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Prime Time Liev
In July's The Manchurian Candidate,
Liev Schreiber hones his killer instincts
by
Sara Brady
Liev Schreiber is a Serious Actor. Serious Actors do not do somersaults on film sets, especially when they've played Hamlet and ago onstage; costarred with Newman, Hackman, and Streep; and worked with directors Robert Benton and Ron Howard. Why, then, is this Serious Actor looking so . . . gleeful?
The Yale-trained Schreiber, 36, is describing the fun he had making 2002's The Sum of All
Fears. He unfolds his long legs and looks far less angsty than his filmography would suggest. "I got to run through the snow with a high-powered telescopic rifle,' he says with an anarchic grin. "It was all [director] Phil [Alden Robinson] could do to stop me from ridiculously doing somersaults and aiming my gun at things that weren't there."
He credits Robinson with teaching him about directing; this month, Schreiber will go to Prague to direct Elijah Wood in his adaptation of the best-seller
Everything Is Illuminated, "a screwball comedy in the shape of a road movie."
Decidedly less screwball is his performance as the brainwashed assassin in Jonathan Demme's remake of
The Manchurian Candidate. He's stingy with details about the update, which is set after the first gulf war. "Who said it was about Desert Storm?" he inquires, poker-faced, before relenting. "It's a faithful interpretation of the original. Exciting and very contemporary."
And then he smiles, with just a hint of the somersaulting kid inside the Serious Actor.
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InStepWith Liev Schreiber
The powerful young stage and screen actor
Liev Schreiber stars in a remake of the brainwashing drama The Manchurian Candidate. He’s also directing his first film
by
James Brady
Photo Rudy Archuleta
ONE OF OUR FINEST YOUNG American actors,
Liev Schreiber, was phoning from Ukraine. He was scouting locations for the film
Everything Is Illuminated, for which he wrote the screenplay and which he’ll direct.
Meanwhile, back in the States, Liev stars in a remake of
The Manchurian Candidate, due out July 3. He plays a man who was captured in the first Gulf War and brainwashed and is now running for Vice President. Meryl Steep is his mother, and Denzel Washington is his former military comrade. The 1962 original starred Laurence Harvey, Angela Lansbury and Frank Sinatra in those roles.
How did Liev’s Manchurian role come about? “I heard to my surprise that [director] Jonathan Demrne was interested in me,” he said. “He came to see
Henry V in Central Park,” (Liev’s acting drew huge audiences and had the tough New York critics raving.) “I was very familiar with the original film,” he added, “but it’s such a cult favorite, the idea of remaking it was intimidating.”
Schreiber has Emmy and Golden Globe nominations
and has worked with actors as celebrated and disparate as Paul Newman, Meg Ryan and Morgan Freeman, but Manchurian might be his break into leading-man status
—something Liev seems to have successfully avoided so far. He calls himself “a tough nut,” but the sense I get is of a very serious professional.
Regarding his current travels, he said: “I’d never been to Ukraine before [his family is Ukrainian], nor anywhere behind the old Iron Curtain. The incredible thing is—and I know it’s impossible—but it smells familiar.” Liev rhapsodized about Kiev, the capital. “It’s a beautiful city,” he told me, “the most polished and cleanest streets ever, and these 10th-century monasteries! I even love the Stalin-era buildings. Prague is our headquarters for the shoot, but we’ll be working here in Ukraine and Russia, hiring our extras.”
Everything Is Illuminated stars Elijah Wood as a Jewish American who sets out to find the woman who may have saved his grandfather from the Nazis. Other than a documentary, it’s Liev’s first directing job. Intimidated? “Yes,” he admitted. “There’s something so insular about being an actor. It’s a lonely life. But collaborative—discussing ideas directing is
collaborative—discussing ideas with other people. It’s great to be a member of something tremendously exciting.”
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For more on Liev Schreiber, visit www.parade.com and click on “In Step With.”
Personal
Born Oct. 4, 1967, in San Francisco. Single.
Films
Include Party Girl (debut), 1994; Walking and Talking,1996; Ransom,1996; Scream,1996; Scream 2,1997; Twilight,1998; Sphere, 1998;A Walk on the Moon, 1999; .Jakob the Liar, 1999; The Hurricane, 1999; Hamlet, 2000; Kate & Leopold, 2001; The Manchurian Candidate, 2004.
Television
includes Janek: TheSilent Betrayal, 1994; Buffalo Girls, 1995;RK0281,1999;Young Dr. Freud, 2002; Hitler: The Rise of Evil, 2003.
Theater
Includes In the Summer House, 1993; Macbeth, 1998; Cymbeline, 1998; Hamlet, 1999; Betrayal, 2000; Othello, 2001; Henry V, 2003.
Brady’s Bits
Liev (LEE’ev) was born in San Francisco but grew up in New York and went to that great high school Brooklyn Tech. “You must have been good at math,” I said. “I was terrible,” he replied. “But I was good at football.” Liev was elected team captain in its championship season. After a couple of years at Hampshire College, he took off for England and the Royal Academy of the Dramatic Arts, intent on an acting career. That was followed up with a master’s degree at Yale Drama School, What’s next for the multi- talented star? “I certainly hope to do more Shakespeare in the Park,” he said. “But being here in Ukraine got me thinking: The things I’m seeing, the people— it’s a great motivation to write.’ Arid can he write while directing his movie? “No,” said Schreiber. “That’s another thing on the back burner. I’ve got to focus on the movie.” Does the name “Liev” have an English equivalent? “In Ukrainian, it means ‘lion,” he said. “But my mother named me after a Russian author —Leo Tolstoy.”
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Meet the Candidate
by
Logan Hill
Photo Neil Davidson
Liev
Schreiber is the kindest, bravest, warmest, most wonderful star we’ve ever
known. “My publicist told me not to talk about politics,” says Liev
Schreiber, “but, yes, I think we have a president who stole the election.”
The Shakespeare veteran – at 36 – can’t avoid the subject, as the
star of Jonathan Demme’s tense remake of The Manchurian Candidate, out
on July 30. Schreiber’s the brainwashed vice-presidential candidate at
the heart of the story, opposite Denzel Washington (in Sinatra’s role) and
Meryl Streep (in Angela Lansbury’s). The film shoots for the sick wit
and suspense of the original, replacing the Cold War with the Gulf War, and
Khrushchev-era fearmongering with a presidential candidate’s “war on
terror.” Despite this, Schreiber, on the phone from Prague where he’s
directing the adaptation of Everything is Illuminated, still claims the
remake is mostly nonpartisan. “Campaign politics for both parties has become
completely bizarre,” he says, “and for me, Manchurian is a perfect
illustration of that.” Though Homeland Security continues to issue threats
about Republican-convention safety, Schreiber defends the film’s scary scenes
set in high-risk spots like Penn Station, Times Square, and what appears to be
Madison Square Garden. “Meryl and I have talked about whether it’s
irresponsible to make a film that plays on those themes,” he says. “The
original Manchurian Candidate was sat on for years because of Kennedy’s
assassination…People are thinking about all this, talking about it, are
uptight about it. That’s the point: All the stuff in the film is so perverse
and far-fetched, but also strikingly familiar.”
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Liev Schreiber to Star in Spring Glengarry Revival
by
Cara Joy David
Broadway.com has learned that Liev Schreiber is expected to star alongside Alan Alda in this season's revival of David Mamet's Glengarry Glen Ross. The production, directed by Joe Mantello, is now aiming for a spring Broadway bow.
Schreiber made his Broadway debut in 1993 in In The Summer House and starred in the Roundabout Theatre Company's Broadway revival of Betrayal during the 2000-2001 season. He was announced to star in Sight Unseen this season, but withdrew from the production prior to the start of rehearsals. His off-Broadway credits include The Tempest, All for One, Goodnight Desdemona, Hamlet, Escape from Happiness, Henry V, Othello and The Mercy Seat. His film credits include Scream, Scream 2, Sphere, A Walk on the Moon, Hamlet, Kate & Leopold and The Sum of All Fears. Schreiber was nominated for a 2000 Golden Globe and 2000 Emmy Award for his role as Orson Welles in HBO Television's RKO 281. Schreiber is also one of the stars of the big screen remake of The Manchurian Candidate, being released at theaters nationwide July 30.
Gllengarry Glen Ross
centers on a competitive group of real estate salesmen who've gotten
more than a little desperate during the reign of Reaganomics. The
play won the 1984 Pulitzer Prize for Drama, had a successful run at
Broadway's Golden Theatre from March 16, 1984 through February 17,
1985, and was made into an acclaimed 1992 film.
A production spokesperson was not available to comment on the
casting of Schreiber.
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On Stage
by
Frank Rizzo
Yale School of Drama, under Dean James Bundy, has created a
leadership council, which is described as "a team of advocates that works
to support the school while increasing participation of alumni and friends in
the life of the school and the Yale Repertory Theatre." The new members in
this advocacy, fund-raising and recruiting group include: John Badham (director
"Saturday Night Fever"), Kate Burton (Broadway's "Hedda Gabler"),
Patricia Clarkson (the film "Pieces of April"), Charles S. Dutton
(Broadway's "The Piano Lesson"), designer Heidi Ettinger ("The
Secret Garden"), Liev Schreiber (the film "The Manchurian
Candidate"), Tony Shalhoub (TV's "Monk"), Henry Winkler (TV's
"Happy Days"), Polly Draper (TV's "thirtysomething"), Mark
Linn-Baker (TV's "Perfect Strangers") and Neil Mazzella (president of
the Hudson Scenic Studio.)
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Getting a Shot: Liev Schreiber improved
relations with Iraq
by
Kristin Hohenadel
ONE SMALL STEP FOR U.S.- Iraqi relations, one giant step for a young filmmaker. On the Prague set of Everything Is Illuminated, 25-year-old Iraqi Muthana Mudher is getting a crash course in American-style moviemaking. As an intern on the project, Mudher, an aspiring filmmaker from Baghdad, has painted sets, assisted the director of photography, shot video for the film's press kit, and even worked as an extra.
All this because actor Liev Schreiber saw him telling MTV's True Life how nearly impossible it is to learn his profession in a country ravaged by war.
Schreiber, who makes his directorial debut with the adaptation of Jonathan Safran Foer's 2002 novel, contacted Mudher through MTV and, along with the movie's producers, is personally financing the cross-cultural moviemaking adventure. "We felt really guilty about what our country had done to his country," says producer Peter Saraf. "And then, of course, he gets here, and it never occurred to me that he would say something like 'But I love George Bush- George he changed my life!"
Illuminated, which stars Elijah Wood and is slated for a 2005 release, follows a young Jewish American's road trip across Ukraine in search of the woman who saved his grandfather from the Nazis. "In a sense, it was perfect to have someone from his world working in our world," says Schreiber of the culture transplant. "In a lot of ways, it mirrored the story."
Mudher will likely return to Iraq when shooting wraps Aug. 7, and he hopes to continue making films. "I consider this thing as kind of miracle," says Mudher, who learned English watching American movies. "I'm attending the best days of my life."
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The Manchurian Candidate: Liev Schreiber
Q&A
On what attracted him to the project:
When I heard that Jonathan Demme was directing this incarnation of it, that was very exciting to me. I've always been a fan of his films. And then as the cast started to take shape - Denzel Washington, Meryl Streep, Jon Voight - are pretty good company.
On his character Raymond Shaw:
I play Raymond Shaw, who first and foremost, is the son of Eleanor Shaw and is a candidate for Vice President. He is born with a silver spoon in his mouth and he's had a difficult relationship with his mother. He's been trying to separate, joined the army, and then returning from the army, he goes into a political career driven primarily, again, by his mother.
On Meryl's character Eleanor Shaw:
I think Eleanor Shaw is one of those people who decided when she was born what she was going to do and never let up for a second pursuing that. Regardless of what it entails losing, whether it be family, lives, reputation, none of that ever mattered. Her goal was sort of viciously single-minded.
On the conflict with Denzel's character:
Denzel's character, Captain Marco, has a very different memory or at least a dream life, about what happened in Kuwait. Which, you know, given the circumstances of any campaign can be really incendiary right now for him to be popping up and telling these stories. I think that the general consensus is that he's delusional.
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It's a Warp for
Everything is Illuminated
Filming
on the adaptation of Everything Is Illuminated has finally wrapped
in Prague, and with a comparatively small budget of $7m, the
film’s producer Marc Turtletaub told Screendaily.com “it looks
like a $40m movie”.
Starring Lord Of The Rings actor Elijah Wood and directed
by The Manchurian Candidate actor Liev Schreiber, much
anticipation surrounds the forthcoming film. The best-selling novel
of the same name, was penned by first time writer Jonathan Safran
Foer and caused a huge stir in literary circles for its incredible
wit and originality.
Fans of the book are intrigued to see how well the story adapts
to the screen. First time director Schreiber it as a ‘bizarre
film’ inspired by the work of Terry Gilliam and Emir Kusturica. He
told Screendaily.com
“I’ve kicked back certain elements of my salary to get a guy
named Boone Naar, who is the dog trainer, who was just outside of
our budget. I just thought it was so important to have the best dog
trainer that we could possibly get.”
The film looks set for an Autumn 2005 release.
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Liev Schreiber's Prague
hot off his turn in 'The Manchurian Candidate,' the actor shares his passion for
Prague, where he's shooting his directorial debut, 'Everything Is
Illuminated'.(My Favorite Places)
by: Ehrman, Mark
If you're going to bring yourself close to suicide to make a film,"
says Liev Schreiber, "You might as well do it in a beautiful place."
For Schreiber, like many a bottom-line minded filmmakers seeking the
optimum balance of expenses and aesthetics, that place is
Prague--where productions cost half as much as they do in Paris or
New York. With a mere $8 million to throw into his directorial debut
"Everything Is Illuminated," the Czech capital not only makes a
suitable stand-in for the Ukraine--where the action of the film
takes place--but it's also a great place to hang out.
Schreiber discovered Prague last year filming a forgettable TV
biopic, "Hitler: The Rise of Evil," where he played the Fuhrer's
financial facilitator. But difficulties of the local lingo being
what they are, "I'm still pretty limited to places that cater to
English-speaking people," he says.
Luckily, his flat in the center of touristy Stare Mesto (Old Town)
fits that description. His first shot of the day tends to be of the
espresso kind, courtesy of the Bakeshop Praha, which sits opposite a
charming little square. "They make a great latte. It's a great place
to set coffee and read the paper," he says. (The U.K. Guardian and
the International Herald Tribune are available along with the Czech
dailies.)
While the local cuisine has never won many raves, Schreiber says he
still eats well. His top picks are Kampa Park and its neighbor
Hergetova Cihelna. "It's a beautiful location. You can sit outside
and eat with a view of the Charles Bridge. It was destroyed by the
flood and owner Nils Jebens rebuilt it and it's really beautifully
designed."
Pad thai aficionados may register skepticism, but "The Manchurian
Candidate" costal claims that "the best Thai food I've ever had is
at Arzenal." Situated behind an art gallery featuring a life-sized
cow sculpture designed by Czech surrealist Jan Saudek. Arzenal is in
Franz Kafka's former neighborhood, which is now populated by
fashionistas and backpackers alike.
After he wraps for the day, Schreiber likes to imbibe at
deejay-friendly M1, a Eurohip, industrial-styled lounge with a
concrete-and-metal bar and red couches. For more swanky libations,
he'll go to Tretter's Cocktail Bar in the medieval heart of Old
Town. Tretter's is a '40s-style "Swingers"-chic place where
tie-and-jacketed bartenders "make a whole production out of spinning
cocktails." Just the place, he says, to relax with a Tanqueray dry
martini nightcap.
Not that Schreiber's the only notable to wend through Prague's
medieval streets. Roman Polanski recently spent time here shooting
"Oliver Twist," Paul W.S. Anderson used it for" Alien vs. Predator,"
and two of this year's horror heavies, "Van Helsing" and "Hellboy,"
were centered here. "This will be another record-breaking year for
U.S. productions in Prague," says Tomas Krejci, general manager of
Prague Studios. "And the reason is simple: The Czechs are remarkable
at set construction--perhaps the best in Europe. So you get
excellent, very artistic labor at a very good cost. Plus it doesn't
hurt that you can also have a very comfortable life here."
Prague Picks
Schreiber's favorites center around the medieval Old Town Square and
Stare Mesto, the heart of the city, where ancient facades adorn
historic churches, funky cafes and smokey jazz clubs. This is also
where Franz Kafka lived and worked--another appeal for the
actor-director.
1. Bakeshop Praha, Kozi 1, info@bakeshop.cz
2. Kampa Park, Na Kampe 8b, Mala Strana, www.kampapark.com
3. Arzenal, Valentinska 11, restaurace@arzenal.cz
4. M1, Masna 1, Stare Mesto
5. Tretter's Cocktail Bar, V Kolkovne 3, www.tretters.cz
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Fast Chat: Liev Schreiber
by
Susan King
Los Angeles Times
As the pivotal character in Jonathan Demme's well-received remake
of John Frankenheimer's 1962 classic, "The Manchurian
Candidate," Liev Schreiber adds one more complex role to a
wide-ranging resume. Schreiber, 36, plays Raymond Shaw - the role
essayed by Laurence Harvey in the original - now a repressed,
decorated Persian Gulf War hero who finds himself running for vice
president thanks to the machinations of his senator mother (Meryl
Streep).
Born in San Francisco and raised in New York City, Schreiber has
developed into one of the most versatile actors of his generation,
appearing in theater in New York in such plays as "Henry
V," "Betrayal" and "Hamlet." He first
came to recognition in Wes Craven's "Scream" trilogy and
has since appeared in such box office hits as "The Sum of All
Fears" and indie favorites, including "Big Night"
and "A Walk on the Moon."
He recently was in Prague directing his first feature,
"Everything Is Illuminated," based on Jonathan Safran
Foer's book. Though he'd been shooting all day, Schreiber seemed
in good spirits when he called Susan King of the Los Angeles Times
from his car to talk about his directing stint and his
"Manchurian" experience.
Have you long wanted to direct a movie?
I had directed some in the theater and had fooled around a little
bit with animation. I had always sort of dreamed about , but I
never imagined it would happen. The more time I spent in front of
the camera, the more I wondered what it would be like behind it.
You have been getting the best reviews of your career with
"The Manchurian Candidate," but were you nervous about
doing the remake since the original is such a classic?
I guess so. But beggars can't be choosers when Jonathan Demme is
the director and you have a Daniel Pyne script and you have Meryl
Streep and Denzel Washington! You can't really think about the
remake.
Are you a fan of the original?
I am. I had seen the original many times, but it was pretty clear
to me early on it was a completely different kind of film. There
was something so wonderfully camp about Frankenheimer's film, and
I think Jonathan's vision of it was more gritty, realistic and
darker. It is almost an entirely different genre.
Did you base Raymond on any politician?
I saw some footage of Robert Kennedy visiting a shantytown, I
think it was in Alabama. It was this moody black-and-white footage
of him walking out of this shantytown that families were living
in. The children's stomachs were bloated from hunger, and it was
just a kind of really un-American vision that seemed almost Third
World. He had a very strange look on his face when he walked out
of there, and I have never seen any politician look that way
before, kind of a vacant stare. He had really been disturbed at
the core, and I felt this was an interesting guy to watch. I
watched more footage of him, and I really got interested in him.
Plus, the movie was so amazingly palpable - timely, at least it
felt like it. Every time I would go home after work and turn on
the television, I was sort of seeing the story of the film played
back to me one way or another. That was also very useful.
The scenes between you and Meryl Streep, who plays your mother,
are scary, riveting and even Oedipal. Had you ever worked with her
before?
Meryl and I did a play together in Seattle quite a while ago, so I
kind of had the luxury of working with her before. I probably
would have been intimidated if I didn't have that. It was great to
sort of have that relationship. We have kept in touch a little
bit. She comes to see me when I do plays, and I go to see her when
she does theater. We have a friendship, so it really made that
work. Part of what defines her as an actress is her generosity. I
think she offers so much with her eyes, and I think it makes
acting with her very, very easy.
You have avoided being typecast. Do you always look for roles
that are so radically different from each other?
Most of the time I am just trying to get other jobs! But I think
once I have secured that job, you just sort of look where the role
clicks with you, what is it you can identify with and how are you
going to deal with the things you can't identify with.
So what was it about Raymond that clicked with you?
I think it is an incredible part ... At a certain level, you can't
play the reality of the character because the reality of the
character is being repressed. It's a very interesting exercise. It
is not really difficult to identify with. I think I have walked
through moments of my life seriously repressed!
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Glengarry Glen Ross to Follow 'night,
Mother Again; Set for May 1 Opening
by
Ernio Hernandez
In a move that will have theatre historians abuzz, the upcoming
revival of David Mamet's Glengarry Glen Ross will follow the
upcoming revival of 'night, Mother at Broadway's Royale
Theatre.
The Mamet work will begin previews in mid-April toward a May 1,
2005 opening. The original staging of 'night, Mother opened
March 31, 1983 at the John Golden Theatre. The venue next housed the
original staging of Glengarry Glen Ross, which opened March
25, 1984.
This time around, the new Michael Mayer staging of 'night,
Mother — starring Edie Falco and Brenda Blethyn — will end
its 19-week run (from Nov. 14, 2004) at the Royale Theatre on Feb.
27, 2005. The May 1 opening of Glengarry Glen Ross will
likely just place it within this seasons's cut-off for Tony Award
eligibility — where it may vie with its predecessor for the Best
Play Revival prize.
Alan Alda (QED, "M*A*S*H"), Liev Schreiber (Henry
V, "Scream") and Frederick Weller (Take Me Out,
"The Shape of Things") will star in the new staging by
Tony Award winner Joe Mantello (Assassins, Take Me Out). More
casting is to be announced.
The design team of Glengarry Glen Ross will feature Santo
Loquasto (sets), Laura Bauer (costumes) and Kenneth Posner
(lighting). Producing the revival will be Jeffrey Richards, Jerry
Frankel and JAM Theatricals.
Glengarry Glen Ross follows the cutthroat world of real
estate where salesmen are vying for the best leads to make the
biggest sales. The play was produced on Broadway in 1984 under the
direction of Gregory Mosher following London and Chicago runs. The
drama earned playwright Mamet the Pulitzer Prize and Best Play Tony
Award nomination that year and was later adapted by the scribe for
the 1992 film.
Alda, known for his Emmy Award-winning television work on
"M*A*S*H," has appeared on the Broadway stage in the Art,
QED, Jake's Women, The Apple Tree, The Owl and the Pussycat, Fair
Game for Lovers, Purlie Victorious and Only in America.
His film credits include "Crimes and Misdemeanors,"
"Everyone Says I Love You," "Flirting With
Disaster," "Manhattan Murder Mystery," "And the
Band Played On," "Murder at 1600," "Same Time,
Next Year," "California Suite" and the upcoming
"The Aviator."
Schreiber trodded the boards last summer in Central Park's
Delacourte Theatre as Henry V. His recent New York theatre
credits include Harold Pinter's Betrayal, Neil LaBute's The
Mercy Seat and Othello. A co-star in the upcoming
"The Manchurian Candidate," he has also appeared on film
in the "Scream" trilogy, "Jakob the Liar,"
"Kate & Leopold" and on television in "RKO
281," "Hitler: The Rise of Evil" and "Spinning
Boris."
Weller, who portrayed blunt ballplayer Shane Mungit in the Tony
Award winner Take Me Out under director Mantello, was last
seen in the world premiere of Edward Albee's Peter and Jerry.
The actor was also seen on Broadway in The Little Foxes, The
Rehearsal and Off-Broadway in The Country Club, Plunge
and The Shape of Things — as well as the latter's screen
adaptation.
Alda will take on the role of Shelly Levene, originated on
Broadway by Robert Prosky and played in the 1992 film version by
Jack Lemmon. Schreiber will portray Richard Roma, the role played to
Tony Award-winning success by Joe Mantegna on Broadway and earned Al
Pacino and Academy Award nomination on film. Weller plays John
Williamson, originated by J.T. Walsh on Broadway and performed by
Kevin Spacey in the movie.
Director Mantello earned two successive Tony Awards for his
direction of Take Me Out and Assassins. Other stagings
include Wicked, Frankie and Johnny in the Clair de Lune, Design
For Living, Proposals, Love! Valour! Compassion!, A Man of No
Importance, The Vagina Monologues and the upcoming Laugh
Whore.
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Making Everything Illuminated
Photographs and Words by Susanna Howe
In
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