Despite Having Gifted Singers in Cast, There Will Be No Singing in Scream Queens

Despite having some of the hottest singers as part of its cast, there will unfortunately be no singing involved in Ryan Murphy's newest television series called Scream Queens.

Glee's Lea Michele, pop star Ariana Grande, and Nick Jonas are all known for their vocal chops, but they will not be using it for this series.

Michele, who plays awkward Hester with the head braces confirmed this in an interview with ET Online. She said that there will be no singing, "not with me! We've got everything - we've got gore, we've got killers, we've got comedy... I think we're good."

But Ariana is urging the show's growing number of fans not to throw in the towel on the series just yet, since it will boast of "the greatest combination" of everything. There will be "a very nice balance between terrifying, scary, macabre, goth horror and girly, hilarious, glamorous, fashion."

It seems like American Horror Story alum Emma Roberts, who played the mean and catty Madison in season three's Coven will once again be putting on her claws as Scream Queen's lead sorority sister and Queen Bee Chanel.

The whole crew created a beautiful Kappa sorority house set, replete with a pink fireplace for the girls, but it won't remain pristine for long since creator Ryan Murphy has teased that there will be one character death per episode.

"Every week, It's really like a murder mystery. Who's going to get knocked off? And who's the killer? And not until the last episode do you find out who it is," Murphy said. "And everybody has the motivation to be that killer."

He added that the show is anthological in nature, but there's a "catch" to it. Murphy also said that Scream Queens will be very different from American Horror Story, which resets completely every year.

Murphy described the Kappa sorority as "the world's meanest sorority," so it comes as no surprise that a series of bad things will be happening to its sisters.

The creative genius is beyond thrilled to have Jamie Lee Curtis on board the series, and even admitted that he wrote the series for her. "She steps in and with the girls tries to figure out who's doing this -- and it's actually tied to an incident that happened 20 years ago at the college," he said.

Aside from those mentioned, other stars in the show include Abigail Breslin, Keke Palmer and Oliver Hudson.