Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Ryan Murphy Reveals Who Mr. Schuester On 'Glee' Was Actually Written For—And It Makes Sense

Ryan Murphy; Matthew Morrison as "Glee" character Will Schuester
Kevin Winter/Getty Images, Fox

The 'Glee' creator also said the character famously played by Matthew Morrison was a 'crystal meth addict' in the original pilot script.

Ryan Murphy disclosed he envisioned pop megastar Justin Timberlake for the role of Mr. Schuester in the musical TV series Glee.

The character of Mr. Schuester that inevitably went to Broadway actor Matthew Morrison was a Spanish teacher who forms a show choir at the school.


Murphy reunited to reflect on the show's pilot episode with Glee stars Kevin McHale, who played Artie Abrams, and Jenna Ushkowitz, who played Tina Cohen-Chang on the first episode of their new iHeart Radio podcast And That's What You REALLY Missed.

During the discussion, the award-winning writer said of the role of Mr. Schue:

"When we were writing the pilot, I've never really talked about this, that pilot was written for Justin Timberlake."
"Mr. Schue was written for Justin."

Some fans were floored by the revelation.






Some people were hardly jolted by the news.



Prior to the revelation, Murphy talked about the origins of Glee and how he was trying to find a way to develop a musical TV series well after landing an overall deal with Fox.

The script for Glee was given to him at the most unexpected place and time.

"While we were having these conversations and I was trying to figure it out, like serendipity, I went to the gym and I was in a towel and a guy went up and handed me a script and he said, 'I had a feeling you were in show choir, am I right?' And I was like 'Yeah'."

He added:

"And he said, 'My friend wrote this script and you should read it'."

While he was impressed by the viability and potential of the musical show after reading the original script–written by co-creator Ian Brennan–Murphy wasn't so sure about the darker tone.

"Mr. Schue, I believe, was a crystal meth addict in Ian's script," Murphy said.

"The NC-17 version of show choir with a weird protagonist who was unraveling."

Murphy then requested the show to be more "pop-y" and "not dark," adding he needed "something optimistic."

Interestingly, Glee wound up portraying Mr. Schue as a controversial figure.

Examples of this include his blackmailing Finn to get him to join the glee club, Mr. Schue's insistence for the school to do a performance of The Rocky Horror Picture Show as a way to get closer to his "taken" female staff member Emma Pillsbury and a slew of other indiscretions.

More from Entertainment/tv-and-movies

Wallace from 'Wallace & Gromit' with jam on toast; TikToker Joseph Herscher recreating the scene
Aardman Animations/BBC; @josephmachines/TikTok

TikToker Goes Viral For Creating Real-Life Version Of Infamous 'Wallace & Gromit' Contraption

From The Jetsons to The Pee-wee Herman Show, from Flubber and Casper to Wallace & Gromit, Gen-Xers and Millennials had endless examples of living life with ease, automation, and robotic assistance.

There were machines that could dress us, brush our teeth and hair, and make us breakfast, and we were fascinated with the possibilities behind living in such an assisted world.

Keep Reading Show less
Screenshots from Fox News video of Camryn Kinsey and Jonathan Hunt
Fox News

Former Trump Official Faints And Falls Off Chair In Shocking Moment During Live Fox News Interview

It was sudden: Former Trump administration official and conservative pundit Camryn Kinsey collapsed mid-interview during a live segment on Fox News—and network host Jonathan Hunt, though horrified at first, tried to continue the segment as if nothing happened.

Hunt was interviewing Kinsey for a segment on former President Joe Biden’s recent media appearances when the incident occurred.

Keep Reading Show less
John Oliver
@LateNightSeth/YouTube

John Oliver Hilariously Explains Why Having A UK Version Of 'SNL' Is A 'Terrible Idea'

John Oliver is not buying into the hype around a British version of Saturday Night Live.

During an appearance on Late Night with Seth Meyers on Monday, the English comedian made it clear: bringing SNL across the Atlantic is, in his words, “a terrible idea.”

Keep Reading Show less
Nancy Sinatra; Frank Sinatra; Donald Trump
Dave J Hogan/Getty Images; Ron Galella/Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images; Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images

Nancy Sinatra Shuts Down MAGA Fan Who Claimed Her Famous Dad Would've Voted For Trump

It's no secret that MAGA Republican President Donald Trump hasn't been able to attract the cream of the crop when it comes to the entertainment industry. While Kid Rock, Kevin Sorbo and Scott Baio are Trump ride or dies, pretty much every other Hollywood or music legend or rising star is taking a pass on Trump.

And some outright despise the man and let everyone know. Often.

Keep Reading Show less
Pope Leo XIV; JD Vance
Simone Risoluti - Vatican Media via Vatican Pool/Getty Images; Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images

MAGA Brands New Pope 'Woke' After His Past Tweet Criticizing JD Vance Resurfaces

After Cardinal Robert Prevost—a Chicago-born Roman Catholic Augustine cleric who ministered in Peru and later led the Vatican’s influential Bishops’ office—made history as the first American ever elected Pope in the Church’s 2,000-year history, a tweet from February resurfaced in which he shared an article criticizing Vice President JD Vance for "ranking" his love for others.

And MAGA is not happy about it.

Keep Reading Show less