‘Stranger Things’ Gaten Matarazzo Sets London Stage Debut To Revive Broadway Legend’s Rent

Published 05/19/2026, 12:07 PM EDT

via Imago

The kids from Hawkins are not kids anymore. Over the last few years, the cast of Stranger Things has quietly transformed into one of Hollywood’s most fascinating talent pipelines, with each actor carving out wildly different career paths beyond the Upside Down. After Sadie Sink made headlines for her London stage debut in Romeo and Juliet opposite Noah Jupe, another Hawkins favorite is now stepping into the theater spotlight. This time, it is Gaten Matarazzo preparing for a major West End moment that feels almost destined for him.

Fans who have followed Matarazzo beyond his lovable Dustin Henderson persona already know he has always carried serious musical theater energy. The fast talking cadence, the emotional timing, the restless warmth. It almost feels like Jonathan Larson’s world has been waiting for him all along.

Gaten Matarazzo heads to the West End

ADVERTISEMENT

Article continues below this ad

According to Deadline, Gaten Matarazzo will make his London stage debut in a new revival of Rent, the landmark rock musical created by Jonathan Larson. The production will premiere at the Duke of York’s Theatre in London’s West End this fall, with previews beginning September 26 and an official opening night set for October 8. Tickets are scheduled to go on sale at noon UK time on Tuesday.

Deadline reported that Matarazzo, who producer Chris Harper described as a self proclaimed “Rent-head,” will begin rehearsals in early August alongside director Luke Sheppard, fresh off his Olivier Award win for Paddington: The Musical. Before Netflix fame, Matarazzo was already a Broadway veteran with credits in Priscilla Queen of the Desert, Les Miserables, Dear Evan Hansen, and most recently Sweeney Todd alongside Josh Groban and Annaleigh Ashford. 

Noah Schnapp Graduates From UPENN as 'Stranger Things' Era Nears Its End

What makes this revival especially intriguing is the timing. Theater culture has been circling back toward emotionally raw stories about youth, uncertainty, survival, and creative identity. That is exactly the terrain Rent helped define decades ago.

Why Rent still matters nearly three decades later

First staged in 1996, Rent changed Broadway forever. Jonathan Larson’s Pulitzer Prize winning musical reimagined Giacomo  Puccini’s La Bohème through the lens of struggling artists living in New York City during the HIV/AIDS crisis. Instead of polished Broadway spectacle, Larson brought punk energy, rock music, queer love stories, political anger, and downtown grit to mainstream theater. Songs like ‘Seasons of Love’ became cultural landmarks far beyond Broadway audiences.

ADVERTISEMENT

Article continues below this ad

The musical’s legacy also carries emotional weight because Larson tragically died the night before the show’s first Off Broadway preview. That story has followed Rent ever since, turning every revival into something larger than nostalgia. For younger audiences discovering the show today, the themes still feel startlingly current. 

Creative burnout, financial instability, chosen family, and fear about the future remain painfully relatable in 2026. Casting someone like Gaten Matarazzo, who already connects deeply with younger fandom culture, could introduce an entirely new generation to Larson’s work.

"Awesome or forget it" - Duffer Brothers Are As Determined As Possible for ‘Stranger Things’ Spin-Off

ADVERTISEMENT

Article continues below this ad

Is Gaten Matarazzo the perfect Mark for Rent? Share your take in the comments.

SHARE THIS ARTICLE :

ADVERTISEMENT

Sarah Ansari

587 articles

Sarah Ansari is an entertainment writer at Netflix Junkie, transitioning from four years in marketing and automotive journalism to storytelling-driven pop culture coverage. With a background in English Literature and experience writing across NFL, NASCAR, and NBA verticals, she brings a research-led, narrative-focused lens to film and television. Passionate about exploring how stories are crafted and why they resonate, Sarah unwinds through sketching, swimming, motorsports—and yearly winter Harry Potter marathons.

Edited By: Hriddhi Maitra

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

EDITORS' PICK