By Harry Haun
30 Apr 2004
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| From Top: Eric Bogosian, David Henry Hwang, Ishmael Merchant, Malick, and James Ivory (right), Ivana Trump and Rossano Rubicondi, Donald Trump and Melania Knauss, Shadi Finnessey, Padma Lakshmi, Debra Monk, Meera Syal, AR Rahman, David Yazbeck, Manu Naray |
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| Photo by Aubrey Reuben |
There to welcome it was a contingent of first-nighters with an appropriately international cast. Among the first to file into the theatre: the Armenian-American Eric Bogosian, the Chinese-American David Henry Hwang, the British David Leveaux and the hyphenated and highly global act of Merchant Ivory. Producer Ismail Merchant and director James Ivory were at this art form long before India's prodigious film industry became known as Bollywood. Theirs is a 40-year sweep of achievement, ranging from "The Householder" (1963) to "Le Divorce" (2003) and including such prestigious hits along the way as "A Room With a View," "Howards End" and "The Remains of the Day"; it continues to this day with the post production of their latest, "Heights" starring Glenn Close and Isabella Rossellini.
"I saw Bombay Dreams in London, and tonight is my third time to see it, so put me down as a fan —absolutely," enthused Merchant, plainly and predictably a convert of the show and a native of Bombay. (His partner, Ivory, looks British but hails from Berkeley, CA.)
Different worlds made themselves harmoniously at home all over the theatre. To give you an idea: Ivana Trump and The Donald shared the same roof — albeit, on the arms of their long-standing main squeezes (Melania Knauss and Rossano Rubicondi, respectively) — but stuck to their own corners rather than risk a forced-smile photo op.
The next Mrs. Trump, a 33-year-old raven-haired Slovenian model, put out a lovely glow from the engagement sparkler on her left hand. And she wasn't the only model with extra dazzle. India's Padma Lakshmi flashed a diamond wedding ring she just acquired from Salman Rushdie. (She's literary, too, having done a cookbook.) When a photographer asked the new Mrs. Rushdie where her hubby was, she said: "Planning our honeymoon."
Hwang, the Tony-winning author of M. Butterfly who was represented last season on Broadway with a revised Flower Drum Song, said he was deep in the African jungle at present doing the musical book for Disney's 1999 animated feature, "Tarzan." Collaborator Phil Collins already has an Oscar-winning jump on the score (a song called "You'll Be in My Heart"). Hwang is also writing a play of his own, but he's not telling the title of that.
Another Tony winner in the throes of an untitled play is actress-turned-author Debra Monk. She said that she's 50 pages into this new career, but she'll relapse into actress again this summer for Terrence McNally's latest, Dedication, which director Scott Ellis will launch at the Williamstown Theatre Festival, "probably in the July-August slot."
Monk's date for the evening was her pal and Steel Pier choreographer, Susan Stroman, who has subsequently acquired a new hat (director) and scads of other Tonys. The hyphenated Ms. Stroman starts cranking up her new show May 10, the Stephen Sondheim-by-way-of-Aristophanes Burt Shevelove-and-Nathan Lane musical, The Frogs. It begins previewing June 22 for a July 22 opening at the Vivian Beaumont.
After that, she'll put Broadway's current Sly Fox, Richard Dreyfuss, into the London company of The Producers. Then she'll direct-choreograph, as she did on Broadway, the movie version of The Producers with Lane, Matthew Broderick and Nicole Kidman. "It'll be like the ultimate movie musical, a real movie musical," she promised. Think, she advised, "The Band Wagon" and "Singin' in the Rain."
Phyllis Newman, whose husband Adolph Green wrote those last two movies with Betty Comden, said she and her daughter, Amanda Green, will be hosting a celebration of Comden & Green's work with Leonard Bernstein July 3 at the Caramoor International Music Festival. More immediately and locally — May 15 and 16 at 3 PM at the Museum of the City of New York — she will join Jim Walton, Diane Sutherland, T. Oliver Reid and Joanna Young in About New York, a revue-in-concert directed by Michael Montel. "They're doing the first theatre salute they've ever done up there," explained Newman. "It's going to be a trip around New York — all in song — and I think it will be a lot of fun."
Continued...


