Go2Tutors
15 Stars Who Took Their Talent to Broadway & Nailed It
By Adam Garcia
April 17, 2026

Broadway has always been the ultimate proving ground for performers. It strips away the safety nets of multiple takes, digital effects, and careful editing.
You’re standing on a stage in front of a live audience, and whatever happens, happens. When celebrities from other entertainment fields step into this world, the results can range from spectacular to cringe-worthy.
But some stars have made the transition look effortless, proving that true talent translates across mediums.
Hugh Jackman
Jackman owns Broadway like few performers ever have. His Wolverine fame brought audiences in, but his song-and-dance mastery kept them riveted.
The Boy from Oz earned him a Tony Award, and his hosting gigs at the ceremony became annual events people actually looked forward to watching.
Idina Menzel
Before Frozen made her a household name, Menzel was already a Broadway legend in the making. Rent launched her career, but Wicked made her untouchable (and yes, that defying gravity note still gives people chills).
She proved that Broadway voices don’t just survive in mainstream entertainment — they dominate it.
Neil Patrick Harris
Here’s someone who understood that Broadway isn’t just about having a good voice — it’s about commanding a room with nothing but presence and timing, which (as anyone who watched How I Met Your Mother can tell you) happens to be exactly what Harris does best. Hedwig and the Angry Inch showcased a performer who wasn’t just visiting Broadway but genuinely belonged there, someone who could handle the demanding physicality of eight shows a week while making it look like the most natural thing in the world.
And his Tony hosting performances? Those weren’t just award show segments — they were masterclasses in live entertainment. The man took a character that could have been a career risk and turned it into a triumph. Broadway rewards that kind of fearless commitment.
Scarlett Johansson
Johansson’s transition to Broadway felt inevitable once you saw her tackle A View from the Bridge. The stage demands a different kind of intensity than film acting, and she delivered it without seeming to break a sweat.
Her Tony nomination proved what theater insiders already knew — movie stardom and stage presence aren’t mutually exclusive.
Patti LuPone
LuPone didn’t transition to Broadway so much as conquer it entirely. Evita made her a star, but her decades-long relationship with the theater has been a masterclass in sustained excellence.
She approaches every role like she has something to prove, which keeps her performances sharp enough to cut glass.
Matthew Broderick
Ferris Bueller on Broadway might sound like a publicity stunt, but Broderick’s stage work runs much deeper than his movie fame suggests. How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying and Brighton Beach Memoirs showed a performer who understood that Broadway comedy requires precision timing that makes film acting look leisurely by comparison.
The stage doesn’t allow for the subtle facial expressions that carry movie scenes — everything has to be bigger, clearer, and more immediate, and Broderick adapted his naturally understated style without losing what made him appealing in the first place. His Tony wins weren’t consolation prizes.
They were recognition of someone who genuinely understood the medium.
Bernadette Peters
Peters moves between Broadway and other mediums like someone switching between instruments in the same orchestra. Sunday in the Park with George and Into the Woods showcased a performer who doesn’t just sing Sondheim — she inhabits his complex rhythms and emotional landscapes.
Her voice carries stories, not just melodies.
Lin-Manuel Miranda
Miranda didn’t just succeed on Broadway — he rewrote what success could look like there. In the Heights was impressive enough, but Hamilton became a cultural phenomenon that made Broadway tickets more coveted than concert passes.
His approach treats musicals like living documents rather than preserved traditions. The fact that Disney came calling afterward says everything about his crossover appeal.
Broadway became his launching pad, not his destination.
Sutton Foster
Foster represents Broadway excellence in its purest form, someone whose television and film work feels like pleasant diversions from her real calling, which is commanding a stage with the kind of energy that makes audiences forget they’re watching a performance rather than witnessing something spontaneous and unrepeatable. Thoroughly Modern Millie and Anything Goes weren’t just star vehicles — they were showcases for a performer who could handle the demanding choreography, complex vocals, and character work that modern musicals demand, often all within the same scene.
Her Tony wins feel like inevitabilities rather than surprises. Broadway rewards that kind of comprehensive skill.
Daniel Craig
Craig’s Broadway debut in Betrayal raised eyebrows initially — James Bond doing Pinter seemed like an odd fit. But theater revealed acting layers that action films couldn’t showcase.
His stage presence proved that movie stardom hadn’t dulled his ability to fill a room with nothing but dialogue and timing.
Denzel Washington
Washington approaches Broadway like he approaches everything else — with complete commitment and zero interest in half-measures. Fences showcased an actor who understood that stage work requires a different kind of stamina and presence than film acting.
His Tony win felt earned, not given.
Midler’s return to Broadway with Hello, Dolly! felt like a homecoming rather than a comeback, which makes sense considering she’s someone who never really left the theatrical mindset even when conquering other mediums, and her performance reminded everyone why she became a star in the first place — not through careful calculation or market research, but through the kind of full-throttle commitment that live audiences can sense from the cheap seats. Her voice filled the theater the way it was meant to, without microphones or studio enhancement, just pure vocal power applied with the precision of someone who understands exactly how much energy a room can hold.
And the standing ovations? Those weren’t polite theater etiquette. They were genuine appreciation for a master at work.
Jake Gyllenhaal
Gyllenhaal’s Broadway work in Sunday in the Park with George showed a film actor genuinely grappling with the demands of live theater. Sondheim’s material doesn’t allow for the subtle, internalized acting style that works in movies — everything has to project to the back row while maintaining emotional authenticity.
His performance proved he could make that adjustment.
Angela Lansbury
Lansbury’s Broadway career spans decades and proves that stage mastery isn’t about youth or current relevance — it’s about understanding how to connect with an audience in real time. Sweeney Todd and Mame showcased a performer who could handle both comedy and drama with equal skill, someone who made difficult material look effortless.
Her longevity on Broadway speaks to something deeper than talent. It’s about respecting the medium enough to keep challenging yourself within it.
Alan Cumming
Cumming’s one-man Macbeth was either brilliant or insane, depending on who you asked, but it was definitely fearless, which happens to be exactly what Broadway rewards most consistently, and his approach to the material — intimate, intense, and completely uncompromising — reminded audiences that Shakespeare works best when performers trust the words rather than trying to modernize or soften them. The performance ran for months, which means audiences kept coming back to watch someone tackle one of theater’s most demanding roles without a safety net.
Broadway doesn’t forgive mediocrity, especially not in solo shows. Cumming’s success proved he understood that completely.
When the spotlight finds its match
These performers didn’t just survive Broadway — they proved that genuine talent translates across any medium when it’s backed by real commitment. The stage strips away everything except what matters: presence, timing, and the ability to connect with people sitting twenty feet away. Some celebrities discover they don’t have what Broadway demands.
Others find out they were meant for it all along.






