Madonna was raked over the coals by Broadway star Anthony Ramos, who decried her behavior in the audience of Hamilton years ago.
Anthony was in the 2015 original Broadway cast of the musical, playing two roles including Alexander Hamilton’s son Philip, who is killed tragically in a duel.
But although audiences were left weeping night after night at Anthony’s death scene, the show was apparently insufficiently captivating for the Material Girl.
The Queen of Pop allegedly sat in the theater on her tablet throughout the performance, Anthony said on Watch What Happens Live!.
When host Andy Cohen asked: ‘Who was the most terrifying celebrity to spot in the audience during your Hamilton days?’ Anthony did not hold back.
‘The most terrifying was Madonna with her iPad in her face. She was like this the whole time,’ he said, miming looking down at the device.

Madonna was raked over the coals by Broadway star Anthony Ramos, who decried her behavior in the audience of Hamilton years ago
‘I was like: “Damn, shorty,” I was like: “If you not enjoying it that much, you know the door’s that way. You don’t gotta stay here,”‘ he joked.
Anthony is not the first member of the Hamilton cast to make reference to the Madonna incident, which went viral in 2015, the year the show opened on Broadway.
Lin-Manuel Miranda, who not only starred as Alexander Hamilton but also wrote the book, music and lyrics of the show, appeared to tweet about Madonna.
‘Tonight was the first time I asked stage management NOT to allow a celebrity (who was texting all through Act 2) backstage. #noselfieforyou,’ he wrote.
Although he never mentioned her by name and deleted the post from his Twitter account, rumors quickly circulated that Madge was the celebrity in question.
The conjecture became so widespread that Madonna’s publicist repudiated it, saying: ‘It’s not true. She was invited backstage four different times,’ via Us Weekly.
‘She texted post show when they were doing their fundraising pitch. Madonna had already made a generous donation,’ said the spokeswoman.
However Jonathan Groff, who played King George III, openly declared that Madonna was not invited backstage ‘because that b**** was on her phone.’

Anthony was in the 2015 original Broadway cast of the show, playing two roles including Alexander Hamilton’s son Philip; pictured in the role at the 2016 Grammys

Lin-Manuel Miranda, who not only starred as Alexander Hamilton but also wrote the book, music and lyrics of the show, is pictured in character at the 2016 Tony Awards
The Spring Awakening star insisted: ‘You couldn’t miss it from the stage. It was a black void of the audience in front of us and her face there perfectly lit by the light of her iPhone through three-quarters of the show,’ per Dot429.
Madonna’s alleged spat with the Hamilton cast came two years after she was banned by the Alamo Drafthouse movie theater chain over claims that she texted through a premiere screening of the Oscar-winning drama 12 Years a Slave.
When another audience member at the screening asked her to put her phone away, she reportedly snapped back: ‘It’s for business…enslaver!’ according to Page Six.
The Like a Virgin hitmaker herself has a long history with the New York stage, having acted on Broadway in the David Mamet play Speed-the-Plow in 1988.
She also famously played the polarizing Argentine first lady Eva Peron in the 1996 movie adaptation of the Andrew Lloyd Webber-Tim Rice musical Evita.
Her performance was memorably excoriated several years ago by Patti LuPone, who won a Tony for the role of Eva in the original Broadway cast of the stage show.
‘Madonna is a movie killer,’ said Patti. ‘She’s dead behind the eyes. She cannot act her way out of a paper bag. She should not be on – in film or onstage.’
She allowed that Madonna was a ‘a wonderful, you know, performer for what she does,’ but slated her as ‘not an actress,’ on Watch What Happens Live!.