The Invisible Actor

All-the-way_

LBJ or a remarkable character actor?

In my last post I talked about TV actors on Stage. That post was originally inspired by my most recent visit to NYC to see Sir Kenneth Branagh in his masterful production of Macbeth. (See post here) With the extra time on my hands that weekend, I also thought to catch a production of Of Mice and Men. However, the week before my visit Bryan Cranston won the Tony for Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role in a Play for his portrayal of Lyndon B. Johnson in All the Way.

An original play with the original cast nearly always trumps anything. A last minute visit to the TKTS booth got me a fourth row seat.

To say I was blown away is an understatement. It was a remarkable play, an amazing cast, with balletic staging and stellar production. But most of all I instantly became a fan of Bryan Cranston. And I didn’t really even know who he was.

same guy

Both of these people are the same guy… really.

I knew he was in some wacky sitcom and in a highly praised cable drama about drugs but I don’t really watch sitcoms, particularly ones that revolve around a wacky family; and I don’t have cable, so I don’t have much opportunity to watch the latest “unmissable” drama. So, in my mind he didn’t actually exist until he took a giant leap to star in an original Broadway play.

Now that I’m a fan, I have to see everything else he had done. As of this post I am almost done with Season 3 of Breaking Bad and I started watching Malcolm in the Middle as well. Interestingly enough, the two characters he portrays are very similar. Right down to their tighty-whitey underwear.

Ha, no I’m just kidding… the man is a chameleon. I can’t believe all the stuff he has been in over the years and he just drifts through invisibly. In All The Way, LBJ commanded the stage, menacingly tall and overly eccentric. At the end of the play (spoiler alert!) he wins the election and the curtain drops down. Seconds later as it rises, we see the cast lined up for their bows… and suddenly Bryan Cranston appears. The stoop is gone, the face relaxed… and we realize how much effortless effort had been expended to create that character.

 [Video from PBS Newshour]

It’s been announced that HBO has purchased the rights to the play and is planning on a film version. It will be great for people to see what Cranston has done with LBJ, but it will be nothing like the stage play. A stage is a small space of infinity. Time and place mean nothing, and yet can speak volumes. Two scenes stand out for me in this production. First, as Johnson makes a decision about a police action in Vietnam, the body of one of the Freedom Summer volunteers is dug up and laid at his feet. Johnson was in the White House, the body was dug out of an earthen dam in Mississippi. But on this stage, they are one and the same place. The symbolism is clear and stunning.

My favorite scene however, was concerning Johnson’s father/son relationship with his aide Walter Jenkins played by Christopher Liam Moore. Once again, time and space are overlapped as Jenkins is arrested and sent to a mental hospital and LBJ frets in his office. As they both play out their sadness and dismay at the situation, they both turn at the same time and stand toe-to-toe, one looming large over the other. It still breaks my heart a little just thinking about it.

It was a Dark and Stormy Night…

I really enjoy Theatre. I think it can be fun or thought-provoking, funny or sad, but mostly enjoyable. It’s a good evening out with friends (real or imaginary) and an opportunity to capture that moment when THIS performance is being created and pushed out into the Aether, captured only by the eyes and minds of those present, never to be seen in the exact same way again.

But every now and then, Theatre is much more than that. Great Plays are Great; and Great Actors come along once in a while. When those two worlds collide, the final product is breathtaking.  It was an honor and a privilege to see Sir Kenneth Branagh on stage in New York City performing Macbeth, and something I can tell people about for the rest of my life.

Entering the Park Avenue Armory on a rainy June day was in itself a thrill. The old building reeked of history and elegance. The audience members were divided into Clans (Go Clan Robertson!) and allowed to mingle with our fellow clansmen before being shepherded out to the seating area. A bell rang and the great doors opened to reveal a blasted heath. Treading carefully along a path, strange cloaked men wandered the moor by torchlight. Our goal? Stonehenge of course. But not a tiny This is Spinal Tap -type Stonehenge. No, this was substantial and eerie.

Park Ave. Armory

 Photo from the Park Avenue Armory

The seats were hard benches but I was in the second row and was not complaining about anything. Stonehenge was even more impressive as we could now see through the megaliths, lines of people being lead by torchlight through the moor. Stonehenge was just a gateway to the “stage”, a long narrow dirt track that lead up to a raised “Altar” and more megaliths framing a triptych of religious images. Dozens of candles were being lit by a veiled woman as the audience found their seats.

 

As the show began, the Witches, eerie and acrobatic gave way to a thunderous battle. Swords clashed, blood flew, rain pelted the performers and a few of us at the front. But the wall that surrounded the action was enough to keep people safe. We still flinched back as soldiers (and the Mr. and Mrs) smashed themselves against the wall in aggressive (and sexual) fury. Yes, that’s right, Sir Ken stripped off to reveal a battered and bruised torso upon returning to his castle, where his primary goal was to get Lady MacB (Alex Kingston) to hoist up her skirts and bend over.

 

But enough savagery! The play really gets going when plans are made and dispatched. It is an old old story [*Spoiler Alert – Everyone dies*] and this production played it out well. What were some surprises for me?

  • The murdering of the king was actually played out on the “Altar” (rarely seen and heartbreaking)
  • Alex Kingston decided to cut to the chase with Lady MacB’s crazy early in her performance. No sharp “Crazy Curve” for her; she went with “Crazy from the start”. (I’ll talk a little more about Lady Macbeth’s “Crazy Curve” in another blog entry.)
  • Also, the production decided to let her do her big “Out Damn Spot” speech from the TOP of the altar’s megaliths. Stunning!
  • When he was told his wife was dead, Sir Ken was RIGHT IN FRONT OF ME! The power of his voice was like a shotgun of emotion. I don’t know how the others can stand up to him on stage.
  • Speaking of which, the young actor who played Young Siward looked like he was 15 years old. Watching the brutish, red-headed Scot bear down on him was actually a bit frightening.

 

All-in-all it was Magnificent! I never cheered so loudly as the actors took their bows, and the thunderous applause for Branagh was rafter-shaking. It was a performance of a lifetime and I was one of the few people on the Earth that was allowed to see it.

The Beginning…

College life was very good to me. I think it was mostly because there was a very tight schedule that we all had to follow. The Syllabus was the center of my Universe. But now, Life does not hand you a syllabus, and there is no one who holds you accountable for what you do and how you spend your time.

Recently I rediscovered Theatre. My favorite play of all time Macbeth (aka The Scottish Play) was re-imagined as a one-man show starring Alan Cumming. He was only performing in New York City for 10 days. And his last performance was on my birthday. I calculated my monetary resources and decided “What the heck?!” I wasn’t doing anything else on my birthday. That weekend I also saw Harvey staring  Jim Parsons and One Man, Two Guvnors staring James Cordon. It was the best birthday weekend ever and I vowed to repeat it as often as possible.

Two years later I am craving more and more theatre. So I decided to start this blog and record my thoughts about the plays I have seen and ones I am hoping to see. Since the town I live in has a limited theatrical culture I cannot sustain my original thought of “A Play-a-Week” but I can enhance my Live theatre experiences with DVDs, the excesses of YouTube and of course the occasional National Theatre Live.

I will try to sustain a weekly blog entry… but I only have myself to hold myself accountable.

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It’s all this guy’s fault.