Lily Tomlin Continues The Search, Extending to March 11 | Playbill

Related Articles
News Lily Tomlin Continues The Search, Extending to March 11 Lily Tomlin, a hit all over again with the Broadway revival of The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe, will extend her commitment to the solo show to March 11 at the Booth Theatre.
//assets.playbill.com/editorial/3b468b7310b62efea64e54292c8b26c1-ne_101335.gif
Lily Tomlin.

Lily Tomlin, a hit all over again with the Broadway revival of The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe, will extend her commitment to the solo show to March 11 at the Booth Theatre.

According to sources, Tomlin has a film job in Los Angeles for a week in the middle of March, but if box office continues to be brisk it's conceivable the actress may continue with the show in late March and greet the spring in Manhattan.

This is the second extension for the revival. The show was announced for ten weeks, opening Nov. 16, 2000, and was extended through Feb. 25.

*

Tomlin won a Tony Award for creating a world of characters in Jane Wagner's The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe in 1985. The doors to the Booth Theatre, the intimate house that proved pure gold for Dame Edna last season, opened for previews Nov. 11, 2000. Originally, the closing was announced for Jan. 21. The play, in which Tomlin essays a collection of offbeat, heartbreaking, hopeful and humorous characters, is directed by Wagner, Tomlin's longtime personal and creative partner. During the run of the revival production, Tomlin told US magazine what had been an open secret in the industry for years — that she's a lesbian and her longtime partner has been Wagner.

Designers on board to help create the skewed worlds of the seriocomic monologue-playlets are Klara Zieglerova (scenic), Ken Billington (lighting), Tom Clark and Mark Bennett (sound). Tomlin had something of a tryout for the returning Broadway run: She toured a trim concert version of the play to 30 cities between September and December 1999. Fall 2000 dates at Seattle Repertory Theatre (Sept. 6-Oct. 7) and McCarter Theatre in Princeton, NJ (Oct. 17-Nov. 5) played before Broadway. The limited engagement continues to Jan. 21, 2001.

The Search for Signs is produced by Tomlin and Wagner Theatricalz. Tickets range $50-$65. The Booth is at 222 W. 45th St. between Broadway and Eighth Avenue. Call (212) 239-200 for information.

*

Tomlin, known for her quirky characters on TV's "Laugh-In" and "Murphy Brown," and in films such as "Nashville" and "9 to 5," won a Best Actress Tony Award in 1985-86 for playing Wagner's varied series of scenes and characters. The script is loaded with incisive seriocomic observations about post 1960s cultural attitudes, expectations and consequences. Wagner, her longtime collaborator, failed to get a nomination. The script of the play, however, became a best-seller and has been re-released by Harper Collins to coincide with the Broadway run.

The show set out on a successful national tour in 1990-91. In the original, Tomlin played a punker teen, a wise bag lady, hookers, a fitness freak, a husband, a lesbian editor and more.

*

One of the more celebrated lines of the play had a character named Lynn, struggling to be a superwoman, observing, "If I had known what it would be like to have it all, I might have settled for less."

The 1999 tour was considered an exploratory reapproach to see how the material played more than a decade after it premiered. The tour was a Delsener Slater production, produced by Tomlin.

Tomlin is a Detroit native who rose to fame on late 1960s TV and graduated to films such as "All of Me," "Incredible Shrinking Woman," "Moment by Moment" (directed by Wagner), "Nashville" and, recently, "Tea With Mussolini."

Her previous Broadway show, Appearing Nitely, written and directed by Wagner in 1977, earned her a Special Tony Award.

Wagner won the Drama Desk Award for "Unique Theatrical Experience" for The Search and a rare Special Award by the New York Drama Critics Circle. The hardcover edition of the play was a New York Times best seller, and is now in paperback. He teleplay for the TV film, "J.T.," brought her to the attention of Tomlin. Wagner co-wrote and co-produced three comedy albums with Tomlin, and wrote and produced six television specials with Tomlin (winning three Emmy Awards along the way).

She is now developing a TV pilot for Tomlin.

 
RELATED:
Today’s Most Popular News:
 X

Blocking belongs
on the stage,
not on websites.

Our website is made possible by
displaying online advertisements to our visitors.

Please consider supporting us by
whitelisting playbill.com with your ad blocker.
Thank you!