Current:Home > StocksBroadway Star Chris Peluso Dead at 40 -Mastery Money Tools
Broadway Star Chris Peluso Dead at 40
View
Date:2025-04-12 15:40:23
The Broadway world has lost a star.
Chris Peluso, who portrayed Sophie's fiancé Sky in Broadway's Mamma Mia! and toured in Wicked as Fiyero, died Aug. 15, according to Playbill and the University of Michigan Musical Theatre department. He was 40.
No cause of death has been shared.
Peluso's death comes nearly a year after his friends Rebecca LaChance and Tim Oxbrow shared that the performer had stepped away from the stage due to a schizoaffective disorder.
"This diagnosis has resulted in Chris experiencing debilitating paranoia, which has kept him from performing in recent years," LaChance and Oxbrow wrote in a September 2022 GoFundMe fundraiser. "As well as affecting his capacity to work in the field he built his career in over the last 18 years, Chris's mental health has affected every aspect of his life."
Peluso reposted the GoFundMe on X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter. Prior to the post, his last social media activity traced back to January 2021. At the time, Peluso celebrated the birth of his daughter Aria Li Gomes-Peluso with a picture of her next to his beloved King Charles Cavalier Peety, who died later that year.
In 2022, Peluso, who lived in London in pursuit of a West End performing career, moved to the United States in search of treatment. In addition to taking a break from his career—which at that point included appearances in productions The Woman in White, Death Takes a Holiday, Show Boat and the revival of Miss Saigon—Peluso's relocation meant he had to move away from his wife Jessica Gomes and daughter.
"In recent months, the paranoia has consumed him to the extent that he is unable to work any job and has had to leave his wife and young child and return to America to seek treatment," the GoFundMe read. "Chris has no health care insurance in the US and was recently hospitalized for about two weeks. Currently, he is seeking treatment at an inpatient mental health rehabilitation center."
Peluso shared a message in the GoFundMe as well, expressing hope that his experience would reach others.
"Hopefully this helps bring some awareness to how so many suffer from mental illness in silence," he wrote. "You never know what someone may be going through. Be kind to each other."
A few months later, Peluso wrote in the GoFundMe that he had shown positive progress and was "able to hold down a job again and even began taping some auditions."
In the wake of his passing, Peluso was mourned by his fellow performers, who remembered him as a gifted artist.
"This is devastating. I only have wonderful memories of Chris. I am holding tight to all of the light he shared. So kind. So funny. So giving. So talented and loving," Toni Trucks commented on Michigan's Instagram tribute to Peluso, an alumnus of the school. Desi Oakley also added, "i learned so much from his kindness & professionalism, i am sending so much love to all who walked closely with him."
Peluso's theater career stretched back to 2004, when he rose to fame as an understudy in the revival of Assassins. His credits also included performances in Broadway's Beautiful The Carole King Musical and Lestat, as well as a role in the 2017 U.K. Tour of Funny Girl.
For Peluso, his love of theater was all-encompassing.
"Theatre is my life. It has provided me with friends, family, education, structure, meaning, and purpose," he told Pocket Size Theatre in 2017. "If it were not for theatre I would not be the person I am today."
Peluso is survived by his wife Jessica and their two children, daughter Aria and son Caio Lian Gomes-Peluso, according to Playbill.
For the latest breaking news updates, click here to download the E! News AppveryGood! (22651)
Related
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Maryland Black Caucus’s legislative agenda includes criminal justice reform and health
- India’s newest airline orders 150 Boeing Max aircraft, in good news for plane maker
- German parliament approves legislation easing deportations of rejected asylum seekers
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- Missouri abortion-rights campaign backs proposal to enshrine access but allow late-term restrictions
- DOJ to release Uvalde school shooting report Thursday. What you need to know.
- Why Penélope Cruz Isn't Worried About Aging Ahead of Her 50th Birthday
- What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
- I’m a Croc Hater–But These Viral TikTok Croc Boots & More New Styles Are Making Me Reconsider
Ranking
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Mexico and Chile ask International Criminal Court to investigate possible crimes in Gaza
- Schools set to pay at least $200 million in buyouts to hire and fire college football coaches
- Teen struck and killed while trying to help free vehicle in snowstorm
- Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
- Galaxy S24, AI launch event: How to watch Samsung's 'Galaxy Unpacked 2024'
- Kate Beckinsale Slams BAFTA's Horribly Cold Snub of Late Stepfather
- 7 giant tortoises found dead in U.K. forest, sparking police appeal for info to solve the mystery
Recommendation
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Texas AG Paxton won’t contest facts of whistleblower lawsuit central to his 2023 impeachment
Poland’s lawmakers vote in 2024 budget but approval is still needed from pro-opposition president
Kate Beckinsale Slams BAFTA's Horribly Cold Snub of Late Stepfather
Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
Couple gives $100M to Atlanta’s Spelman College, in largest single gift to a Black college
Woman alleges long-term heart problems caused by Panera Bread's caffeinated lemonade
CDC expands warning about charcuterie meat trays as salmonella cases double