By Seth Rudetsky
12 Oct 2009
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| Chris Durang |
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| Photo by Aubrey Reuben |
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I'm sitting on a lounge chair on a beautiful wooden deck, looking through billowy white curtains lazily blowing in the wind, at a pool below. First of all, I think I ended that sentence in a preposition. Secondly, it sounds like the beginning of a Harlequin romance called "Her Roman Lover." Thirdly, it's true! I'm at the Madison on Fire Island, which is a stunning hotel that's more like your rich friend's enormous beautiful house that he lets you stay in. I'm here because Ben Hodges (who edits Theater World and just edited "The Play That Changed My Life") invited me to spend the weekend. Ben and Andrew Kurtzman do an event every year where Broadway folk are interviewed in an effort to try to keep people coming out to Fire Island in the fall. Last year celebrated Grey Gardens and I interviewed Doug Wright (script) and Michael Korie (lyrics). This year I interviewed Tony Award winner Michael Rupert and hilarious playwright Chris Durang. Or, as he was advertised, "Chris Durang, legendary playwright, making a rare public appearance." We were obsessed at how Norma Desmond they tried to make him sound. And it was perfect because the interview took place around the pool so he could just end it by shooting me and having my body drop in the water.
| Listen to Seth's Podcast: Durang and Rupert on Fire Island |
I asked Chris about some of the hilarious short plays he'd written. One of my favorites is also audition monologue! It's from his play Business Lunch at the Russian Tea Room which is about a Hollywood executive having lunch with a playwright. The writer is pitched different film ideas to see if he wants to write one. Here's one pitch: "A priest and Rabbi fall in love, and then, Gift of the Magi-style, each has a sex change without telling the other." The writer is not interested. Then the executive says, "OK, did you see the movie Cruising? S and M Murders? Al Pacino as an undercover cop posing as a homosexual in leather? Re-do the whole movie, but with children. Did you see 'Bugsy Malone'? It would be like that…only sick." I'm obsessed. Anyhoo, we talked about the funeral sketch he wrote for a Carol Burnett TV special in the '80s that featured Robin Williams. They filmed it three times in front of an audience. The first two were as written and for the last one, Carol Burnett told the audience that Robin was going to go off-script and do his shtick. Of course, the audience loved it. For the TV version, the show edited together sections from the real sketch and merged it with the one that Robin sassed up, but it didn't really land because you could only appreciate Robin's ad libs if you knew what it was beforehand. Chris was, of course, frustrated because he felt that the stuff Robin ad libbed didn't really make sense unless you knew what it originally was and the sketch was going to clank on TV. Well, it was an hour-long show and it was supposed to feature four sketches, however, one of the sketches didn't work out and they were suddenly short a segment. So the network decided to run Chris' sketch as written and then follow it with the one featuring Robin Willliams doing his shenanigans. It was a brava… and Robin won an Emmy for it!
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| Julie Andrews in Putting It Together |
Last Monday, I went to a fantastic benefit for an organization called Broadway in South Africa featuring the belting of Deborah Cox, Kate Shindle and Shoshana Bean. My friend Frankie Grande is one of the founders of it and what they do is bring Broadway performers to South Africa and give kids a theatre intensive program. The stories the Broadway performers/teachers told about their last trip were amazing. There's still a lot of prejudice and ignorance in South Africa and, at first, certain kids wouldn't sit next to other kids from different townships. But by the end when they had to say goodbye, those same kids were crying and hugging each other. Then they showed a video of the dance class taught by Frankie and I was mortified to admit these kids who just started taking dance four days before looked better than I did in my fourth year of "Modern Dance 3" at Oberlin. Check out the videos on their fabulous website: BroadwayInSouthAfrica.org.
I also went to see Superior Donuts with my mom and loved it. It was literally one of those "it made you laugh, it made you cry"-type shows and the actors were excellent.
Annoyingly, we're still looking for an apartment. I was excited to see a four bedroom advertised that I could afford and when I went to see it, there were actually just two bedrooms and then a large downstairs. I asked the broker why it was advertised falsely and he said, "Well, it used to be a four bedroom." I'd had it. I glared and said, "AND I USED TO BE 20!" and stormed out.
And finally, on Nov. 2, I'm performing in the Only Make Believe benefit I do every year. The exciting news is that it's the tenth anniversary benefit this year and it's going to be on Broadway at the Shubert Theater with appearances by Jude Law, Alan Cumming, Nellie McKay, the cast of Hair and Memphis and I'm going to do a section from Broadway 101! I put together a Broadway quiz that can win you two $100 tickets! Go to www.sethrudetsky.com for the link.
All right, this week I have Rebecca Luker at my "Sirius/XM Live on Broadway" show and I'm seeing Love, Loss and What I Wore. Peace out and get out your fall jackets!
Seth Rudetsky is the host of "Seth's Big Fat Broadway" on SIRIUS Satellite Radio and the author of "The Q Guide to Broadway" and the novel "Broadway Nights." He has played piano in the orchestras of 15 Broadway musicals and hosts the BC/EFA benefit weekly interview show Seth's Broadway Chatterbox at Don't Tell Mama every Thursday at 6 PM. He can be contacted by visiting www.sethrudetsky.com.





