By Harry Haun
07 Mar 2008
"That's every single moment of his life. He refuses to tell a lie. And that's the thing that's so hard in Act I with Maggie. She thinks the thing to do is to perform—it's her nature to perform—and you watch her and wait for those few moments that are directed right to me. Even though I feel like I could lose the audience in those first 15 minutes, I hold the line."
Next month for six weeks, starting April 15, Howard will bolt to the other coast, not to make a movie but to promote one—he's Jim "Rhodey" Rhodes, sidekick to Robert Downey Jr.'s Iron Man, the Marvel Comics blockbuster that goes into release May 2.
In his absence, Brick will be played by Boris Kodjoe, best-known for the Showtime series "Soul Food." Five years ago, People Magazine voted him "One of the 50 Most Beautiful People in the World," and he's holding up rather well, looking forward to his Broadway debut. "I've seen two stage versions of Cat and the movie version," he said, "but this is a bit different. I love it. It's closest to what Tennessee Williams intended."
Until this temporary replacement is in place, Brick is being understudied by the servant who waits on him hand and foot on stage, Robert Christopher Riley. "On a day-to-day basis, I play Lacey, but I understudy Brick. I've had a couple of rehearsals, but I haven't gone on yet." The Pollitt's household staff is omnipresent with a lot of on-stage time and, usually, one line. Riley's one-line—he noted with relative glee—is "Yes sir, Mr. Pollitt."
His badder half—the snide and snippy "Sister Woman," Mae—is solidly put over by Lisa Arrindell Anderson. "It's a wonderful role," she said. "I usually play the ingénue—the nice, beautiful, young girl—so the idea of playing the not-so-nice and nasty is a real treat."
So is returning to the stage (this is her Broadway bow). "I usually just get to do film. In fact, I don't get to do theatre much. I'm from Brooklyn, but I live in John's Creek, GA. I met a guy there and didn't make him move to New York, so we're raising a family there."
Motherhood was something she can use in her work as the chronically child-bearing Mae. "They didn't tell me when I auditioned that James Earl Jones was doing it. I just auditioned for a great play, and, when they said, 'We want to make an offer, and James Earl Jones is starring, my right hand started shaking. I actually remember, when I was a student at Juilliard, going to the Lincoln Center Library and renting Fences just to see him, because I didn't get to see it on Broadway, but I remember sitting there and watching him and going, 'One day, I want to be on stage with him.' And it has actually happened!"
This is the fourth Cat on a Hot Tin Roof to be costumed by the great Jane Greenwood. "I guess I have five more Cat lives to go," she mused. "I did the first one with Elizabeth Ashley, and then the one with Ashley Judd and Ned Beatty, then with Mary Stuart Masterson and George Grizzard at the Kennedy Center when they did the Williams festival. And here I am again, No. 4." Her familiarity with the property hasn't created any designing shortcuts. She starts from scratch with each production and redesigns everything. "I come with an open mind and a clear page and serve the actors and the way they'll portray the characters. It's an incredibly attractive cast. Every one is a poem."
Obama and Oprah didn't make the opening, as promised by the Daily News' Ben Widdicombe. Nor did Will [Smith] and Bill [Cosby, Rashad's TV hubby]. Pauletta Pearson, who gave up the stage [Sweet Main Street, the Carol Hall-Shirley Kaplan musical at Playwrights Horizons] to marry Denzel Washington stood in for him ably.
But there was an African-American parade into the Broadhurst, led by that mighty swatter, Hank Aaron, hardly a familiar first-night face. What brought him there? "She did," he said, gesturing the direction of The Mrs. "She wanted to come to this tonight."
Harry Belafonte arrived limping a little, using a cane and disguising all infirmities with his million-dollar Star Smile. Morgan Freeman, returning to the Main Stem April 27 after 20 years in a Mike Nichols revival of The Country Girl, had a beautiful young lady on his arm—his granddaughter, Edena Hinds. Also glittering the red carpet: Eartha Kitt.
Spike Lee, looking exactly like Spike Lee, admitted he had no desire to remake a movie of Cat. "Why would you? You have the ultimate one with Paul Newman," reasoned Spike the wise. He was less certain about his stage remake of Stalag 17, waving that idea away with a rocky we'll-see hand gesture. Translation: it won't happen.
Others in attendance: George Faison, Motown's Berry Gordy, Tony winners Tonya Pinkins, Cady Huffman and Sarah Jones, 2008's Miss America Kirsten Haglund, Tex Allen, Hot Feet's Maurice Hines, Lieutenant Governor David Paterson, Derrick Baskin of Spelling Bee and The Little Mermaid, Jeremy Piven (sans "Entourage"), Ceci Jones, Sirak Sabahat, legendary Cicely Tyson, Brenda Braxton, Lynn Whitfield, The Color Purple's Elisabeth Withers and the man who dreamed and then produced this vision of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Stephen Byrd.
Phylicia Rashad arrived at the party unfashionably late and played to the one remaining TV crew, who was in the process of packing it in. Tsk tsk, Phylicia.
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| The cast of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof take their curtain call.
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| photo by Aubrey Reuben |
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