Hirson's Wrong Mountain Delays Bway Previews Until Dec. 27 | Playbill

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News Hirson's Wrong Mountain Delays Bway Previews Until Dec. 27 The Mountain came to the millennium, but the millennium won't come to the Mountain.
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Daniel Jenkins and Ron Rifkin in Wrong Moutain. Photo by Photo by Kevin Berne

The Mountain came to the millennium, but the millennium won't come to the Mountain.

As David Hirson's new comedy, Wrong Mountain, finishes its San Francisco tryout this weekend, producers announced that the show has postponed its first preview date on Broadway from Dec. 4 to Dec. 27. The official opening date at the Eugene O'Neill Theatre has also been changed, from Dec. 14 to Jan. 13, 2000.

According to a production spokesperson, producer Michael David said in a statement the change was made so that Wrong Mountain wouldn't get "lost in a rash of openings all trying to get in before the millennial excitement." One assumes the delay would also allow more time to finessing the script and staging, which have met with mixed reviews and positive but not quite enthusiastic audience response on the West Coast.

American Conservatory Theatre spokesperson Michael Hicks told Playbill On-Line the show isn't selling out but "it's getting pretty good word of mouth." He noted that among the changes made were the excising of one character: a baby, played by actress Pippa Pearthree, who left the production early on. Hicks affirmed that Hirson has done significant cutting and changing of the script, with the result that the show is "generally tighter." Wrong Mountain started previews at ACT Oct. 21, opened Oct. 27 and runs there through Nov. 21.

Directed by Richard Jones, this new work by the author of La Bete boasts a number of recent Broadway performers on board, among them Ron Rifkin (Cabaret), Daniel Jenkins (Big) and Ilana Levine. Larry Pine (Bus Stop at Circle in the Square) and Tom Riis Farrell (1776) are in the cast, alongside Beth Dixon, Bruce Norris (La Terrasse), Reg Flowers, Daniel Davis, Jody Gelb, Anne Dudek and Mary Schmidtberger. Rifkin, a veteran stage and television actor, saw his career accelerate after his acclaimed performance in The Substance of Fire. Since then he's won a Tony for his work in the Roundabout's Cabaret. His other Broadway roles include A Month In The Country and Broken Glass.

Actress Levine was relatively unknown until she was picked to play Lucy in last season's revival of You're A Good Man, Charlie Brown. She also appeared on Broadway in Alfred Uhry's The Last Night of Ballyhoo.

Designing Wrong Mountain are Giles Cadle (set and costumes), Jennifer Tipton (lighting) and John Gromada (sound).

The A.C.T. press release describes Wrong Mountain thusly: "With touches of surrealism and hints of science fiction (a 40-pound, intestine eating worm and an intoxicating elixir called `lithia water' figure prominently in the plot), the story...concerns an utterly pretentious obscure poet [Rifkin], his ex-wife's new husband, a fabulously successful, lightweight playwright; a new-plays festival situated in the middle of nowhere, and the absolute horror and pleasure of unwanted, yet coveted, overnight success."

*

In 1991, La Bete, a rare contemporary verse comedy about an acting troupe forced to compromise its artistic integrity, brought playwright Hirson to Broadway. Reviews were generally good but the play, directed by Jones, had difficulty finding an audience.

In an Oct. 24 interview with the San Francisco Chronicle, Hirson noted that the commercial failure of La Bete accounted for his long absence from the footlights. "I went through quite a long period when I was paralyzed," he said, adding that he began thinking in terms of "the image of a man who was being consumed by some kind of parasite, and I really didn't know what that image meant or where it would lead me. And it's one of the reasons I suppose that I launched myself into this second play, to find out what that meant."

Dodger Endemol Theatrical Productions sponsored a reading of Wrong Mountain in early August 1998 in midtown Manhattan. Among the actors: Tony winner Alan Cumming, Joyce Van Patten (Labor Day) and the aforementioned Rifkin and Pine.

Unlike La Bete, Wrong Mountain is set in modern times and is not in verse. Actor Pine told Playbill On-Line (Aug. 6, 1998), "The play is about an unrecognized poet and his intellectual family. There's also this famous Broadway playwright, who's married to the poet's ex-wife. The playwright bets the poet $100,000 he can't write a play, but the poet does -- and it turns out to be really good."

Asked in August 1998 about Wrong Mountain's future prospects, Pine said, "Well, this is the next step. The first readings we did, the play was 178 pages long. Now its 149 pages. I figure once it's in the 110 range... This is honestly the best play I've read since Angels in America."

For information on the A.C.T. season call (415) 749-2228. Next up will be A Christmas Carol, Nov. 27-Dec. 26; January brings Tom Stoppard's Invention of Love. For tickets, call (212) 239-6200.

-- By David Lefkowitz

 
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