Andrew Rannells
Andrew Scott Rannells (born August 23, 1978) is an American actor, singer, and voice artist primarily recognized for his contributions to musical theater and television.[1] Rannells achieved breakthrough success originating the role of Elder Kevin Price in the 2011 Broadway musical The Book of Mormon, for which he received a Tony Award nomination for Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical, along with Drama Desk and Outer Critics Circle Awards.[2][3] His theater career encompasses lead and featured roles in productions such as Falsettos, Hedwig and the Angry Inch, Hairspray, and a replacement portrayal of King George III in Hamilton.[4] On television, he has starred in series including Girls, The New Normal, and Black Monday, while film appearances feature A Simple Favor and Netflix's The Prom.[5][6] Rannells has also provided voice acting for animated projects, beginning with early roles in shows like KaBlam! and extending to recurring characters in adult animation.[6][5]Early life
Family and upbringing
Andrew Rannells was born on August 23, 1978, in Omaha, Nebraska, to parents Ronald and Charlotte Rannells.[1][7] He grew up in the city as the fourth of five children, including three sisters and one older brother, in a household where his siblings pursued activities such as dance and sports while he gravitated toward performance.[8] His father, Ronald, passed away in 2001 at age 61.[9] Rannells' formative years in Omaha included early involvement in local performing arts, beginning with classes and productions at the Emmy Gifford Children's Theater (now known as The Rose Theater).[8] By age 11, he had appeared in his first play through community theater outlets in the area, which provided initial outlets for his interest in acting and voice work.[10] He also participated in Catholic church activities, serving as an altar boy during childhood.[11] These experiences in Nebraska's community environments shaped his initial creative pursuits amid a conventional Midwestern family setting.[12]Education and initial interests
Rannells attended private Catholic schools in Omaha, Nebraska, beginning with grade school at Our Lady of Lourdes and continuing through high school at Creighton Preparatory School, an all-boys Roman Catholic institution.[13] Despite the absence of a formal theater program at Creighton Prep, he developed an early passion for performance by seeking out opportunities in local community and children's theaters, which fostered his ambition for a career in musical theater.[12][14] After high school graduation, Rannells moved to New York City in 1997 to enroll at Marymount Manhattan College, where he studied theater for two years before leaving to pursue professional auditions full-time, prioritizing practical immersion over continued formal education.[14][15] This decision reflected his self-directed commitment to Broadway aspirations, built through adolescent experiences that emphasized resilience amid limited structured support for his artistic pursuits.[16]Career
Early career in voice acting and commercials (1994–2004)
Rannells initiated his professional career in voice acting during his teenage years in Omaha, Nebraska, performing local commercials and radio spots, including work filmed in nearby Sioux City, Iowa.[17] By age 18 in 1996, he secured additional voice-over roles and participated in a commercial parodying the musical Grease alongside fellow Omaha native Amy Adams.[18] Following his high school graduation, Rannells relocated to New York City in 1997 to pursue acting opportunities.[15] In New York, Rannells expanded into animation and anime dubbing, beginning with the role of Archie Andrews in the animated series Archie's Weird Mysteries (1999–2000).[19] From 2001 to 2004, he collaborated with 4Kids Entertainment on English-language dubs of Japanese anime, voicing characters such as Mako Tsunami in Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters (2001–2004 episodes), Noah Kaiba and Leon von Schroeder in the same series, Harley and Morty in Pokémon episodes, Len Tao in Shaman King (2001), and Dren in Mew Mew Power (2002–2003).[20][21] These roles capitalized on his clear, youthful vocal timbre suitable for adolescent and young adult characters.[22] The intermittent nature of voice acting assignments, combined with typecasting in juvenile parts due to his vocal profile, resulted in financial precarity during this period.[23] Rannells later recounted these challenges as motivating a pivot toward live theater auditions in New York, where steadier stage work offered greater stability by the end of 2004.[16]Broadway debut and breakthrough (2005–2012)
Rannells made his Broadway debut in the musical Hairspray in 2005, initially performing in the chorus before assuming the role of Link Larkin on November 15 of that year.[24] In this romantic lead role, he showcased early vocal talents amid the show's energetic dance numbers and satirical take on 1960s Baltimore integration efforts.[25] Following this, Rannells joined the national tour of Jersey Boys as Bob Gaudio, one of the Four Seasons members, and transitioned to the Broadway production in the same role starting January 13, 2009, contributing to the jukebox musical's depiction of the band's rise amid internal conflicts.[26] These performances honed his skills in character-driven ensemble work, bridging pop-infused narratives with historical biography. The pivotal breakthrough came with Rannells's casting as Elder Kevin Price in The Book of Mormon, a satirical musical by Trey Parker, Robert Lopez, and Matt Stone that premiered at the Eugene O'Neill Theatre on March 24, 2011.[27] Originating the role after competitive auditions emphasizing comedic timing and vocal range for the naive Mormon missionary's arc—from optimistic recruiter in Uganda to crisis of faith—Rannells embodied the character's wide-eyed enthusiasm and eventual disillusionment through high-energy numbers like "You and Me (But Mostly Me)."[28] The production demanded precise physical comedy and belting vocals to convey the show's irreverent critique of religious proselytizing and cultural clashes. Critics lauded Rannells's portrayal for its blend of earnest vocals and humorous physicality, earning him a Tony Award nomination for Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical.[29] Despite backlash from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which condemned the musical's blasphemous depictions of doctrine and scripture as offensive and reductive, the show achieved robust box office returns, grossing $1,428,663 for eight performances in one week during early 2012, underscoring audience demand for its provocative humor over religious objections.[30] [31] This success validated the production's commercial viability amid protests, with Rannells's star turn central to its nine Tony wins and enduring appeal.Television expansion and diverse roles (2012–2020)
Rannells transitioned from stage acclaim, particularly his Tony-nominated performance in The Book of Mormon, to television by landing prominent screen roles that capitalized on his rising profile. In 2012, he debuted as the lead Bryan Collins in NBC's The New Normal, a sitcom depicting a wealthy gay couple's pursuit of surrogacy and parenthood alongside co-star Justin Bartha as David Sawyer; the series premiered on September 10, 2012, and concluded after one season on April 4, 2013, amid debates over its portrayal of same-sex family dynamics, which drew protests from conservative advocacy groups like One Million Moms.[32][33] Concurrently, Rannells joined HBO's Girls in 2012 as Elijah Krantz, initially a recurring character revealed as Hannah Horvath's ex-boyfriend from college who comes out as gay; his role evolved into a main cast member by season 4, spanning 2012 to 2017, allowing him to explore flamboyant, scene-stealing comedic traits that echoed his theatrical energy.[34][35] This exposure facilitated further diversification, including a supporting film role as the ambitious COO Cameron in Nancy Meyers' The Intern (2015), where he played a high-strung executive opposite Anne Hathaway's founder.[36] By the late 2010s, Rannells ventured into voice acting with the recurring role of Matthew MacDell, a dramatic and gossipy gay teenager, in Netflix's animated series Big Mouth, debuting in 2017. He also starred as the opportunistic banker Blair Pfaff in Showtime's Black Monday from 2019 to 2021, contributing to the dark comedy's depiction of the 1987 stock market crash through ensemble antics with Don Cheadle.[37] These roles across live-action sitcoms, prestige cable drama, animation, and film underscored Rannells' adaptability beyond musical theater, broadening his career footprint during this period.[5]Recent theater, film, and television work (2021–present)
In 2023, Rannells returned to Broadway in Gutenberg! The Musical!, a two-hander comedy directed by Scott Ellis, where he portrayed Doug, one half of a pair of hapless aspiring composers pitching their ill-conceived musical about the invention of the printing press to potential investors. The production, co-starring Josh Gad as Bud, previewed on September 15 and officially opened on October 12 at the James Earl Jones Theatre, running for 156 performances before closing on January 28, 2024.[38][39] Rannells expanded into film with the 2025 black comedy I Don't Understand You, directed by David Joseph Craig, in which he played Cole, part of a gay couple (opposite Nick Kroll's Dom) vacationing in Italy to celebrate their anniversary and impending adoption, only to encounter a series of murders and mishaps amid language barriers and escalating peril. The film, also featuring Amanda Seyfried, premiered in the United States on June 6, 2025, after Vertical Entertainment acquired distribution rights.[40][41] On television, Rannells competed as a celebrity contestant in The Great American Baking Show: Celebrity Summer, a one-episode special streamed on The Roku Channel starting August 16, 2025, alongside participants like Jesse Tyler Ferguson and Yara Shahidi, testing baking challenges under hosts Casey Wilson and Zach Cherry. He later co-hosted the Celebrity Holiday edition of the same series, announced on October 23, 2025, welcoming four celebrity bakers for festive competitions.[42][43] In July 2025, Hulu greenlit Stay Tuned, a comedy series adaptation of the 1992 film, with Rannells set to star opposite Josh Gad as a couple trapped in a hellish TV universe, while also executive producing alongside Gad and others. The project, developed by 20th Television, marks another collaboration for the duo following Gutenberg!.[44][45] Rannells joined the cast of CBS's Elsbeth for its third season as a guest star, with the announcement made on October 23, 2025, alongside additions like Jaime Pressly and Lindsey Normington, contributing to the procedural's ensemble of episodic suspects and allies.[46]Personal life
Religious background and Catholic experiences
Andrew Rannells was raised in a devout Catholic family in Omaha, Nebraska, where church attendance and participation in religious rituals formed a central part of his early life.[11] His family emphasized traditional Catholic practices, reflecting the broader cultural norms of Midwestern Catholicism during the late 20th century.[11] From fourth to eighth grade, Rannells served as an altar boy at Our Lady of Lourdes parish, undergoing training under Sister Idalia and participating in mass rehearsals.[11] He received the sacraments at standard milestones: Reconciliation in second grade, First Communion in third grade, and Confirmation in eighth grade.[11] During services, he wore cassocks and sashes—such as red for martyrs—and assisted priests, describing the theatrical elements of mass, including lights, music, and dramatic rituals, as engaging.[11] His Catholic elementary education at Our Lady of Lourdes and subsequent attendance at the Jesuit-run Creighton Preparatory School instilled a sense of ambition and service, though the latter encouraged critical questioning of church doctrines.[11] As a closeted gay youth, Rannells experienced inherent conflicts between Catholic teachings on sexuality—which viewed homosexual acts as sinful—and his emerging personal identity, contributing to internal tensions during adolescence.[11] These doctrinal pressures, set against the church's era of mounting revelations about clerical misconduct from the 1980s onward, influenced his eventual departure from organized Catholicism upon graduating high school at age 18.[11][47]Relationships and public coming out
Rannells disclosed his homosexuality to his family at age 18 in 1996, stating that his orientation was anticipated by those close to him by that point.[8] [48] He had recognized his attraction to men from early childhood, including infatuations with male actors by ages 4 or 5.[49] Publicly, Rannells addressed his gay identity in media interviews starting around 2012, amid high-profile roles portraying gay characters in HBO's Girls and NBC's The New Normal; prior to this, he had not extensively discussed it in outlets despite originating gay leads on Broadway, such as in The Book of Mormon.[50] [51] Since 2019, Rannells has been in a relationship with actor Tuc Watkins, met while co-starring as romantic partners in the Broadway revival of The Boys in the Band.[52] The pair has not entered a legal marriage as of October 2025.[53] Rannells acts as stepfather to Watkins' two sons, born circa 2013, who were approximately 6 years old when the relationship began; he has described this role as unanticipated but integrated into his life.[53] [54] Rannells has voiced no interest in biological children of his own, while maintaining a generally private stance on his personal affairs beyond select interviews.[55]Disclosures of abuse and memoir insights
In his 2019 memoir Too Much Is Not Enough, Andrew Rannells detailed two instances of sexual assault by the same Catholic priest during his teenage years in Omaha, Nebraska. The first occurred during confession at his Jesuit high school, where the priest forcibly kissed Rannells, described as muscling his tongue into the teenager's mouth while he was already grappling with his sexuality as an altar boy.[56][57] A second assault followed shortly after Rannells's high school graduation, during a visit initiated by the priest at his family's home.[47][58] Rannells also recounted experiences of sexual harassment in the Broadway theater industry early in his career, including unwanted advances from influential figures that he rebuffed directly, such as by responding with "F*** off, no thank you." These accounts, shared in a 2023 interview, highlight his resistance amid the #MeToo revelations in theater, where power imbalances enabled such behavior but individual agency allowed him to push back without career repercussions in those instances.[59][9] Criticisms of Rannells's memoir from outlets skeptical of institutional narratives, such as Religion Unplugged, argue that his framing extrapolates individual priestly misconduct into broader indictments of Catholic culpability, blending personal trauma with unsubstantiated theological critiques that portray the Church as inherently predatory rather than addressing isolated criminal acts.[60] Such interpretations lack empirical demonstration of systemic intent by Church leadership beyond the perpetrator's actions, reducing complex ecclesiastical failures to anecdotal drama without causal evidence tying them to doctrine or policy.[60]Professional credits
Theatre roles
Rannells began his professional stage career in regional and touring productions. He performed as James, a Pokémon trainer character, in the national touring company of the musical Pokémon Live!, which ran from September 2000 to August 2001 across various U.S. theaters.[61] Prior to his Broadway debut, he appeared in regional theater including the role of the Engineer in Miss Saigon, Mark in Rent, and the title role of Hedwig, a gender-nonconforming rock singer, in a 2002 Austin, Texas, production of Hedwig and the Angry Inch.[2] [62] On Broadway, Rannells made his debut as a replacement in Hairspray (2002–2009), taking over the role of Link Larkin—a charismatic teenage heartthrob and protagonist—from January 2005, while also understudying and performing as Fender, Denizen of Baltimore, Corny Collins, Harriman F. Spritzer, and others.[4] He originated Bob Gaudio, the tenor and songwriter member of The Four Seasons, in the touring production of Jersey Boys before replacing in the Broadway run (2005–2017) from January 13 to July 12, 2009.[61] [4] Rannells originated the role of Elder Kevin Price, an optimistic and ambitious Mormon missionary, in The Book of Mormon (2011–present), performing from the preview on February 24, 2011, through June 10, 2012.[4] He replaced Neil Patrick Harris as Hedwig, the protagonist rock performer grappling with identity, in Hedwig and the Angry Inch (2014–2015) from August 20 to October 12, 2014.[4] In Hamilton (2015–present), he succeeded Brian d'Arcy James as King George III, the British monarch antagonist, from October 27 to November 29, 2015.[4] In the revival of Falsettos (2016–2017), Rannells portrayed Whizzer Brown, the athletic lover of central character Marvin, from October 27, 2016, to January 8, 2017.[4] He played Larry, a self-assured advertising executive, in the revival of The Boys in the Band (2018) from May 31 to August 11, 2018.[4] Rannells co-starred as Doug, an earnest but delusional aspiring composer pitching a musical about the printing press, in the premiere of Gutenberg! The Musical! (2023–2024) from October 12, 2023, to January 28, 2024.[4] In 2025, he appeared as a replacement performer in All In: Comedy About Love (2024–2025) from January 14 to January 26.[4]Film roles
Rannells' feature film appearances have largely consisted of supporting roles in comedies, often portraying ambitious or quirky characters. His earliest credited role in a feature film was as Manny, a wedding party attendee, in the 2012 ensemble comedy Bachelorette, directed by Leslye Headland.| Year | Title | Role |
|---|---|---|
| 2015 | The Intern | Cameron |
| 2016 | Why Him? | Blaine Pederman |
| 2018 | A Simple Favor | Darren |
| 2020 | The Prom | Trent Oliver |
| 2023 | Our Son | Matthew |
| 2025 | I Don't Understand You | Cole |
| 2025 | Another Simple Favor | Darren |
Television roles
Rannells' television career features prominent series roles alongside select guest appearances in live-action programming. His breakthrough came with lead and recurring parts in comedies that highlighted his comedic timing and character depth. Series roles:- The New Normal (NBC, 2012–2013): Portrayed Bryan Collins, an optimistic television producer in a committed gay relationship seeking to start a family via surrogacy; appeared in all 12 episodes of the single-season series, which explored modern family dynamics amid cultural debates on surrogacy and homosexuality.[32]
- Girls (HBO, 2012–2017): Recurred as Elijah Krantz, initially introduced as the ex-boyfriend of protagonist Hannah Horvath who later comes out as gay, evolving into a self-absorbed yet loyal friend navigating acting ambitions and personal relationships; featured in 35 episodes across six seasons.[34]
- Black Monday (Showtime, 2019–2021): Played Blair Pfaff, a ambitious and opportunistic junior executive at a Wall Street firm during the lead-up to the 1987 stock market crash; main cast member in all 30 episodes over three seasons, contributing to the show's satirical take on financial excess.[37]
- Nurse Jackie (Showtime, 2011): Appeared as Gabe in season 3, episode 10 ("Kushrol"), portraying a character entangled in the emergency room's chaotic interpersonal dynamics.[63]
- Elsbeth (CBS, 2025): Guest starred in season 3, announced in September 2025, amid the procedural's ensemble of episodic investigations.[64]