It's 2020, and we got a Jessie topknot tutorial, Craftin' With Carole, and Jessie playing the guitar in a thirty minute timespan.
Incredible.
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@muellerdk
It's 2020, and we got a Jessie topknot tutorial, Craftin' With Carole, and Jessie playing the guitar in a thirty minute timespan.
Incredible.
Jessie Mueller on āCBS This Morningā promoting video collaboration to benefit The Actorās Fund. April 7, 2020.
Former cast members and musicians from productions of Beautiful: The Carole King MusicalĀ around the globe, including an appearace from Carole herself at the end, collabortate to performĀ āYouāve Got A Friendā during quarantine.
This made me smile so much this morning!
THE DISTANCING DIARIES: JESSIE MUELLER IS TURNING TO COOKING, HARRY POTTER, AND DOLLY PARTON
March 26, 2020 by Suzy Evans
Welcome to The Distancing Diaries, where we chat with members of the theater community about how theyāre staying creative and inspired in the time of social separation. While we canāt go to a show (for now), we hope that by sharing stories from the field, youāll find comfort, solace, and maybe a few new ideas of how to pass the time.
Tony Award winner Jessie Mueller, known for her leading turns in āBeautiful: The Carole King Musical,ā āWaitress,ā and āCarousel,ā had just started previews for her first play on Broadway, āThe Minutes,ā when the theaters were ordered to shut down to slow the spread of coronavirus. But she takes comfort knowing that this is something that is having an impact on everyone.
āThatās the wild and maybe beautiful thing about it,ā she says. āWeāre all being asked to slow down, take care, be aware, and work as a collective.ā
Mueller shared with us how sheās spending her time (lots of cooking) and some of her favorite recent reads and binges.
āThis is all really strange and sometimes scary and most of all unprecedented,ā she adds. āIāve never been good with the unknown. For me, this is a big lesson in patience.ā
Read more about how sheās spending her time below!
What is keeping you inspired during this time? Is there anything specific that youāre turning to for inspiration?
Canāt say Iāve been particularly creative! But Iām also coming to peace with that. Itās ok to slow and pause and listen instead of make and produce. Iāve definitely been cooking more and remembering thatās a creative outlet I love.
What is something (or a few things) great that youāve watched?
āMcMillionsā [on HBO], āOutlanderā [on Starz]. I miiiiiight be considering rewatching the whole series of āDownton Abbey.ā āJamestown,ā and Jimmy Fallon and Stephen Colbertās Late Night Home Editions.
What is something that youāve enjoyed reading?
Iāve been rereading āHarry Potterā! And a wonderful book called āThe Queens of Animationā by Nathalia Holt, about the women working for Disney Animation during its early years.
What are you listening to?
If you havenāt listened to the podcast āDolly Partonās Americaā yet, do it! Weāve also been thinking about picking some old radio shows and listening to them at night (like āBob and Ray,ā available on iTunes.) Meg Tooheyās album āButchā is also on heavy rotation and available on iTunes and Spotify. Itās killer.
Have you gotten into cooking or baking? Whatās something that youāve enjoyed making, and if you can, can you share the recipe?
Yes, I havenāt cooked or baked this much in years! Iām loving it, trying different gluten-free baking recipes and making lots of soups. For anyone with a gluten intolerance, I love Bobās Red Mill 1 to 1 Baking Flour. Itās an awesome blend that has xantham gum in the mix, so itās super easy to use and Iāve had great results.
Here are some of her recent recipes:
Gluten-free White Sandwich Bread
Chocolate Chip Zucchini Bread
How are you staying physically and vocally ready to return to your show?
Itās hard! Most gyms are closed, and Iāve not been moving as much as I normally do. But there are lots of great videos online for yoga and things to stay active and sweat those toxins and crappy feelings out! But Iāve noticed Iām feeling better in a lot of ways because Iām cooking for myself and know exactly what Iām putting into my body. Iām also getting more sleep.
Jessie Mueller, Armie Hammer, K. Todd Freeman, and Sally Murphy in āThe Minutes.ā (Photographed by Michael Brosilow)
How do you think people can support theater and the arts community and engage with it during this time?
Look, everyone is facing some very real financial realities right now. If you can give, great, if not, think about how you can exercise what the arts do best: reach out and be empathetic (from a safe social distance, of course). Be there for the people you love. Listen. Stream! The artists you watch and listen to receive that love (and sometimes even payment!)
If youāre looking to give, especially to the theatrical community: The Actorās Fund helps all theatrical artists in times of crisis. Check out Seth Rudetsky and James Wesleyās live concert broadcasts Stars in the House to benefit this awesome cause! Not only do you get to hear some awesome music while most of us are on hiatus, but you just might get a look at your favorite starsā throw pillows and pets!
Season of Concern is Chicagoās version (my hometown!) of Broadway Cares that funds their local theatrical community.
Rosieās Theatre Kids is my favorite Arts Ed organization right here in NYC! Programs like this need our help right now to keep kids inspired, connected and safe!
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You donāt want to walk around thinking youāre hot shit. But you also have to say, āI have a right to be here and my point of view is unique.ā
Ohhhhā¦what secret?
Jessie Mueller attends the 25th Annual Criticsā Choice Awards held at Barker Hangar on January 12, 2020 in Santa Monica, California
I donāt know how to say this, sister⦠Lord, just say it!
it wasnāt god who made honky tonk angels
Jessie Mueller reminisces on her time at time at the diner.
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JESSIE MUELLER IN 2019
CATCHING UP WITH TONY AWARD WINNER JESSIE MUELLER
A POPBYTES EXCLUSIVE
Jessie Mueller and Megan Hilty arenāt just best friends on screen.
In fact, the Broadway alumni have been practically inseparable since filming the Lifetime movie, Patsy & Loretta. Released last month with an accompanying soundtrack now available for purchase, the biopic found Mueller and Hilty teaming up as iconic country singers Loretta Lynn and Patsy Cline.
Now, the duo continues to combine forces by kicking off Seth Rudetskyās new Broadway concert series at Town Hall. This Monday (December 2), Mueller and Hilty will perform in a one-night-only affair that promises to be full of show-stopping musical performances, up-close and personal conversations, and lots of surprises.
Leading up to this concert, I spoke with Mueller (Tony Award winner for Beautiful: The Carole King Musical, and nominee for Carousel, Waitress, and On a Clear Day You Can See Forever) about collaborating with Hilty, her creative process, returning to Broadway this winter in The Minutes, who sheād like to play on season three of Smash, and more.
ALEX KELLEHER-NAGORSKI: Prior to collaborating on Patsy & Loretta, you and Megan Hilty didnāt know one another. Now, it seems like you two are best friends! Why do you think you two have such great chemistry together, both when performing and not?
JESSIE MUELLER: I feel like there are many parts of our personalities that are very different ā but thereās just something about her that I innately really gel with. I think she has a tremendous sense of humor. Sheās a really hard worker and she knows whatās important. She doesnāt allow bullshit to take up a lot of space in her life. I really admire that. And weāre both just big dorks, so we get along well.
Youāve done several solo concerts with Seth Rudetsky in the past. What makes him a musical director you keep coming back to work with again and again?
Seth has such a vast knowledge of music and especially of the musical theater repertoire. He constantly amazes me. Heāll throw out an idea for a song, or Iāll say, āOh, gosh, well, I used to sing this one song,ā and heāll just start playing it. Heās one of those musicians. As funny and big as his persona is, I think sometimes people forget what an amazing technician he is. So to me, itās kind of the blend of the two things.
Heās really fun to perform with because heās such an amazing performer. I find that the energy just flows back and forth between us really well. Heās really funny. Heās great at off-the-cuff stuff, and he keeps me on my toes and makes it fun! You never quite know whatās going to happen and I think thatās very freeing.
Heās just such an amazing musician. Playing with any musician is a different experience. Itās about chemistry, like you were talking about with Megan. I just feel like we have both a good musical chemistry and a good conversational chemistry.
At the show, you and Megan will be interspersing your performances with behind-the-scenes stories about your career thus far. Are there any particular tales you can tell me today as a bit of a preview for what fans expect?
When Iāve done shows with Seth in the past, I told him my story about my first job on Broadway. He was like, āWell, we have to do that. We have to tell that story!ā I had one of those almost actor nightmare moments, where I went into an audition with a particular song and then the casting director said, basically, āDo you have this other type of song?ā Of course I didnāt, so I ended up just looking to the accompanist and saying, āCan we do this again with a different style to it?ā
Luckily, the accompanist completely rose to the occasion. Ultimately, I ended up getting the job but it was certainly one of those nail biting moments. I was like, āOh my god, I donāt have exactly what theyāre looking for!ā So I just made something up. I have a feeling that story might resurface.
But I canāt wait to hear Meganās! I want to hear audition nightmare stories of Meganās. So hopefully I will get to. People donāt get to see the part thatās just you, the people auditioning you and the accompanist. Thatās all thatās ever in the room. Itās like this secret enclave that people donāt get to view very often. I think stories about that are always interesting.
What type of music will you and Megan be performing at Mondayās concert? Will you be performing songs from Patsy & Loretta, your respective shows, holiday music, and/or something totally different?
Itās going to be a little mix of all of those things! Itās going to be some of the stuff that Megan and I have done in shows and also just some of our favorite songs. Weāre going to sprinkle in a little holiday stuff in there. There might also be a little Patsy & Loretta in there ā weāll have to see!
As a performer, how is your creative process different when preparing to go on stage as Jessie Mueller versus as a scripted character?
Oh, interesting. I usually find it more stressful. I think I find solace in slipping into a character. Usually, you also have much more preparation time for something like that.
Not that you donāt prepare for concerts ā itās just kind of a different animal because there arenāt the layers of transformation and research. Itās a little more of a ācome as you areā party. I think thatās part of why it could be so fun, and hopefully why it could be engaging for audiences. But itās certainly a different experience. Itās a more personal experience, or it can be. Itās something that is still kind of new to me. Iām still exploring it, but I feel like I learn a lot every time I do it!
One of the many things that I loved about Patsy & Loretta was just how remarkably similar you sounded to Loretta Lynn. From Carole King to now Loretta, how do you transform and manipulate your voice to so perfectly match the nuances and tones of these legendary performers?
Gosh, well thank you. The first thing I have to say is itās so nice to hear something like that. Iāve had the experiences of somebody saying, āGosh, you sounded just like so and so,ā and then somebody else will be like, āYou didnāt sound like her.ā To me, itās such a personal thing. Everybody experiences and hears things differently. So sometimes I lean into that. I try to do a lot of listening. I try to dig into āwhat do I love about this personās voice? How does this personās voice make me feel?ā
Technically, I canāt duplicate⦠It is very difficult to duplicate someoneās voice. There are people that are brilliant at it ā but to me, itās about finding certain nuances, phrasings, shaping of vowels, and so on.
I experienced that working on Patsy & Loretta. I was so fascinated by the way she looked and the way she sang. That was an interesting challenge because we look very different. Our facial structures are very different. So the way she creates sounds, or a certain sound, is very different than I would. As a singer, as a technician, you realize things like that really come into play ā the spreading of the jaw, where youāre putting your sound, how youāre phonating. Itās a lot of playing with that stuff. Itās a lot of guesswork. Sometimes itās trying something, recording it, listening to it back, and being like, āOh, that doesnāt sound anything like I thought it sounded in my head. Let me try this instead.
I really find it fascinating because I love peopleās voices. You spoke of Carole King and Loretta Lynn, those are two of my favorite voices now. I love the sounds of their voices, and both of their voices make me feel something when I hear them. I think there are just certain voices like that. Harry Connick is one of those people for me also. There are certain voices that the sound, the timbre, whatever it is, they just do things to you. Those are people that I have that reaction to.
Itās the work of like, āOkay, so what is that all about? Why do I have that reaction?ā Or, āHow do other people react to her, and what do they love about her voice?ā Only then can I try to figure out how I can filter that through myself.
This concert will be raising funds for Sandy Hook Promise. Why do you think this organization is so important?
Not to get political or anything, because in so many ways, I think it just goes so much farther than politics. But I believe that as a country, weāre in a slightly wounded state and I think thatās where violence comes out of. Thatās where fear comes out of. It comes out of wounds.
I certainly think that there are things we can do and there are actions we can take and should be taking. But also I think that we have to remind ourselves of the little things we can do to care for one another and to heal the really deep stuff that makes someone grab for a gun in the first place.
Sandy Hook Promise has done a really great job at getting the word out there. Thereās a new back-to-school commercial out thatās pretty shocking. For so many kids, things like lockdown drills will always be a part of their school experiences. They never were part of mine, so for me, thatās so surprising and heartbreaking.
In terms of the concert, it always feels good to do something like this for a purpose. And I think this is really an excellent one.
On January 5, Waitress will be closing up shop on Broadway. The last time that we spoke, you said that āplaying Jenna has taught me to own your feelings and your thoughts. The good, bad, and the ugly.ā What are some of your biggest takeaways from your journey originating the role of Jenna and what do you think the showās legacy will be?
I guess I agree with my statement from before! I canāt say that I always practice what I preach. Iām definitely still working on all of that. But I think it opened up that kind of thinking for me in a way that I hadnāt explored before I started working on that project. Itās something I still think about, because now that Iāve had time away from it, I see it in a very different light.
I think Waitress has brought and spread so much joy and so much hope to people. A lot of people have felt affirmation and hope from it in the sense that they have watched characters in that show go through very difficult things and come out better for them. Iāve spoken to a lot of people who relate to what those characters go through. Thatās a very powerful thing.
I think it is a very powerful thing, too, for women to witness other women acknowledging their own questions, downfalls, failures, accomplishments, and all the complexities that the characters experience in that show. We donāt see a ton of really fully-dimensional female characters all the time. With that show and with the people behind it, that was something everyone felt very strongly about. Thatās something thatās resonated very strongly with audiences, both female and male, but I think especially for women.
This February, youāll be returning to Broadway in the play The Minutes by Tracy Letts and featuring a cast that also includes Armie Hammer, Blair Brown, and Letts himself. What made you want to tackle a play instead of a musical this time around? And what is it about this specific play that made it the perfect one with which to make that switch?
One of the huge draws was Tracy Letts and his work. Once I read the play, I was really taken with it. It was unlike anything Iād read or worked on before. I havenāt done a play in a long time so I wanted the challenge.
To be honest, singing on Broadway eight times a week is really, really hard. It can be very rewarding but I wasnāt ready to step back into a big musical. Then this came along and so many wonderful people got involved. It really felt like something I wanted to be a part of. Itās something very exciting to be a part of!
At the same time that The Minutes will be playing its limited engagement, your sister Abby will be opening the musical Six as one of Henry VIIIās wives. In fact, your parents and two brothers are also all actors. How do you think coming from a family full of performers helped prepare you for your eventual Broadway domination? What are some of the ways that youāre all able to support one anotherās creative endeavors while simultaneously working on your own?
One of the best things that I got out of it was I got a healthy dose of reality about what it might actually be like. I donāt feel like I went into all this with stars in my eyes, like, āI want to be a star, Mama!ā It was like, āThis is really interesting and this is really hard work. This might go really well sometimes, but sometimes it might be really hard and challenging and demoralizing.ā I saw all that growing up.
Since my parents are actors as well, thatās one of the things that we relate to and lean on each other about ā the ups and downs of it. Thatās also what makes it exciting. When you get to celebrate someone in your family that you love and is having success, itās partly because you know how hard it is. So I think itās important to celebrate that when you get the chance to.
Fans are always clamoring for there to be a third season of the cult classic TV series Smash, which Megan Hilty starred in. If the show were to come back, would you want to be on it to work with Megan again? What would your dream character in that universe be?
Oh, hilarious! I know, I feel like weāve been hearing all these rumors. Iād work more with Megan in a heartbeat. What would I want to do though? Iād want to play somebody funny. Maybe I can play her makeup artist or her hair person or something. Or her assistant! I think that would be hilarious. Or I could play something I would never do, like a really outlandish choreographer. Any of that would be fun!
How will you be celebrating the holiday season this year and do you have a new years resolution for 2020?
My main goal is just to be with family and friends, and appreciate all of the time together and our blessings. Itās been a busy couple of years, and there is a lot to be grateful for.
New Yearās resolution? My biggest thing is just to be healthy ā physically, emotionally, spiritually, and really, really focus on putting that first. Then from there, hopefully, other things fall in line. I really appreciated how important that is this past year. So I will continue to be working on that!
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Jessie Mueller attending opening night ofĀ āA Christmas Carolā on Broadway (2019)
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Tracy Letts, Jessie Mueller, Armie Hammer & More to Star in The Minutes on Broadway
Tony-winning writer and actor Tracy Letts will lead the cast of his Pulitzer-finalist play The Minutes on Broadway next year. Letts will be joined by Tony winner Jessie Mueller and Golden Globe nominee Armie Hammer in the previously announced production, directed by Tony winner Anna D. Shapiro, scheduled to begin previews on February 25, 2020 and officially open on March 15 at the Cort Theatre. The Minutes will also feature two stars of Lettsā current Broadway play Linda Vista, Ian Barford and Sally Murphy, along with Tony winner Blair Brown (Mary Page Marlowe), two-time Tony nominee K. Todd Freeman (Airline Highway), Tony nominee Austin Pendleton (Choir Boy), Cliff Chamberlain (Superior Donuts), Danny McCarthy (To Kill a Mockingbird) and Jeff Still (To Kill a Mockingbird). Described as a comedy, The Minutes refracts the current state of America and our politics through a town meeting in the small fictional city of Big Cherry. The design team will be announced at a later date.
Patsy & Loretta Stars Megan Hilty and Jessie Mueller Open up About Playing Country Legends
OCTOBER 11, 2019 ā 4:30 AMĀ
ByĀ WALTER SCOTT
(Michael Kovac/Getty Images for A+E Networks / JAKE GILES NETTER/LIFETIME)
Broadway stars Megan Hilty and Jessie Mueller go country in Patsy & Loretta (October 19 on Lifetime), based on the real-life friendship between country icons Patsy Cline (Hilty, 38) and Loretta Lynn (Mueller, 36). Cline took the āCoal Minerās Daughterā under her wing and the two remained fast friends until Clineās death in 1963 at age 30.
What was your prior experience with country music?
Mueller: I remember traveling to Nashville when I was in my early teens, but in recent years Iām really getting into it again. Some of the new writers and artists, like Kacey Musgraves and Jennifer NettlesāI just love those gals.
Hilty: I grew up listening to Dolly Parton; when I started doing this, my dad got very emotional because of how much Patsy Cline music was played in his house growing up.
Did you try to sound like Patsy and Loretta?
Hilty: To an extent. Weāre playing actual people, but I am not a mimic. It also has to be real. Itās a delicate balance of going in that direction, but keeping your voice your own. Otherwise itās horribly distracting.
Mueller: In approaching a project like this, for me, itās a deep dive in the listening, trying to figure out the sound of Lorettaās voice. What is the essence of what she does? And then itās little things, like what are the Loretta-isms?
How did you each relate to the characters you were playing?
Hilty: Patsy seemed fiery, and I definitely have that quality too. It takes a minute for me to get there, but I like to take care of people like she did, and thereās something in each of us, to varying degrees, of a powerful drive, like ambition. I definitely related to that.
Mueller: I related to Lorettaās shyness. Sheās the opposite of Patsy with her tentativeness to enter into the business, to think she belonged; I get that. Iāve had a lot of amazing opportunities in my life and Iāve been super blessed, but Iāve had a lot of people helping to push me toward it.
Megan, will you add any of Patsyās songs to your concert repertoire?
Hilty: Iāll probably do āWalkinā After Midnight.ā I donāt know if Iām going to touch āCrazy.ā I think it might be crazy for me to touch āCrazy,ā but I might do some songs that we didnāt do in the film.
How hard was it to sing with a twang when you are basically trained for Broadway?
Mueller: Itās all technical, I think.
Hilty: Thatās the part I love about it. I love peopleās voices, I love accents, I love listening to different singers.
Mueller: Sheās really good at accents.
Hilty: ā¦and different things they do, but so are you. You have such a good ear. I just like that stuff. I feel like any time I approach a character, whether itās in a musical or whatever, one of my first things I think about is who they are, and Iāll be like, What do they sound like?
Mueller: Me too. I think the most important thing is what they sound like. Like where their voice resonates physically in their body.
Hilty: Yes, because that means something. Thatās like where youāre from, thatās if you want to be heard, if you donāt want to be heard, if youāre confident, if youāre shy. It tells you so many things.
Did you know each other before this, because Lifetime movies shoot quickly, and the friendship seems really authentic. So what did you do to make sure that that worked?
Mueller: We had a lot of slumber parties. No, we didnāt know each other before this. Weād met a couple of times socially through mutual friends, but we didnāt.
Hilty: We went out on a date to get to know each other in Nashville before we started filming.
Mueller: And then it just was real easy. I think we have a similar sense of humor.
Hilty: Yeah, we finish each otherāsā¦
Mueller: ā¦sentences.
Lorettaās still alive. Did you get a chance to talk to her at all?
Mueller: I havenāt had a chance to talk to her or meet her yet. We actually had an amazing experience. We were in Nashville filming and they were throwing a birthday bash for her 87th birthday party, which was like a blowout concert at the Bridgestone Arena, and Patsy Lynn, one of her daughters, arranged for Megan and me to go with backstage passes, and it was likeā¦
Hilty: It was magical.
Mueller: It was magical. Anybody who was anybody in country music was coming to sing out of the goodness of their heart and say happy birthday to her. I felt like such a voyeur. I was like, āThere she is in her red outfit.ā I really hope I get the chance to meet her and thank her.
Patsy died when she was 30. There wasnāt the celebrity media coverage then that there is now. How were you able to research her?
Hilty: Thereās lots written on her. I read two different books. One of them I did not like because it seemed like a lot of gossip and hearsay, and after all of the other things that Iād read I was like, āI donāt believe this.ā I also heard after that that people really loved telling stories on her, because she was a powerful woman, who was working, and that made people uncomfortable. So, like the line she had in the movie, āEverybody assumed I was handing out this favor or that to get where I am, when really I was just working really hard, and, honestly, even if that were the case, even if this gossip were true, it does nothing to serve anything.ā
So I read all that I could read. The letters that she wrote to people were extremely helpful because it showed how funny she was and how she wanted to laugh at everything. The letters that people wrote to her, being thankful for things that she did for them, were extremely helpful, and then the live recordings of her concerts were extremely helpful. Hearing how she spoke to her fans and her audiences was very helpful as well.
Country music back then was very much a manās industry. Thereās that scene with Patsy, Loretta, Dottie West and June Carter. It was nice to see that the women supported each other.
Hilty: Apparently, that was the thing.
Mueller: Oh yeah, that happened.
Hilty: It also happened to a negative effect. There was one story aboutā¦
Mueller: I think it was in Lorettaās book. She heard that some of the gals in townā¦and she didnāt name any names, which is very Loretta. But there were some gals in town who were kicking up some dirt about Loretta and they said, āWeāre going to have a meeting about this. We all need to get together. We need to figure out whatās going on with this gal.ā
Hilty: To figure out how to stop her, right?
Mueller: Yeah, a little bit. And they called Patsy, and theyāre like, āCome on,ā and Patsy called Loretta and was like, āHey, theyāre having a meeting. Youāre coming with me,ā and Loretta was like, āNo, no, no. I canāt do that.ā Patsy was like, āYes, you are,ā and they went. Patsy showed up with Loretta in tow and was like, āThis is Loretta. Get on board.ā
Hilty: Yeah, and they didnāt mess with her. Apparently, they were friends.
Mueller: In Lorettaās book, I hope Iām getting it right, because Loretta never named names, but she was like, āAnd Iām friends with a lot of those women to this day.ā Patsy really smoothed the waters, and was like, āJust stop it. Get on board. This is a good lady.ā I think Patsyās seal of approval meant a lot to people, because of who she was and how high people held her in esteem.
So we have films like Bohemian Rhapsody and Rocketman, what do you think is the fascination with telling these stories?
Mueller: The musicians.
Hilty: Absolutely. Everybody loves music.
Mueller: Yeah, and musicians lead remarkable lives.
Hilty: Donāt you think thereās a fascination with musicians, in terms of music is universal? Good songs reach people, so people are interested in the people that create the songs that reach them and why.
Mueller: Absolutely.
Hilty: But itās true. Itās like this person doesnāt know me, so why does it feel like they wrote this song about me? I think people are fascinated by that, and I think itās a gift. I think musicianship is a gift in the same way that I think people are fascinated with famous athletes and people that have extraordinary gifts. I think it falls under that category, so I think maybe thatās why people are fascinated by musicians.
Whatās next for you?
Hilty: Iām getting on a plane to go do a Lifetime Christmas movie.
Mueller: I donāt know what Iām doing next, so Iām hanging out. Iām waiting. Iām doing a little songwriting and weāll see what happens.
https://parade.com/934186/walterscott/patsy-cline-loretta-lynn-lifetime-movie
Jessie Mueller on the Grammy Salute to Music Legends - airing October 18 on PBS!
Patsy & Loretta āSelf Madeā promo