There was an echo in the house the last week of January. My house. On Sunday evening, January 25, I’d seen ‘Pippin’ pop-open at the Mark Taper Forum. The co-production with Deaf West Theatre – which literally halved the title character for a House of Sight & Sound – left me reverbeatin’ with those feelings of the late-late ‘60s. (When they’d become the early ‘70s.)
Pippin is a variation on Pepin, the powerful father and ineffectual son of Charlemagne, or Charles I. The original show opened on Broadway weeks before Richard Nixon’s re-election, in 1972 which means it came at the tail end of the most subverted Presidential election in American history. (As far as we know.)
Nixon’s pursuit of ‘Imperial Presidency’ – the title of the Arthur Schlessinger wake-up tome published the following year – led many artists to compare him to kings. Paul Conrad did it in his amazing string of 'L.A. Times' editorial cartoons, Steely Dan and Jefferson Airplane did it in rock songs, and Stephen Schwartz certainly was ready for the tie-in when he wrote music and lyrics for ‘Pippin.’ In contrast to folks like Charles (and Richard), who crave Kingdomination, ‘Pippin’s' second act offered representatives of the ordinary life. The woman who becomes 'Kid' Charlemagne’s true love, describes herself as “your average ordinary kind of woman, competent and neat, making life a treat.”
The lyrics may not be Fagin and Becker (who that year released, in ‘Kings,’ with expectant lines like “We’ve seen the last of Good King Richard; ring out the past his name lives on; roll out the bones and raise up your pitcher”), but it makes its point about being satisfied with one's even share.
Two nights after ‘Pippin’ opened, the echo came while listening to PBS’ NewsHour. In tribute to writer John Updike, who had died that day at age 76, portions of an interview conducted by Jeffrey Brown were replayed. The conversation had been part of Updike’s 2003 promotional of a new collection of short stories.
Brown asked, “In the Foreword, when you’re describing writing short stories, you write, ‘My only duty was to describe reality as it had come to me, to give the mundane its beautiful due.’
What does that mean, ‘to give the mundane its beautiful due?’”
“I worked hard at that sentence,” Updike said, “‘cause I was trying, you know, having challenged myself to say what did I think I was doing, I then had to find the phases for it. But I’ve always had, I think, even before I began to publish, this notion that the ordinary, middle class life, was enough to write about. That there was enough drama, interest, relevance, importance, poetry in it.”
“You didn’t need the grand, epic,” Brown assumed.
“I was stuck for my own limits, really, with middle class life, or the mundane let’s call,” Updike responded. “And so I was trying to serve my story, encapsulate some aspect of life as I was experiencing it, or observing that this was a time when the American way of life was coming in for a lot of hard knocks, some of them deserved, but nevertheless, I thought that somebody should be bearing witness to the kind of ordinary life that was going on.”
He was speaking of that same era which, like failed joke tellers always say, you had to be there to appreciate. Much too much rhapsodizing has been made of it. Those who were there still have it in their bones. While it couldn’t make the morrow, it still salts the marrow.
How beautiful that Center Theatre Group will now present the real end of King Richard’s public performance, in ‘Frost/Nixon,’ opening weeks after this weekend’s Academy Awards will bestow – according to most critics including TIME’s Richard Corliss – an Oscar upon theater’s own Frank Langella.
Looking forward to more echoes at the March 12 opening of that production, starring Stacy Keach and Alan Cox.
Wednesday, February 18, 2009
Saturday, October 25, 2008
Bizarro Synchronicity
If you have experienced synchronicity, an aligning of random, disconnected events into something of possible significance, you are familiar with what Carl Jung’s “temporally coincident occurrences of acausal events.” The concept may be best as living theater, in which we are both innocent participant and curious spectator. But tuning in to synchronicities is a fairly harmless way of noting and to some extent honoring, the inexplicable universals, allowing oneself to hear another orchestra section in the great symphony of universal connectedness. While never intend as an operating principle, it has nevertheless found eager discrediting by psychologist’s who dismiss any linking of unlinked events as a psychological disorder. Apophenia, coined by Klaus Conrad in 1958, may want to be the antithesis of synchronicity. But I prefer an equally opposite but considerably more fun reverse concept. This is not the mere absence of serial unrelated events. That’s normal, and requires nothing more than ignorance. How about the series of events that gain meaning by failing to connect as expected? Call it Bizarro Synchronicity.
Recently, the day's planned events included driving a weekend houseguest from Lake Arrowhead to Fullerton where she would take the train to Union Station; dinner with a friend at 5 p.m.; a playwright lecture at 7 p.m.; and a sleep test at 9 p.m. However, that morning, before things could get started, the dinner date was canceled. I attempted to cancel everything and drop my friend at a closer train station but there were no trains and the sleep center would charge a $250 cancellation fee. So, I thought I’d spend the dinner hour using a movie gift certificate abd see “W.” At the station we learned that all trains were running 90 minutes late because a trespasser had been killed on the tracks in Solano Beach. We had dinner instead and I missed the movie. The streets where I usually parked for the lecture had all be turned to "Permit Only," so I went in search of the movie theater. I had the address of the one where the gift certificate could be used, but the Stadium Theatre in Orange, at 1701 Katella, is apparently not in either Orange (across from the stadium) or in Anaheim (near Disneyland). So, I drove to a big cinema near the sleep study office prepared to pay, hoping there would be something of interest. The only one starting near the time of my arrival was . . . “W.” I slipped in only five minutes late and, hunching down to not block others' view, took a seat. After 15 minutes I thought I'd see if there were people behind me, or nearby, as my eyes were now accustomed to the darkness. I looked around at 400 empty seats. I guess it was no surprise that I was the only person in this Orange County theater for Oliver Stone's take on George W. Bush.
Recently, the day's planned events included driving a weekend houseguest from Lake Arrowhead to Fullerton where she would take the train to Union Station; dinner with a friend at 5 p.m.; a playwright lecture at 7 p.m.; and a sleep test at 9 p.m. However, that morning, before things could get started, the dinner date was canceled. I attempted to cancel everything and drop my friend at a closer train station but there were no trains and the sleep center would charge a $250 cancellation fee. So, I thought I’d spend the dinner hour using a movie gift certificate abd see “W.” At the station we learned that all trains were running 90 minutes late because a trespasser had been killed on the tracks in Solano Beach. We had dinner instead and I missed the movie. The streets where I usually parked for the lecture had all be turned to "Permit Only," so I went in search of the movie theater. I had the address of the one where the gift certificate could be used, but the Stadium Theatre in Orange, at 1701 Katella, is apparently not in either Orange (across from the stadium) or in Anaheim (near Disneyland). So, I drove to a big cinema near the sleep study office prepared to pay, hoping there would be something of interest. The only one starting near the time of my arrival was . . . “W.” I slipped in only five minutes late and, hunching down to not block others' view, took a seat. After 15 minutes I thought I'd see if there were people behind me, or nearby, as my eyes were now accustomed to the darkness. I looked around at 400 empty seats. I guess it was no surprise that I was the only person in this Orange County theater for Oliver Stone's take on George W. Bush.
Thursday, June 21, 2007
Of pit bulls and pit bands

Above, Sean Wing and Jeanne Syquia
Sunday, January 21, 2007
A Fallen Speaker, A Father Found

The absence of something can be a heavy burden, and eventually not knowing the details of her parents’ early lives became unbearable for Marissa Chibas. In ‘Daughter of a Cuban Revolutionary,’ which CalArts recently provided with an evocative production at its REDCAT space in Disney Hall, Chibas dramatizes her one-woman journey into a family's extraordinary past.
Like Dan Evans' simple set – a raked, sand-covered square beneath a narrow, wing-spanning projection screen of pegboard – Chibas' story incorporates powerful symbols. Broken radios, spectacles, a microphone, a blind man and some massive parade ground loudspeakers advance her personal story of discovery as they resonate an underlying theme of communication.
At rise, she kneels inches in front of the first row of the audience. She rises in a pool of light and turns to address a house full of her contemporaries, telling of a near-death experience of her own in the Venezuelan Amazon, which she enters by stepping onto the platform and into the past. An effect by lighting designer Rebecca M.K. Makus sends ripples from her bare foot across the sand as if she were reactivating the spilt contents of a ruptured hourglass. Colbert S. Davis IV weaves a fabric of frequencies that blend ocean waves, radio static and political speeches into a beautiful sound cue as she wades up stage through lost time. (Adam Flemming's remarkable video creation – which must wrestle with an impossible aspect ratio twenty times as wide as it is tall – is constantly filled with supplemental visuals that complement without distracting, like the fuzzy image that may combine a low line of breaking waves with a sound wave.)
Chibas takes us across the water to Cuba, across the years to the 1950s, and through fading photographs to meet her extended family – ancestors as well as current Cuban cousins. Her mother was a captivating beauty whom Miss Cuba judges in 1959 awarded duplicate top prizes despite her second place finish. Her father was so much the conscience of Cuban injustice that after articulating what would become the revolution's written architecture, he saw problems ahead and had concerns, which in turn caused Castro to drop him from the circle of founding fathers. And her uncle, Eddie Chibas, Cuba's most popular and influential radio personality, raised rabble-rousing to the level of oratory before ending one broadcast with his suicide in a disquieting call to action.
'Daughter of a Cuban Revolutionary' is another of the wonderful one-woman shows we have seen this year in Los Angeles. This seems to be an age of theater reminiscent of the halycon first days of the singer-songwriter, in which the same artist lives through, writes down, and eventually performs a story with personal investment no one else can rival.
In the theater these stories are amplified by three-dimensional imagery. For Chibas, the most versatile icon is the massive metal speaker, now lying in the sand, which once hung above the stage with the others. It's a stark reminder of the great communicators who fell – from grace or by their own hand. Chibas' reconnaisance has artfully righted them all, and reminded us that we keep our currency by maintaining the stories of those who went before.
PHOTO/RALLYING STRENGTH. Marissa Chibas, above left, discovers her presence in her father's past. Raul Chibas, right. Her uncle Eddie Chibas' funeral center.
Wednesday, November 29, 2006
The Long and Fisher Road

Gene Splicing. Fifty years after their birth into show business families – one famous, one a footnote – two writer-actors have cherry-picked their pasts for one-woman shows about the performance gene. In Jodi Long’s celebratory Surfing DNA at East West Players, she dives into her genetic pool and backstrokes upstream among Chinese, Japanese, Australian, American and Scottish ancestors. In Carrie Fisher’s comic Wishful Drinking, her famous family album becomes an open tabloid in which she jokes about “having my DNA fumigated.”
Ms. Fisher’s entertaining show – a kind of pot-shot-spraying drive-by of herself, her father (crooner Eddie Fisher) and her mother (movie star Debbie Reynolds) – is filled with such neatly phrased jabs. But it’s a stretch to call it theater. Especially compared to Ms. Long’s carefully shaped evening of filial showbiz piety. Beyond the common age, sex and coincidental L.A. premieres, the women have vastly different stories and present them in vastly different ways. While Ms. Fisher provides scandal sheet fodder to remind the audience her parents (and she) are just people, Ms. Long works to get her people into a spotlight that makes them memorable. And where Ms. Fisher seems uncomfortable on stage, delivering her stories as she paces the apron like a shooting gallery target, Ms. Long owns her stage and uses it to perform the role of her lifetime.
Growing up at opposite ends of the country, these women share only one cultural reference point: Gene Kelly. Kelly co-starred with Fisher’s mother in Singin’ in the Rain, her most famous role, but fired Ms. Long’s feisty father Lawrence from his staging of the Broadway premiere of Rodgers and Hammerstein's Flower Drum Song. (Although he would later tour and direct productions of the show, his name does not appear on IBDB's Opening Night credits and, according to Ms. Long, he was blackballed from the first national tour and the 1961 film.)
That near miss does not seem to have hurt Ms. Long's stage, television and film career, however. It just adds to the awe and empathy with which she presents her parents’ story. Especially given the limitations they endured based on discrimination, which persist but were clearly worse a generation ago. This helps contextualize the bittersweet experience of her own Broadway debut at age 8, which was somewhat dampened coming so soon after her father’s close call with Kelly. But the same musical provides dramaturgical arc, as the family shared the pride when Ms. Long returned to Broadway in 2002 as Madame Liang in David Henry Hwang’s re-working of Flower Drum Song. “Grand Avenue,” her big number from that show, opens Surfing and she delivers it – “sells it” as we say – with a grin wide enough to span the song’s two-generation significance.
Her Chinese-Australian father and Japanese-American mother, Kimiye Tsunemitsu, met, married, and raised a daughter while working the ‘Chop Suey’ circuit in San Francisco and New York. They were talented dancers, singers and comics. They worked up a Vaudeville style act that outlived Vaudeville in nightclubs. It was a hard life of rejection and low earnings. But every performance day ended on stage, with those big smiles helping to convince their audience better times were ahead.
Like her parents, Ms. Long embodies this tradition. But she wants to leave us with more than comic and soft-shoe patter. She takes us behind the scenes and behind the smiles. Her parents were like the countless chorus girls, sidemen and understudies who fill the stage beyond the spotlight, quietly reshaping their dreams to fit their achievements. On behalf of them all, Ms. Long has gathered her own variegated roots into a presentable bouquet, and sent it floating downstream to their descendants.
Surfing DNA closed at East West Players’ David Henry Hwang Theatre on November 19. Wishful Drinking is packing houses in an extended run at the Geffen, with a specially enhanced ticket price of $103.
A review of Wishful Drinking is available here. http://www.theatrealtor.com/specialassessments.html
Photo. Jodi Long, left, and Carrie Fisher flank a helix-climbing Gene Kelly.
Tuesday, September 19, 2006
One Degree of Separation

Lindsay-Abaire’s ‘Rabbit Hole’ is close enough to reality to be mistaken for simple melodrama, especially after the playwright’s previous central characters were given 180-degree turns: ‘Kimberly Akimbo’ is a teenager who looks 50 because she’s aging at an accelerated rate and ‘Fuddy Mears’’ principal characters are an amnesiac and a criminal crippled by limp and lisp. The folks in ‘Rabbit Hole’ are not only normal looking but quite attractive. But while the damage has been internalized, it has not been minimized. And Lindsay-Abaire and Carolyn Cantor, his director with talent aging at an accelerated rate, offer a versatile metaphor to help us get at it.
Becca (Amy Ryan) and Howie (Tate Donovan) lost their only son when he chased something into the street and was killed by a teenage driver. Jason (Trever O’Brien) was alone, sober, paying attention, but unable to stop his car in time. Though still angry, Howie wants to limit the loss of life to one, his son, and salvage what's left of his and Becca's. She, however, cannot function in that way. She has been blasted out of her orbit by the loss. Though she wanders her home, cooking and cleaning, she has separated from it as cleanly as a capsule from its booster. Floating this way, and to her husband’s incomprehension, she gravitates to her fellow damaged drifter, Jason, who has dedicated a story about unseen corridors – the kind the physicists theorize link to parallel universes and the kind Lewis Carroll did link to one – to his victim.
In the way Brooks held his comic mirror up close to our faces, Lindsay-Abaire and Cantor keep Becca unmistakable – as recognizable as any neighbor we might pass in the market. It's impossible to guess the displacement and alienation she is suffering. That tight clutch of normalcy, as Ryan and the rest of the cast (which also includes Joyce Van Patten and a stunning Missy Yager) show, is what makes for such a huge explosion when the fission finally comes. The physical production is also stunning, with a beautiful set by Alexander Dodge, lit by Matthew Richards.
For the record, credit must be given to a first public reading of the play, also directed by Cantor, two summers ago at South Coast Repertory. SCR had commissioned the script from Lindsay-Abaire, as it had done with 'Kimberly,' which it premiered. Anna Gunn as Becca, Kevin Kilner as Howie, and Lynn Milgrim, Sarah Rafferty and Phillip Vaden filling out the rest of the cast proved this untested script so road worthy that its next public performance would be on Broadway. With virtually no visible separation between art and audience, those five actors also reasserted the simple magnificence of great theater. In an auditorium of a few hundred people in casual clothes, five virtually indistinguishable from the rest sat before the others on stacking chairs, turning a hundred or so pages of fresh text into two hours of life experience. They rendered it to such a degree, that everyone in that room was moved.
Photo: Trever O'Brien and Amy Ryan.
Saturday, September 09, 2006
Counter Intuitive

‘Nighthawks,’ sang Tom Waits on his 1975 live recording, ‘at the diner of Emma’s Forty-Niner, there’s a rendezvous of strangers around the coffee urn tonight.” That sketchy nod to the frozen loneliness of Edward Hopper’s 1942 painting was a palatable bit of extra-disciplinary referencing. But according to Los Angeles crama critics, Douglas Steinberg has gone one worse in his 'Nighthawks,' receiving its premiere at the Kirk Douglas Theatre through September 24, 2006. With some inspired in-breeding, Steinberg has apparently produced a mutant child of tableaux vivant and film noir. His reason for doing so is a mystery -- in more ways than one – involving the diner’s three customers and attendant and a couple "off-stage" characters. The Los Angeles Times’ Charles McNulty suggests that the reason “they don't yet exist in three dimensions only underscores their need for someone with an imagination big enough to hear what they really sound like.” In 'Variety,' Robert Verini calls it a 'clumsy, interminable dramatization,' with 'cheap gags in his first act and over-the-top melodrama in the second.' Whether there's sufficient heft in the Steinberg stylus to pull off this sleight, one wonders whether such conversions can ever take. With due respect to Jon Hendricks and the vocalese set, I wager that if Joe Zawinul wanted singing in ‘Birdland' he'd have written lyrics. Same with Paul Desmond and ‘Take Five.’ (The exception that proves the rule is Cassandra Wilson’s ‘Run the Voodoo Down,’ which eerily expands Miles' universe.) Siimilarly, a great song is only diminished by becoming a video. I remember losing interest in MTV (even before I lost interest in the next generation’s music) because I didn’t like limiting the songs of Talking Heads or Squeeze or whomever into a single visual interpretation. (I still see Chevy Chase's stupid mug every time I hear 'You Can Call Me Al.') It’s what people complain about when artists sell their songs for use in advertisements. It's not the sell-out we object to. It's the way songs that were once important to us are now appliqued over with with images of Cadillac SUVs (Led Zeppelin’s ‘Rock ‘n’ Roll’), Kaiser Permanente health care (Dylan’s ‘The Times They Are A-Changin’) and Chase credit cards (The Beatles' ‘Love is All You Need’). Just as I prefer letting my subconscious throw up images for 'Birdland,' 'The Weight' and ‘Burning Down the House' each time I hear them, I'm sure I'll be glad I can create my own seedy stories for those denizens of Hopper's diner.
Photo collage: Brian T. Finney and Colette Kilroy "step outside" Edward Hopper's 'Nighthawks' for a little play.
Sunday, September 03, 2006
Old Times, Good Times

Photo: Berghofer, Wycliffe Gordon, Hamilton, Stripling, Person, DeRose, Hashimoto.
Friday, September 01, 2006
Blustery Days
Promo Seltzer. This week the Windy City was blowing gusts of disgust in a knock-down exchange of letters, emails, blogs and articles. The tempestuous snit between the 'Chicago Sun-Times' and Theater Building Chicago, a 30-year-old company, attracted the input of nearly two dozen of theater’s most distinguished blowhards, including Edward Albee, Tony Kushner, Arthur Kopit and Dramatist Guild President John Weidman.
What sparked the dramatists' high dudgeon was Sun-Times Critic Hedy Weiss’ review of the company’s 2006 showcase of new musicals. Even though the works are billed as in development and in some cases not completed, Weiss, a former dancer who has been reviewing for more than 15 years, had drifted from doing advances to help promote the festival to doing reviews.
In her defense, Ms. Weiss, who truly seems not to know better, was not condemned in 2005 after writing what amounts to brochure copy on that year’s works-in-progress. She called the musical Tevya, "a remarkably fine piece of work. Not only does it play fully on the powerful frame of reference created in Fiddler, it moves the story forward in intelligent and believable ways, stepping gracefully and confidently into those giant footprints while building on the blend of humor, bitterness and debate that animated the original."
She said the musical version of Synge’s Playboy of the Western World, "deserves a thriving future. Along with its ready-made tragicomic story and marvelous characters, it comes with a lovely, lyrical score that very skillfully blends traditional Irish melodies and a Broadway sound.”
On August 16, 2006, her overview story stated that "the eight deeply flawed new musicals showcased in this year's Stages 2006 marathon at the Theatre Building seemed to suggest the artform [sic] has fallen on very hard times."
This was an egregiously inappropriate opinion for a major paper to print regarding theater pieces that were expressly available as part of their development. But technically, it was no worse that the raves she gave shows last year. The problem for the American theater is that our only true allies are newspapers, a community that is itself increasingly marginalized. The point of contact between theater and paper, which I know only too well, requires a kind of rigidity that may cost a story.
As barrage after barrage of pent-up critic-critique from America's greatest living playwrights was gathered by DGA to be dumped on the desks of Sun-Times editor John Barron and publisher John Cruikshank (like Albee's "Ms. Weiss has a reputation as an irresponsible critic, and there are many occasions that are brought to my attention where her reviews have been shocking in their irresponsible provocation and others in which her opinions and prejudices have seemed curiously contrived."), the theater's executive director Joan Mazzonelli began to look for cover. Whereas she earlier had told Jeffrey Sweet (as reported on his blog), "Ms. Weiss was explicitly told that these presentations were not for review," when she spoke to Campbell Robertson for yesterday's New York Times story, she was "acknowledging that she had not made the festival’s policy clear to Ms. Weiss, whom she had encouraged to attend, along with other members of the press."
Whether Ms. Weiss is a good witch or a bad witch, the issue of theater criticism in this country is one which needs much more attention. (And, publicists need to keep a stiff spine despite the potential loss.)
What sparked the dramatists' high dudgeon was Sun-Times Critic Hedy Weiss’ review of the company’s 2006 showcase of new musicals. Even though the works are billed as in development and in some cases not completed, Weiss, a former dancer who has been reviewing for more than 15 years, had drifted from doing advances to help promote the festival to doing reviews.
In her defense, Ms. Weiss, who truly seems not to know better, was not condemned in 2005 after writing what amounts to brochure copy on that year’s works-in-progress. She called the musical Tevya, "a remarkably fine piece of work. Not only does it play fully on the powerful frame of reference created in Fiddler, it moves the story forward in intelligent and believable ways, stepping gracefully and confidently into those giant footprints while building on the blend of humor, bitterness and debate that animated the original."
She said the musical version of Synge’s Playboy of the Western World, "deserves a thriving future. Along with its ready-made tragicomic story and marvelous characters, it comes with a lovely, lyrical score that very skillfully blends traditional Irish melodies and a Broadway sound.”
On August 16, 2006, her overview story stated that "the eight deeply flawed new musicals showcased in this year's Stages 2006 marathon at the Theatre Building seemed to suggest the artform [sic] has fallen on very hard times."
This was an egregiously inappropriate opinion for a major paper to print regarding theater pieces that were expressly available as part of their development. But technically, it was no worse that the raves she gave shows last year. The problem for the American theater is that our only true allies are newspapers, a community that is itself increasingly marginalized. The point of contact between theater and paper, which I know only too well, requires a kind of rigidity that may cost a story.
As barrage after barrage of pent-up critic-critique from America's greatest living playwrights was gathered by DGA to be dumped on the desks of Sun-Times editor John Barron and publisher John Cruikshank (like Albee's "Ms. Weiss has a reputation as an irresponsible critic, and there are many occasions that are brought to my attention where her reviews have been shocking in their irresponsible provocation and others in which her opinions and prejudices have seemed curiously contrived."), the theater's executive director Joan Mazzonelli began to look for cover. Whereas she earlier had told Jeffrey Sweet (as reported on his blog), "Ms. Weiss was explicitly told that these presentations were not for review," when she spoke to Campbell Robertson for yesterday's New York Times story, she was "acknowledging that she had not made the festival’s policy clear to Ms. Weiss, whom she had encouraged to attend, along with other members of the press."
Whether Ms. Weiss is a good witch or a bad witch, the issue of theater criticism in this country is one which needs much more attention. (And, publicists need to keep a stiff spine despite the potential loss.)
Tuesday, August 29, 2006
Fall from Grace

Photo: Putting the CNN in Nancy.
Monday, August 28, 2006
'24's' Heaven

Counter Television Unit. My one TV series indulgence fared well this Sunday when ‘24’ broke into the Emmy winner circle with its fifth season. Fans will no doubt be crawling all over the show’s elaborate Web site to digitally high-five each other and argue whether this was really the season deserviing such status. For my money, however, it was a good one. For starters, as a seasoned viewer, I thought that with Season 4 '24' had chosen to take its own life. It did not end with a cliff hanger so much as with a fatal, precipitous fall: there was no way our hero, Jack Bauer (Keifer Sutherland, who earned one of the show’s three awards for Lead Performance), could return after faking his death so he could change identity and disappear to avoid a vengeful Chinese official (Tzi Ma). All this made the Season 5’s 24-segment arc all the more severe, gripping, and – as any true fan will happily admit – ridiculous. Providing the biggest goose to the storyline was our friend Greg Itzin’s President Logan, who did a Shakespearean turn of changing from Dogberry to Richard III in one revelation, playing opposite Jean Smart as First Lady. Another of the show’s 12 nominees, Itzin lost to now-five-time winner Alan Alda. Logan will not be back next season, so we’ll be seeing Greg back on stage, where he has been missed. According to the cliffhanger that appeared to spoil last season's happy ending, Jack will begin Season 6 in the hands of the Chinese. That's right. It was less than a day before Mr. Ma’s character picked him up, taped him over, and tossed him in a holding cell until January. Photo: Keifer in Sutherland.
Sunday, August 27, 2006
Once in Love With Emmy

It's Itzin's Hour. Tonight’s Emmy Award nominees include an old theatre colleague, Greg Itzin, for his role as President Logan in FOX’s ’24.’ Itzin was critical to ‘24’s’ breakout year, in which it received 12 Emmy nominations to lead the series category. When I ran into Greg at a recent Ahmanson opening, he was the only actor among a plaza full of them, posing for pictures with fans. When I joked that he had take well to being famous, he beamed and admitted – “Loving it. Having the time of my life!” His character, who changes from a forgettable vice president to a forgettable president with behavior that doesn’t mesh with a veteran of campaigning, is explained in a mid-season plot twist as the most conflicted character in the show’s history. Suddenly he – and his First Lady Jean Smart – were at the center of a Shakespearean maelstrom. As is the case with every moment of this show – the one series I know – the entire enterprise would collapse under its own cartoon logic if it weren’t for these great actors making their characters so believable. And Itzin's character will hopefully triumph over a final round of candidates – William Shatner of "Boston Legal," Oliver Platt of ‘Huff,’ Michael Imperioli of ‘The Sopranos,’ and Alan Alda of ‘The West Wing.’ This time, however, he shouldn't need to resort to subversion.
Photo: Jean Smart and Gregory Itzin
Saturday, August 26, 2006
Cut and Run

Friday, August 25, 2006
Cruise Control

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