Viersen, Germany - July 9. 2020: Closeup of Fleetwood Mac band vinyl record cover collection
Broadway’s hottest new drama arrives at the Duke of York’s Theatre on 24 May, fresh from a record-breaking 13 Tony Award nominations and five wins. Yet Stereophonic lands in the West End under a cloud: the play’s striking similarities to Fleetwood Mac’s 1976 Rumours sessions prompted a plagiarism lawsuit that was quietly settled earlier this year.
Written by David Adjmi with original songs by former Arcade Fire member Will Butler, Stereophonic tracks a five-piece Anglo-American rock band as creative turbulence, romantic break-ups and mountains of cocaine threaten to derail a career-defining album in 1976 California. Its haul at last year’s Tonys made it the most-nominated play in the award’s history, eclipsing the previous record held by Slave Play.
The fictional band’s line-up, relationship drama and West Coast studio setting mirror the real-life saga behind Fleetwood Mac’s Rumours. Even several on-stage songs evoke the unmistakable pulse of tracks like “The Chain” and “Dreams,” fuelling comparisons and headlines that dubbed the show “Fleetwood Mac for the stage.”
Former Rumours producer Ken Caillat—co-author of the memoir Making Rumours—filed suit last October, alleging the play lifted key narrative beats, studio layout and dialogue from his book. He and co-writer Steven Stiefel pointed to shared anecdotes, mirrored character arcs and even niche studio jargon.
Court records confirm the dispute was resolved in January on undisclosed terms, sparing both sides an extended trial. By then, Stereophonic had already grossed more than $20 million on Broadway and fuelled talk of a film adaptation. Caillat and Stiefel say Hollywood interest in their own story is also accelerating.
Fleetwood Mac’s remaining members have kept their distance from the stage production and are focusing on an authorised Apple TV+ documentary slated for 2026. Meanwhile, playwright Adjmi continues to explore silver-screen possibilities for Stereophonic, keeping the narrative’s evolution firmly in the spotlight.
Stereophonic begins previews on 24 May and is currently selling tickets through 20 September 2025. Running just over three hours and performed through a working studio console, the show promises the same raw intensity that electrified New York—plus the off-stage intrigue of its recent courtroom drama.
Photo Credit: DepositPhotos.com
Producers Darren Bell and Cuffe & Taylor are thrilled to announce that Tony and Grammy…
There are Tony Awards nights that feel like coronations. There are years when one production…
The 12th annual Smart Fone Flick Fest (SF3) is open for entries. The Sydney-founded -…
CATS: THE JELLICLE BALL brought one of the most stylish surprises of the 2026 Tony…
Rachel Zegler honoured one of Broadway’s most influential musicals at the 2026 Tony Awards, delivering…
Broadway received a major blast of theatrical nostalgia at the 2026 Tony Awards as the…
View Comments
How is the lawsuit lingering when it was resolved four months ago?