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- <text id=93TT0532>
- <title>
- Nov. 15, 1993: The Arts & Media:Theater
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Nov. 15, 1993 A Christian In Winter:Billy Graham
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE ARTS & MEDIA, Page 100
- Theater
- Ego Trip To Bountiful
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The National Actors Theatre may have started as a personal vehicle
- for Tony Randall, but it is showing signs of improvement
- </p>
- <p>By WILLIAM A. HENRY III
- </p>
- <p> When Britain created a national theater, it turned to Laurence
- Olivier. If the American stage had set out to form a national
- troupe, it almost surely would not have turned to Tony Randall.
- And it certainly would not have expected him to direct Ibsen
- or to cast himself repeatedly in romantic leads decades younger
- than he is. At the dawning of his grandiosely named National
- Actors Theatre, Randall recalled last week, New York Times critic
- Frank Rich characterized the venture as a TV actor's ego trip.
- </p>
- <p> After two seasons and six productions--one laudable, two passable,
- three catastrophic--it has at least survived to start a third.
- Its staging of Shakespeare's Timon of Athens, with Brian Bedford
- in the title role (and Randall not in the cast), is stirring
- storytelling, capably acted in a blustery, old-fashioned style.
- Director Michael Langham, who has joined Randall as artistic
- associate, gives the company a new sense of assurance and evokes
- a contemporary relevance that previous shows conspicuously lacked.
- </p>
- <p> The story of a man who is beloved for spendthrift indulgence
- of his friends, then abandoned the instant his considerable
- fortune is gone, has been set in the jazz age and augmented
- with music by Duke Ellington. The semimodern dress and judicious
- pruning of the most convoluted language makes the text accessible,
- and its cynicism about the rich is timeless. But the play's
- rage depends in large part on the context of classical notions
- about the sacred nature of hospitality. These ideas of mutual
- obligation, almost unto ruin, were antique in Shakespeare's
- day, and are alien to our own. Thus Bedford wisely plays the
- extravagant Timon as a bit of a buffoon, easily gulled, while
- his fair-weather friends are made more foul by licentious excess.
- </p>
- <p> If eccentric, this staging of Timon is a vast improvement over
- what preceded it: in the first season a murky, static staging
- of The Crucible, a labored, lumpen version of a Feydeau bedroom
- farce and a rendition of Ibsen's The Master Builder about which
- even Randall, who directed, can't find anything good to say;
- in the much improved second season, an intelligent, revisionist
- reading of The Seagull, a solid (and Tony-nominated) Saint Joan
- and the George Abbott comedy Three Men on a Horse, with Randall
- supremely skillful if utterly miscast as a husband in his 30s.
- </p>
- <p> Whatever the strengths of Timon, NAT is not remotely worthy
- of comparison with London's Royal National and Royal Shakespeare
- companies or Canada's Shaw and Stratford festivals. If Timon
- is a great leap forward, Randall's next vehicle, The Government
- Inspector, could be a big jump back. He plays the title role,
- a naif of 23--an age Randall reached half a century ago. The
- irrepressible farceur says with a mildly manic laugh, "I'd like
- to be acting every night of my life. That's why I formed this
- theater." His tone sobering, he adds, "In a noncommercial circumstance,
- age shouldn't matter. It's all about acting, isn't it, and who
- has the comic skills to play these parts. I don't know anyone
- who can play comedy better than I can."
- </p>
- <p> The NAT's audience seems to agree. Randall is the selling point
- to ticket buyers and potential sponsors. Executive producer
- Manny Kladitis concedes, "I don't know how long we could survive
- without him," in tones that suggest the likely duration would
- be a day and a half. While season subscribers have fallen from
- 27,000 the opening year to about 18,000 today, that is competitive
- with the 23,000 for the much older Roundabout, a nonprofit Broadway
- company that favors more contemporary, commercial work.
- </p>
- <p> Nonetheless, the majority of NAT's $8 million budget comes from
- two patrons--a French emigre named Laura Pels, who believes
- she is helping launch an American equivalent of the Comedie-Francaise,
- and Randall himself. He takes no salary, donates all outside
- earnings, and has given more than $1 million in savings to fulfill
- "a lifelong dream." Randall also raised $1.2 million for the
- first season via a one-night benefit in which he and Jack Klugman
- reprised their TV-series roles in the stage version of The Odd
- Couple. Next summer he and Klugman plan a two-month, eight-city
- benefit tour in which they will play the roles eight times a
- week.
- </p>
- <p> Obsessed as he is, Randall insists he will someday relinquish
- the reins. He says he is looking, not too urgently, for a successor.
- The odds are against his building an institution that can last.
- But Timon finally makes the case that perhaps there is an institution
- that should last.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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