Lea Michele to replace Beanie Feldstein in Funny Girl on Broadway

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It's time to say "hello, gorgeous" to a new star!

The rumors were true: Lea Michele is officially replacing Beanie Feldstein as Fanny Brice in the Broadway revival of Funny Girl.

Feldstein earned much press for being the first woman to play Fanny on Broadway since Barbra Streisand originated the role, but the actress revealed Sunday that she will step away from the show at the end of this month after previously announcing her plans to exit the production (alongside Jane Lynch) in September.

Lea Michele, Beanie Feldstein
Lea Michele, Beanie Feldstein

Kevin Mazur/Getty Images; Arturo Holmes/Getty Images Lea Michele is taking over the role of Fanny Brice in Broadway's 'Funny Girl' from Beanie Feldstein.

Rumors had swirled that the Glee star known for her own rendition of Funny Girl track "Don't Rain on My Parade," would subsume the role. Michele has a working relationship with the show's director, Michael Mayer, who helped propel her to theatrical stardom by casting and directing her in Spring Awakening.

Sadly, we won't be getting a Glee reunion as Michele's run as Fanny won't overlap with former costar Lynch playing her mother. Instead, Tony nominee Tovah Feldshuh (Broadway's Yentl, Crazy Ex-Girlfriend) will take over the role of Mrs. Brice when Michele begins on Sept. 6.

Feldstein's understudy, Julie Benko, who earned strong notices when she stepped into the role in the star's absences, will fill in during the gap between Feldstein's July 31 departure and Michele's arrival. Ramin Karimloo, who stars as Nick Arnstein, and Tony-nominee Jared Grimes, who plays Eddie Ryan, will remain with the production through the casting change.

Funny Girl was one of the most anticipated shows of the spring Broadway season, coming with high expectations due to the fact that this marks the first Broadway revival of the musical since its debut in the 1960s. But it was quickly hampered by lackluster reviews, particularly for Feldstein.

"It's hard to escape the feeling that Feldstein, for all her fourth-wall winks and bright enthusiasm, is fundamentally miscast," wrote EW critic Leah Greenblatt. "This Girl needs a force majeure, not a light breeze, to make it sing."

The show is currently in an open-ended run at the August Wilson Theatre.

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