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Broadway Director's Foster Care Secrets Exposed in 'Only Murders' Twist

Summary

  • Meryl Streep returns to 'Only Murders in the Building' after apartment fire
  • Oliver Putnam's foster care backstory revealed, shaping his persona
  • Loretta Durkin assesses damage to her 47-year-old belongings
Broadway Director's Foster Care Secrets Exposed in 'Only Murders' Twist

In the latest episode of 'Only Murders in the Building', Meryl Streep's character Loretta Durkin, the star of 'Grey's New Orleans: Family Burn Unit', returns from New Zealand to assess the damage after her apartment went up in flames. Everything she owned, 47 years' worth of belongings and memories, had been reduced to ash.

While in Brooklyn with Oliver Putnam, the show's flop-prone Broadway director, a surprising revelation comes to light. Oliver, who had always been portrayed as a larger-than-life "Bon Vivant", actually grew up in the foster care system. From ages 9 to 12, he lived with his second foster family in Flatbush, where he kept himself small, hoping he'd get to stay.

It was only when Oliver stumbled into the Mycyn Theatre and was cast in a play that he finally felt "at home". His foster parents didn't approve, but on opening night, he snuck out in costume to watch as another kid said his line. "In my whole life, I've only really felt like myself in two places," Oliver says, "being back here today, I finally understand why I'm so afraid to leave the Arconia."

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This backstory, which wasn't entirely new, was the perfect time to deliver the reveal and challenge preconceived notions about Oliver's character, according to series co-creator John Hoffman. The specifics of Oliver's childhood were shaped by this season's central mystery, as well as Hoffman's own history growing up in Brooklyn.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.

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Loretta Durkin's apartment went up in flames, destroying 47 years' worth of her belongings and memories.
Oliver Putnam's foster care experience from ages 9 to 12, where he lived in Flatbush and found solace in the theater, shaped his larger-than-life "Bon Vivant" persona.
Oliver Putnam said that in his whole life, he's only really felt like himself in two places - being back in Flatbush, and at the Arconia, where he is afraid to leave.

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