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After one particularly arduous but rewarding rehearsal for
last year's new Broadway musical "Sweet Smell of Success," the
show's second-billed actor, Brian d'Arcy James, remarked to a
small group of his colleagues: "Revivals are for cowards."
"That became our rallying cry," recalled the show's star, John
Lithgow. And the morale behind the scenes of that show apparently
needed rallying, because "Sweet Smell" was ultimately saddled with
the bitter smell of failure -- after generally disapproving
reviews, it lost millions of dollars and closed.
James played a grimy press agent who fed items to Lithgow's gossip
columnist, winning mostly favorable reviews and a Tony Award
nomination. Lithgow won a Tony, but James' role "was much more
difficult than mine," Lithgow said. "He was the engine of the
show. He never flagged."
That same quality will be even more essential for James' next
assignment, for he will be the only actor on stage in Conor
McPherson's "The Good Thief," opening Saturday at the Court
Theatre in Los Angeles.
James plays a brutal Irish thug who tells the story of the most
botched job of his underworld career and relates some of the
terrible consequences. It's a 1994 play by the same man who later
wrote the acclaimed "The Weir." James won an Obie Award for "The
Good Thief" in New York in 2001, with the New York Times review
referring to his performance as "exquisitely calibrated." The L.A.
production is the West Coast premiere.
It will serve as a Hollywood calling card for James. Despite a
couple of appearances on the TV series "The City" and "The
Education of Max Bickford," James is probably best known here for
playing the Stoker in "Titanic" in the opening of that musical's
national tour at the Ahmanson Theatre in 1999.
The differences between a big Broadway musical and a nonmusical
monologue in a 99-seat theater are many. Perhaps most obviously,
the absence of song in "The Good Thief" means "I have to find my
own ways of expressing the emotion," James said.
But James said the most important difference is "the relationship
with the audience." In "The Good Thief," the audience "is involved
in a way unlike anything else I've done."
This is perhaps clearest when an audience member makes noise.
During a New York performance of "The Good Thief," an audience
member's beeper intruded on the play, and a man left his seat in
the front row. When the man returned to the theater a few minutes
later, James stopped the show and invited the man to come back in
but then felt temporarily thrown about where he was in the script.
He later learned that the man was a doctor who had taken an urgent
call.
On another occasion, James asked a theatergoer who had been
crinkling a candy wrapper for about 15 minutes to please open it
up and consume the candy. The rest of the audience applauded. This
is something that would be unlikely to interrupt a show on the
scale of "Sweet Smell of Success" or "Titanic."
The idea of being all alone on stage means "that if I get in
trouble, I can't turn around and ask the policeman or any other
cast member to help me out. I can't pass them the ball."
However, he noted that he has performed big solos even in
musicals, so "I never balked at the idea of being alone."
James had seen "The Good Thief" in Edinburgh in 2000 and liked it.
Three months later, when he was playing the Baker in a Minneapolis
production of "Into the Woods," he read of a proposed New York
staging of "The Good Thief" by a producer he knew. "I was sure
they had already cast someone else," but they hadn't. He got the
job.
Irish plays weren't completely foreign to him. His family heritage
is seven-eighths Irish and one-eighth Welsh. He acted in Kenneth
Branagh's "Public Enemy," another play with allusions to Irish
organized crime, in Dublin, New York and, in 1995, at the same
L.A. theater, the Court, where "The Good Thief" will play.
After the New York run of "The Good Thief," James did the play in
Dublin itself, where he was told that theatergoers thought he was
from some other part of Ireland, doing a Dublin accent. He had
consulted briefly with a dialect coach, but in mastering the
accent, "most of my instincts were to parrot the Dubs who were in
the cast of 'Public Enemy.' "
When people think of an Irish accent, "a lot of people have the
Lucky Charms guy in their minds. There is such a difference
between the stereotype and the real sound. I love to try to make
it sound right."
The psychological authenticity of the character would seem to be a
greater stretch for James. He's not exactly a tough guy.
Pressed to recall any firsthand memories of violence, the actor
reached back to the fifth grade in Saginaw, Mich., when he was
"fighting with this same kid every day for about a week."
As an adult, he witnessed a mugging on a New York street -- but "I
didn't wait to watch what happened. I ran to find a policeman. I
was all worked up about it, but to the policeman it was just
another night on the job."
However, James' maternal grandfather, Harry F. Kelly, was a
celebrated prosecutor who took on Detroit's notorious Purple Gang
and rode his crime-fighting credentials to four years as the
Republican governor of Michigan in the '40s. James is helping
develop a movie script about Kelly.
Where to draw the line
James acknowledged that the character in "The Good Thief" is "so
different from me. His oxygen is different."
Perhaps because of that, however, "every chance to be in that skin
is interesting." Noting that the narrative of the play refers to
some characters who are even more vicious than the storyteller
himself, James said he wants to know how people decide where to
draw the moral line over which they won't cross.
His character does have his regrets, "so there is hope for
redemption. You see his conscience being born in front of you."
Playwright McPherson said the character is "kind of a thief, but
with a certain sense of morality" -- hence the title. The play is
based on a dream that the playwright had, not on a real criminal
case.
Since the last time he did the play, James has become a father.
The birth of his daughter will inform the parts of his performance
in which the character talks about a young kidnapped girl, James
said. "But it's my job not to allow it to affect it in a way that
it becomes unbalanced. The character I play isn't a father, so he
wouldn't have that perspective. If I thought about it too much,
I'd be weeping."
Enough to make him weep
David Alexanian, who is producing "The Good Thief" in Los Angeles,
also has a story about weeping. He was James' roommate during
their freshman year at Northwestern University. A couple of months
after they met, he saw his roomie perform the role of Eugene
Jerome in Neil Simon's "Brighton Beach Memoirs."
"I had no idea how talented he was. I was so moved, I left the
theater sobbing," said Alexanian, who now produces movies as
co-founder of Elixir Productions in Santa Monica.
Lithgow, who will co-host the opening night party for "The Good
Thief," said, "It's ingenious for [James] to bring this as his
entree to L.A. He has almost been a victim of his tremendous
musical talent." A nonmusical showcase will display talents that
might be considered more marketable in Hollywood.
James wants to move to L.A. "New York needs so much energy to get
through the day," especially with a baby in the family, he said.
"The Good Thief" is opening just a few months before an unrelated
film of the same title, starring Nick Nolte. McPherson said he is
thanked in the movie's closing credits, presumably because of the
title and because he knows the movie's director, Neil Jordan. He
doesn't plan to raise a stink. "In a way, it's common property,"
he said -- ever since the New Testament told of "the good thief"
who was crucified alongside Jesus.
Nor does the title likeness faze James. "I did 'Titanic,' " he
pointed out, "and the little movie by the same name didn't hurt
us. In this town, it might help." |