Play On! Smits, Lloyd, Braff, Platt, Meisle Added to Central Park Twelfth Night Cast | Playbill

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News Play On! Smits, Lloyd, Braff, Platt, Meisle Added to Central Park Twelfth Night Cast Additional principals in New York Shakespeare Festival/Public Theater's summer staging of Twelfth Night in Central Park have been announced, including Morning's at Seven's Christopher Lloyd as Malvolio, Zach Braff of TV's "Scrubs" as Sebastian, Oliver Platt of TV's "The West Wing" as Sir Toby Belch, Jimmy Smits of "L.A. Law" and "NYPD Blue" as Duke Orsino and Kathryn Meisle of Old Money as Olivia.

Additional principals in New York Shakespeare Festival/Public Theater's summer staging of Twelfth Night in Central Park have been announced, including Morning's at Seven's Christopher Lloyd as Malvolio, Zach Braff of TV's "Scrubs" as Sebastian, Oliver Platt of TV's "The West Wing" as Sir Toby Belch, Jimmy Smits of "L.A. Law" and "NYPD Blue" as Duke Orsino and Kathryn Meisle of Old Money as Olivia.

They join the already announced Julia Stiles as Viola, Kristen Johnston as Maria and Michael Stuhlbarg as Sir Andrew Aguecheek. Brian Kulick directs at the Delacorte Theatre in Central Park.

Meisle has appeared with regularity on New York and regional stages. Her most recent credit was the premiere of Eric Bogosian's Humpty Dumpty at the McCarter Theatre. At Lincoln Center Theater, she acted in Wendy Wasserstein's Old Money and David Hare's Racing Demon. At the Roundabout Theatre Company, she was seen in London Assurance.

Before becoming one of the more busy character actors in films ("Flatliners," "Married to the Mob," "Indecent Proposal," "Bulworth"), Platt performed in such New York plays as Ubu as LCT and Jules Fieffer's Elliot Loves at the Promenade.

Lloyd, known for his television work in "Taxi" and film roles in "Back to the Future" and "Who Framed Roger Rabbit?," recently returned to the Broadway stage in the acclaimed revival of Morning's at Seven. Stuhlbarg and Kulick have worked together before: The latter cast the actor in his Central Park Winter's Tale in 2000. Last season, Stuhlbarg was seen on Broadway in The Invention of Love.

Johnston, lately the bitchiest of the female characters in Broadway's The Women, appeared in Central Park a few seasons back in The Skin of Our Teeth—again as a conniving maid, Sabina. Johnston starred for many years in the sitcom "Third Rock from the Sun," co-starring with John Lithgow, who is now in Broadway's Sweet Smell of Success.

Stiles made her mark in the 1999 flick "10 Things I Hate About You," a teenage version of The Taming of the Shrew, in which she played the Kate role. The next year, she was Ophelia to Ethan Hawke's Hamlet in Michael Almereyda's high-tech, dystopian version of Hamlet. Then, last year, she played "Desi" in Tim Blake Nelson's contemporary, high school-set look at Othello, called "O."

Stiles is a native New Yorker, born in 1981, and is currently a student at Columbia University, making a season at the Delacorte a convenient and attractive employment prospect.

Stiles follows in the footsteps of Helen Hunt and Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio, the last two actresses to play Viola in major New York productions.

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As reported earlier, instead of the customary two play line-up, the Shakespeare comedy will be The Public's only park offering in 2002. However, the play will have a longer run than usual. In the past, park plays have typically lasted about a month.

Kulick received sunny reviews for his Delacorte A Winter's Tale in 2000. The production featured Keith David, Henry Stram and Jonathan Hadary. Kulick has also staged A Dybbuk and Timon of Athens, among other works, for the nonprofit.

Last year, The Public presented one of the starriest summer line ups in its history. The season began with Measure for Measure, starring Billy Crudup and Joe Morton, directed by Mary Zimmerman, and ended with the headline-making Mike Nichols production of The Seagull. Among the cast were Meryl Streep, Kevin Kline, Christopher Walken, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Natalie Portman and John Goodman.

Variety reported that the Public hopes to stock Twelfth Night with more boldface names. The recipe of stars and Illyria has worked magic for the company in the past. Over a decade ago, the Delacorte saw Michele Pfeiffer, Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio, Gregory Hines and Jeff Goldblum play Olivia, Viola, Feste and Malvolio, respectively.

More recently, at Lincoln Center Theater, Nicholas Hytner directed Helen Hunt, Kyra Sedgwick, Paul Rudd and Philip Bosco in the comedy.

—By Robert Simonson

 
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