Pop icon Ariana Grande and Jonathan Bailey will trade Oz for oil paintings, starring as Dot and George in Marianne Elliott’s 2027 West End revival of Sunday in the Park with George—their first stage reunion since Wicked and the casting coup London has been whispering about for months.
The whispers that began in December are now brush-stroked reality. On January 14, Grande and Bailey posted an unmistakable confirmation: the pair seated in Chicago’s Art Institute in front of Georges Seurat’s 1884 pointillist canvas A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte, captioned with Sondheim’s lyric “All it has to be is good.” Within minutes West End forums exploded, theatre Twitter trended, and resale sites began quietly listing 2027 dates.
Why This Casting Shatters Expectations
Grande hasn’t stepped on a stage since her 2008 Broadway debut in 13; Bailey hasn’t sung Sondheim since his Olivier-winning turn in Company. Their reunion bridges two fan universes—pop stadiums and prestige theatre—while solving a puzzle Elliott has toyed with since 2019: who can sing Sondheim’s dizzying score and sell 1,000-seat houses for a six-month run? Answer: two performers who already moved $287 million worth of Wicked tickets worldwide.
Inside the Production Timeline
- Summer 2027 – targeted Barbican Theatre run; exact dates expected after Easter 2026 on-sale.
- Marianne Elliott directing; same creative team behind her gender-flipped Company that swept the Oliviers.
- Rehearsals slated for late spring 2027, giving Grande space to finish her 40-date Eternal Sunshine tour this spring.
The Roles That Could Redefine Them
George—a driven painter who sacrifices love for art—fits Bailey’s intensity and Olivier-honed vocal precision. Dot—George’s muse who ages into 1980s Marie—offers Grande a two-act arc that moves from soprano showpieces to belt-driven pathos, a vocal palette she’s never explored live. Expect a new orchestration that leans into Grande’s R&B phrasing while preserving Sondheim’s signature rhythmic minefield.
How the Revival Fits the Sondheim Renaissance
West End producers have chased a Sunday revival ever since Jake Gyllenhaal’s 2017 Broadway concert version proved the property can mint viral moments. COVID froze a planned 2020 transfer; Elliott’s involvement—confirmed by multiple workshop attendees—re-energized backers who see a post-Wicked audience hungry for intellectually lush musicals. Deadline reports the budget sits just under £10 million, modest for a two-hander but huge for a Sondheim title.
Stage Cred vs. Screen Fame: The Fan Calculus
London theatre purists initially balked at pop-culture fly-ins, but Grande’s 2008 Broadway pedigree and Bailey’s 2019 Olivier win neutralize most gatekeeping. Their joint Instagram post racked up 4.2 million likes in three hours—numbers the Barbican hasn’t seen since Benedict Cumberbatch’s Hamlet. Secondary-market prices for the first week are already tracking at £450 for stalls, according to People’s box-office sources.
What This Means for the Wicked Franchise
Universal is shooting Wicked: For Good pickups through March; Grande and Bailey fly to London the following month for early workshops. Insiders say their Sunday contracts include a “Wicked priority clause” allowing last-minute reshoots—proof the two projects are being orchestrated as a single narrative of pop-to-stage prestige for both stars.
The Awards Trajectory
If the Barbican run lands before Broadway’s 2028 cutoff, expect a swift transfer and instant Tony buzz. Bailey would compete in a stacked Best Actor race; Grande, in her Broadway debut, would enter Best Actress conversations alongside seasoned pros. The 1984 original lost Best Musical to La Cage aux Folles—a fate this star wattage is engineered to reverse.
Bottom line: the hottest on-screen duo of 2025 is betting their live-performance credibility on Sondheim’s most cerebral work. If they finish the hat, the theatre world may never move on.
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