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A star does his 'Brilliant Thing' onstage
Los Angeles Times
|March 16, 2026
In this interactive Broadway premiere, Daniel Radcliffe's work is deeply felt.
MATTHEW MURPHY DANIEL RADCLIFFE'S character compiles an ongoing list of what makes life worth living, and includes the audience in the process.
What makes life worth living? For hardcore "Harry Potter" fans with money to burn, it might be getting Broadway tickets to interact fleetingly with Daniel Radcliffe in "Every Brilliant Thing," an ingenious and touching solo performance piece written by Duncan Macmillan with Jonny Donahoe on the subject of suicide — or more precisely, on the ordinary joys that militate against such a drastic step.
Radcliffe was breathlessly scampering up and down the aisles of the Hudson Theatre before the show began, enlisting audience members to be participants in the play. Having seen "Every Brilliant Thing" twice before, once at the Edye (the black box at Santa Monica's BroadStage) starring Dona-hoe in 2017 and once at the Geffen Playhouse's intimate Audrey Skirball Kenis Theater starring Daniel K. Isaac in 2023, I knew exactly what he was up to.
The play revolves around a list that the narrator began at the tender age of 7 after his mother first attempted suicide. While she was still in the hospital, he started compiling, as much for her benefit as for his own, sources of everyday happiness.
Ice cream, water fights, kind people who aren't weird and don’t smell unusual. These items are given a number, and audience members assigned a particular "brilliant thing" are expected to shout out their entry when their number is called.
The list gradually grows in complexity as the narrator gets older. Miss Piggy, spaghetti bolognese and wearing a cape give way to more sophisticated pleasures, such as the way Ray Charles sings the word "You" in the song "Drown in My Own Tears" or the satisfaction in writing about yourself in the second person.
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