Category Archives: Broadway

Oscar-nominated actress Jill Clayburgh dies at 66

Jill Clayburgh was one of my favorite actresses.  She was such a critical part of the 1970’s film scene with her signature role in “An Unmarried Woman”.  I always thought she should have won the Oscar for that part…I will miss her.  I was looking forward to many more years of her work…

Jill Clayburgh, whose Broadway and Hollywood acting career stretched through the decades, highlighted by her Oscar-nominated portrayal of a divorcee exploring her sexuality in the 1978 film “An Unmarried Woman,” died Friday. She was 66.

Her husband, Tony Award-winning playwright David Rabe, said she died after a 21-year battle with chronic lymphocytic leukemia. She was surrounded by her family and brother when she died at her home in Lakeville, Conn., he said.

She dealt with the disease courageously, quietly and privately, Rabe said, and conducted herself with enormous grace “and made it into an opportunity for her children to grow and be human.”

Clayburgh, alongside peers such as Anne Bancroft, Shirley MacLaine and Jane Fonda, helped to usher in a new era for actresses in Hollywood by playing women who were confident and capable yet not completely flawless. Her turn as a mother dealing with life after 16 years of marriage in “An Unmarried Woman” earned Clayburgh her first Oscar nod.

“There was practically nothing for women to do on the screen in the 1950s and 1960s,” Clayburgh said in an interview with The Associated Press while promoting “An Unmarried Woman” in 1978. “Sure, Marilyn Monroe was great, but she had to play a one-sided character, a vulnerable sex object. It was a real fantasy.”

The next year, Clayburgh was again nominated for an Academy Award for “Starting Over,” a comedy about a divorced man, played by Burt Reynolds, who falls in love but can’t get over his ex-wife.

via Oscar-nominated actress Jill Clayburgh dies at 66 – Yahoo! News.

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Finding A Place For Colored Boys : Tell Me More : NPR

I have mixed feelings about seeing this film.  I loved the play, but Tyler Perry scares me….

I’ve hated all his movies up until now.  To me, he has played the worst black stereotypes for a lot of cash.

But I think I will go see this film.  I’ll give him the benefit of the doubt.

This article makes a very good point.  Why hasn’t someone written the black male point of view?  I would love to see that, too…

Or maybe Essex Hemphill or other writers wrote it, but it has yet to be filmed…

This is a gap in popular culture I would like to see explored outside of the world of E. Lynn Harris, the black, male Jacqueline Susann.

Not that there’s anything wrong with that…

I’ve already seen For Colored Girls.

I was slightly coerced (pushed!) by my colleagues to accompany fabulous Tell Me More host Michel Martin to a screening the other day.

But I’m thinking, “here we go again.”

The last thing I wanted (or needed) to see was another film that painted the black man as society’s stammering uber-demon, who comes to steal, kill and destroy; or another project that portrays black men as this nation’s perpetual delinquents — jobless, thoughtless sexual misfits who can’t stop screwing long enough to pick our heads up and realize how we’re letting down our women, our children and families, our God and our America.

Hide your kids, hide your wife, and hide your husbands, too … (you know the rest).

Quite frankly, it’s a narrative I’ve had enough of, thank you very much.

In For Colored Girls, yes, there is a disproportionate number of troubled black men. There is one redemptive male character who isn’t a killer, a rapist, or a liar.

But although the movie (I never saw the stage version) is basically the story of black women who are — in awful ways — victimized by black men, it is also very much the story of black women, pressing through the grit and gravel of life and finding a hope and place of vulnerability that they can depend on. And that’s a beautiful thing.

I left the screening with Michel disturbed, for many reasons. It was, partially, because the film was so emotionally intense. But I was also disturbed thinking about how the men in For Colored Girls — although perpetrators — had struggles, too.

Where was their healing, their resilience? Where is the window into that pain? And who’s telling that story?

I feel blessed to have a motley circle of friends. And, specifically, among my black male “homeboys,” there is no shortage of issues among us. One good friend is a self-described “flaming heterosexual,” for whom dating (and mating) is like a sport. Another is navigating his way through his own sexuality — in the closet some days, out and proud on others. One was sexually abused as a youngster. Another grew up with an absent mother. And another suddenly lost his father at a critical time in his life.

We all have issues, and we’re working through them daily — sometimes selfishly, and not so wisely. And I believe (scratch that, I know) that among us, we’ve at times “fit the profile” of destructive black men, and caused others (including the women we love) a portion of pain.

My point? Hopefully one day, more narratives will unearth the delicate taboo of the wounded black male and his journey to find “god in himself.”

For Colored Boys? Right now, it remains unwritten, but that’s a story I’m waiting to see.

via Finding A Place For Colored Boys : Tell Me More : NPR.

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A Broadway Holloween

“One Halloween” from  the 1973 broadcast of “Applause”:

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Rose’s Turn: Your Choice

It’s one of the most famous roles in American Musical Theatre.

Moma Rose in “Gypsy”.

Alas, there is no footage of the original Mama Rose, Ethel Merman…but

Thanks to YouTube, there are videos of many of the most famous Rose’s doing the famous “Rose’s Turn”  or other numbers from the show.

Who’s the best?  Your choice….tell us.

Tony Award Winner Tyne Daly

Bernadette Peters:

Betty Buckley:

Patti LuPone:

Angela Lansbury:  No video of Rose’s Turn, so this number will have to do:

Bette Midler:

Rosalind Russell:

Kurt …from Glee

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Cagney and Lacey: The Musical

I love this video…

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My First Broadway Show

I just found some clips from the first show I ever saw in New York on Broadway.

Over a hundred shows later, it was still one of the best…

Damn Yankees. 1994 Revival

 

 

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In Honor of the That Old Devil Moon…

That Old Devil Moon.

One of my favorite songs from one of last year’s Best Revivals “Finian’s Rainbow”.

I loved seeing this show…

It’s a full moon.  The pagan in me wants to celebrate…with show tunes.

With one of my favorite Broadway performers, Cheyenne Jackson and the wonderful Kate Baldwin.

And…with Judy doing it…

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“The Boys in the Band”

I have a love/hate relationship with “The Boys in the Band.”

I love it because it was one of the first Gay plays to be a hit in New York.  It brought homosexuality out of the closet and onto the stage.  It was a true cultural touchstone, coming out just a year or so after the Stonewall riots.

And it scared the hell out of me when I was a young, Gay man in the 1980’s.

It was hard to see past these stereotypes in Danville VA and figure out how they related to me and my life.  But, it was one of the few visual examples of Gay life, of any kind,  available to us.

Thank God, for “Will and Grace”….I can’t believe I’m saying that, but it was so much more positive than this…

I hate “The Boys in the Band” for all the self hatred it shows and all the negative sterotypes.  It was of it’s time…

But it does truly show the way some of us were….

It’s honest.  Scary, but honest.

And it’s a fair reminder of how the times were and how Gay men saw themselves then…It’s a snap shot in History.

And it should make us grateful for how far we’ve come since then…

And make us appreciate how much harder it was for those who came before us…

It’s gotten so much better…

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It’s my Birthday and I’ll Post If I Want to…

Since, thanks to Facebook and these blogs, I no longer have any secrets….

Thanks to all of you for the Birthday wishes.  I truly appreciate it.

I thought I would share a few videos that reflect my thoughts on various stages of  growing just a little bit older…

And the journey to get there…

I can’t believe I’m almost 42, ugh, I mean 52…

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Staged Reading of plays by Steve Willis, Oct. 25 at 7pm

Just a note to let you know about an evening of plays from the Great American Playwright Steve Willis.

Who just happens to be my partner!

 

I hope you will mark your calendars and plan to be part of a special event on Monday evening, Oct. 25th, when Paper Lantern Theatre Company presents a staged reading of two plays by Steve Willis: The Shadow of Eldorado, a play he wrote a few years ago that won several awards; and an excerpt from a new play he started writing this summer about Dorothy Kilgallen. Check out the attached flyer for all the details.
Paper Lantern has lined up a terrific cast of excellent local actors, including Michael Kamtman, Tennille Foust, and Beth Ritson. The event is free and we would love it if you could be there.
Feel free to spread the word to anyone you know who might be interested.
Hope to see you there.

 

 

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