they were.
Loved it. You know, I call out number one. And someone goes ice cream and they're like, oh, someone else has a piece of paper. Two, three, four. Okay.
I know what's going on now. It's almost like a dance that we have, you know, with the other audience members. The one that didn't want to play with me in the beginning, want to play in the middle of the play. I think it's just solidified for me.
Really the importance of community. Hi, my name is Greg Dragas. Hi, my name is Candidumette. And I performed every brilliant thing in Virginia. And I have performed this wonderful show with Virginia stage company and a gazillion different
places. We've switched off who performs. Basically, it's just who's available at the time. I've performed the show on the USS George H. W. Bush. Make sure they got the whole name in there.
An actual vessel, a Navy vessel, which is like mind-blowing to think about. The operations of the US Navy don't just stop because you're putting on a play. There's like people are marching. There are four cliffs driving around behind the audience. At one point at a alarm went off.
A large going off. And I thought, should I be worried? People are coming up the game way. Like, I'm trying to deliver my lines in meaningful way.
My goal always is to catch them, to connect, you know, eye to eye contact.
You know, you can tell during a show if an audience is with you or not.
In that space, getting through to them wasn't a heart thing.
Especially when like this where the lights are totally up and they're right there in front of you.
And you're interacting with them. Yeah, it felt like a good show.
“I remember learning as we were going in to do these shows on the aircraft carrier that apparently there had been one week where three crew members had taken their own lives.”
Just on that ship. This has been more than once where we've come in and perform the show because there's either been a spike in the number suicide or someone has just, you know, lost their lives to suicide. And it's more of a fragile environment. And it's more of a, it's more of a need to really get that message out there.
The Navy shows that we've done do strike me as some of the most important that we do.
We have partnered with local organizations that will come out to our shows that will have our show and we will also give out resources and connect to people who can continue that conversation after we're done. I'm sure there were folks that were probably not super comfortable with what we were doing, but for those that are more willing to participate. Those opportunities there. Doing the Navy shows is especially challenging for the Mrs. Patterson scene because they look at you like I am not taking part of my uniform off.
Maybe they don't know if they're even allowed at that time to take their part of their uniform off.
In Miami, I can tell you that nobody uses socks.
“We have to ask for scarves. Can you use your scarf?”
There is a lot of worry about will the audience, especially when they play Mrs. Patterson, taking their shoe off and putting a sock on their hand. Be able to take on the role without feeling uncomfortable. I'm Tabel Jean. I will see every brilliant theme in Korea. Our Korean audience is on the Shire side and as an actor myself, I'm on the more introverted side too.
So we actually prepared socks on our hand in case someone would be unable to take off their own socks. I don't think there was anyone who asked for that.
“Everyone, although they are shy, in that moment, was so eager to help the actor out. When they participate without hesitation, those moments are memorable.”
We wanted to enter their own space. Where did they feel safe? Hello, I am Mohsin Akta and I performed in every brilliant thing in Bangladesh. I am performed in living rooms, cafes, offices and libraries and even hospitals. When this issue is explored in a private setting, I am on friends and family to this performance. Everyone can begin to understand and import their eyes with one another.
And after the show, of course, they feel that we have a common ground somehow. And I am maybe a part of their lives. Like after one performance, I held my hand and confused that she had been contemplating suicide. Until she saw the play, just hold my hand and like that. She told me the show changed her mind. The very next month, she organized her performance in her own drawing room for her friends and family.
This play gives me miracles, give me interactions that are unforgettable and give me hope. Hi, my name is Erika de la Vega. I have performed every brilliant thing in more than 20 cities in the United States. I have been in Panama, Chile, Canada, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Iguate Malah. A guy in Washington DC, when I finished the play, he couldn't stand up and leave. And my producers sat down with him and told me what's going on.
You are here, Erika is over there, she is going to take some pictures of what...
And he told her that he was thinking about taking his life the day before, but something tell him that go to a play.
“He went alone and he didn't believe what he was experiencing.”
I spoke with him and took a picture and we were very worried that month after that I was performing Miami and he sent a message to my producer. And he said to her like, "Hi, I'm traveling to Miami and I want to take some friends to the play." When we did the restaging in 2024, one young person came to me and said, "I came for the show last year." And we had mental health support, someone wanted to talk to someone after the play, they could go into a little tent and talk to someone. And she did, and that started her journey in seeking therapy.
And when she was coming for the play a year later, she said, "I'm coming to celebrate one year of therapy."
I'm Tommy Schoffler, I performed every billion thing in Juno, Alaska.
After the show closed, I was inspired to enroll in my college master's program in counseling. So I actually finished another master's degree in mental health counseling. So I'm actually moved to where I'm now working in counseling. I had many hugs from long hugs sometimes from strangers who are not strangers anymore after the show. I'm Nanda Muhammat, I performed every billion thing in Egypt and our report.
I have a lot of beautiful memories with the audience during this show. One time a woman was playing Miss Sara, she's the school counselor. In the original production, it was Miss Patterson, with me in our version, the name is Miss Sara. And we improvised together. She was asking me some questions and I was improvising with her.
“And at the end she said, "But you are very intelligent and very clever and you are so courage and you need to move on."”
She was so sincere and genuine when she was saying that. And then I said to her, "Honestly, I feel that I can't move on." She said, "Do you remember your list?" So I said, "No, I don't remember anything." And she started to yell at the numbers.
She said, "What had one?" "I'll handle." Two swimming. She was like three. Staying up late passure bedtime and being allowed to watch TV. Four people falling over.
Five, six, seven, and when she couldn't remember the rest of the numbers, the audience was saying it themselves. Not until I go Jordan. The first time I saw Hijal in Indiana Jones, the Temple of Doom, Bangaley Flower, all Hijal. The sensation of Kalma, that comes at the heart of Quinta, that, although this is a lamentable situation, there is nothing to be able to do.
And they were all together shouting all the lists and I was like, "Oh my God! They happen, they finished it. It was very beautiful.
I can't. I will never forget her."
“I think if I heard about this play and thought, "Oh, it's a show about you know, if you just,”
if you only look at the bright side of life, you'll be okay." That's not what I'm trying to say at all. What I really believe in is the power of people and the power of actual genuine connection with human beings. And I believe in asking for help when you need it and giving help when asked for it. Experiencing the show should re-enigize your faith in how brilliant people can be.
The list began at the first attempt. The list of everything.
The list began at the first attempt.
After the break, my call with the actress was about to take over this role on Broadway.
Morrishka, Harketany.
Hello. Hey, Merska. Michael Barbarrow here. Hi. Thank you for doing this. I'm couldn't be more excited about it. There's nothing that I rather talk about right now than this.
Then this is something beautiful and brilliant and just feels like a big huge gift that landed in my lap. And just to explain in a few weeks, you're set to take over the central role in every brilliant thing.
This is your first time correct me if I'm wrong on Broadway.
This is my Broadway debut. I mean, I just want to say letting your first appearance on Broadway be a high-wire act one person audience interaction extravaganza is bold. It's bold. It's bold, Michael, but it's so up my alley. Why? Because for those who know you through TV, primarily as Captain Olivia Benson from Lawdoriss for you.
And by the way, when I was watching you were detectives, so congrats on the promotion. Thank you. Thank you. This might seem like a pretty unusual career turn. And so I want to understand why you think it's up your alley.
“How you decided to do not just Broadway, but why this show?”
I am very different than Olivia Benson. And I love humans and I love to connect with humans. And I think, you know, this is what human beings need is communities. So I want to be in community. I want to give community. I think that there are ways that I am much more like this person. I see parallels to my own history in this play and very excited to just explore that.
Well, I want to talk about those parallels to your life that you just mentioned because I just saw the documentary. The documentary that you made about your mother, Jane Mansfield. The documentary is called "My Mom Jane." And it's a really bracing brutal, candid journey of self-discovery. Because your mother died when you were three years old.
It seems like you've spent a lot of your adult life trying to understand this mother that you never really knew.
And after seeing the film and seeing everybody in thing, I started to see so many parallels to the character in every brilliant thing.
“Am I being too much of a dime stores like all of this here?”
Now, not at all. I am so drawn to themes of healing and renewal. You know, my movie was about our, it's a family film, right? It's a movie about our collected pain and the, the universality of family trauma. And I have had some profound conversations with people after the film because of what it brought up in them, right? For me, I made a film about my family, about my mother, right? And you'd think, "Wow, that's nothing to do with me."
Right? And that's not to take away the film. The takeaway is mourning and identity and love and pain. And in these pains, this is where we do connect, right? When somebody shares their history with you, is all that makes you feel is compassion and love for them. And so that is what this play, I think, leaves us with, is such beautiful empathy and compassion. And again, the resiliency and the triumph of the human spirit.
Okay, so to end, which brilliant thing from the shows, very long list of them, speaks to you, Mariska Hargate, the most. There's just so many for so many different reasons and what was so fun is as I started preparing for the play. You know, I made my own list of brilliant things.
“Oh, can you tell me one from your own personal list, if I can pry?”
Oh, my gosh, I have it right here. How about this, are you ready? Yes.
Speed Racer, $6 million man, Bionic Women, Jolly Ranchers, the things monogrammed with my name on it.
That's how it was better and cheap.
Cardinias, the first summer jump into a pool, your first time putting your feet in the ocean at the beginning of summer.
Carries, a coffee with heart, put in the foam, full moon. You know, when my husband hands me my coffee in the morning, there's just these little moments now that are so sacred.
“I have a new lens right now, so I'm going into something that it's so joyful, even though the premise of the play, there's so much pain there, and yet isn't that the way life goes, we laugh, we cry, and life is hard.”
So, so joyful, if you can see it.
Well, Mariska, we will not only be rooting for you, we will be in the audience at some point to watch. Thank you.
“And if you're out, you're any good at it.”
I also...
Today's episode was reported and produced by Alex Barron, with help from Tina Antelini.
It was edited by Wendy Dorr.
“Our production manager is Franny Kartoff.”
The episode contains original music by Diane Waw, Alicia By YouTube, Dan Powell, Leah Shaw Dameron, Miran Lzano, and Roenie Misto, who also engineered the episode. Special thanks to Hannah On and Minju Park. That's it for the Daily On Sunday. I'm Michael Barrow. See you tomorrow.


