Skip to content
OVistoaIntelligence index
AboutMethodologyPricingDocs
Sign inSign up
BREAKINGPerson found dead in car after it plows into health club in Portland, Oregon2 hr ago
Top StoriesUnited StatesCanadaWorldPoliticsGeneralBusinessTechHealthSportsAviationArtificial IntelligencePublishers

Laurie Metcalf’s Third Act

1 articles · 1 outlets · spread 0.00

Laurie Metcalf’s Third Act
politics6 d ago

Laurie Metcalf’s Third Act

Full coverage view across outlets, lean, source quality, and framing. Compare framing without algorithmic ranking.

1 articles1 outletsSpread 0.000 claims
OVistoa

Article-level news analysis, transparent scoring, and API tools for readers, publishers, and teams that need source context.

DMCA and copyright review

Copyright owners can submit notices, counter-notices, and source material concerns through the dedicated review flow.

Open DMCA review

Product

  • Home
  • Feed
  • Search
  • Topics
  • Saved

Platform

  • About
  • Methodology
  • Home
  • Search
  • Saved
  • Me

From the Left

0 outlets

No coverage from this perspective yet.

From the Center

1 outlet
  • The New Yorker·Apr 27

    Laurie Metcalf’s Third Act

    Somewhere in the bowels of Lincoln Center, Laurie Metcalf was in a rehearsal room, quietly conferring with the director Joe Mantello. It was February, days before the new Broadway revival of Arthur Miller’s “Death of a Salesman” would move into the Winter Garden Theatre. Four weeks into rehearsals, the cast—led by Nathan Lane, as the delusional, doomed salesman Willy Loman—was still refining the Loman family’s implosion. Metcalf, playing Willy’s enabling wife, Linda, had read the play in high school but had purposefully avoided ever seeing a production. “I thought maybe down the line I’d be able to play the part, so I didn’t want somebody’s performance in my head,” she explained. The same went for Martha in “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” and Mary Tyrone in “Long Day’s Journey Into Night”—characters that Metcalf had tackled in the past decade and a half. “I stayed away from bucket-list-type roles, just in case,” she said, then let out a hearty laugh. “And now, in my dotage—here they come!”Metcalf’s turn as a Broadway eminence was far from assured. Since the nineteen-eighties, TV audiences have known her as the rootless, rubbery Aunt Jackie, from the sitcom “Roseanne.” The more stage-savvy know her as a

From the Right

0 outlets

No coverage from this perspective yet.

Claim synthesis

Pro users see canonical claims across the cluster and which outlets reported each one.

Learn more

Outlets covering this story

The New Yorker

First seen

Apr 27, 2026

Latest

Apr 27, 2026

Outlets

1

Diversity

100/100

  • Pricing
  • API docs
  • Publishers
  • Account

    • Sign in
    • Create account
    • Reader settings
    • API console

    Legal

    • Terms
    • Privacy
    • Security
    • DMCA

    © 2026 Vistoa. All rights reserved.

    Limited excerpts, attribution, analysis, and outbound publisher links remain core product boundaries.