Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Meryl Streep and Philip Seymour Hoffman are FABULOUS in the new film DOUBT


Last night I (Jim Dykes) was invited to attend a Screen Actors Guild screening of the new movie DOUBT, starring acting heavyweights Meryl Streep and Phillip Seymour Hoffman. OH MY GOD…what a great film! It still hasn’t been released until later this month..this screening was for Screen Actors Guild members and included a Q&A following the film with screenwriter/director John Patrick Shanley (MOONSTRUCK) and his friend, fellow director Norman Jewison. I saw the Shanley play on Broadway several years ago starring Cherry Jones in the Streep role and the story has been largely re-written, “opened up” and re-adapted for the screen. If you don’t know it, the play is set in a Catholic parish church and school in the Bronx circa 1964.
Hoffman plays the priest Father Flynn and Meryl Streep is the feisty, elderly head nun, Sister Aloysius, who strongly accuses the priest of improper conduct (pedophilia?) when he be-friends a 12 year old black boy, who stands out in the all-white school. But she still has some “doubts”, hence the title. Amy Adams (so wonderful last year as a Disney princess in ENCHANTED), plays the young nun, Sister James, who sees the good in everybody and really doesn’t want to believe such things are possible in the priest.
The movie is fast-paced and it’s absolutely thrilling to watch the two pros Hoffman and Streep joust verbally back-and-forth. Oscars will be nominated all around, including a supporting Oscar for Viola Davis, as the boy’s mother. Tears running down her face, her performance is superb as a woman who only wants the best for her little boy, whom she already suspects is growing up to be a gay man.
In the Q&A afterword, Shanley mentioned that when he was in high school, a well-known gay teacher had mentored him, recognizing his writing abilities early on. Shanley said there were no sexual overtures, and he wasn’t even aware until years later what was happening, but he has come to realize that many people have told him since then that they have made this sort of “bargain” with an older, more experienced person.
Don’t miss this film…it’s only 95 minutes long and every minute is riveting. One of the best films of this year, 2008.
Every time I see a Streep movie, not only do I marvel at her performances and her ability to completely assume different identities, I also recall meeting her years ago when I was a high school kid in New York visiting friends. Meryl Streep was fresh out of Yale and was doing lots of theatre including musicals, because she was a talented coloratura soprano from the age of 13 who studied with the great coloratura opera coach Estelle Liebling.
Grayson Hall was an actress who I knew thru friends and she was the leading lady in a Broadway show called Happy End, a three-act musical comedy by Kurt Weill, Elisabeth Hauptmann, and Bertolt Brecht which first opened in Berlin. It was playing in New York on W. 45th Street at the Martin Beck Theatre (now The Al Hirschfield) and on a hot summer night, I sat in Grayson’s dressing room drinking coca cola and trying to cool off, while meeting all her co-stars as they arrived and signed in on the backstage call board, including the young, unknown soprano ingĂ©nue: Meryl Streep!! I was completely blown away by her performance that night and then several years later when she began making movies, I remembered our evening in Grayson’s dressing room that hot summer night.
Then years later, I got a small (tiny) role in the film SHEDEVIL starring Roseanne Barr and Meryl Streep! It was nice being on the set with her, watching her professionalism up close and mentioning our long-ago meeting in Grayson’s dressing room, which she immediately recalled.

Monday, November 10, 2008

Rich and Famous Tour in New York spots numerous celebs

WOW…this weekend the Rich & Famous Tour was hot and Jim Dykes guide to the stars! We kept running into celebrities all over New York…East Side, West Side…all around the town! Friday on the Upper Westside my group from San Francisco when we ran into Barbara Walters in front of the ABC Studio complex. We turned around and suddenly there was Ben Affleck and Jennifer Garner with baby Violet, and awhile later we bumped into old film star Connie Stevens, completely overdressed in fur (it was 54 degrees!) while gabbing on her cellphone. Connie has an apt. over there by ABC Studios even though her main home is in L.A. She lives in the same luxury building as Howard Stern, Regis Philbin, Celine Dion, Julie Andrews and others. We saw Sex and the City's Cynthia Nixon hopping a taxi with her grocery bags in front of the Columbus Circle Whole Foods store.
On Saturday morning we were touring thru the Upper Eastside (E. 71st Street to be exact) and bumped into world-famous syndicated gossip columnist Liz Smith, walking her dog, obviously having just rolled out of bed. She was NOT amused when I acknowledged her (politely) to my group of assorted tourists. As we reached Park Avenue and East 69th Street, we ran into ABC News reporter/anchor Cynthia McFadden, anxiously flagging a taxi down.
A few blocks later we passed David Koch, multi-billionaire, the richest man in New York, originally from Wichita, Kansas, who now lives at the formidable fortress 740 Park Avenue (“The Best Address”) where Jackie Kennedy grew up. On Columbus Circle we ran into someone I could actually introduce them to, my friend Dick Scanlan, co-author of the Broadway hit Thoroughly Modern Millie.
My group was thoroughly convinced that New York City is truly Never Never Land!

Sunday, November 9, 2008

Christmas in New York is here already

The Christmas season is almost here in New York. I've been noticing this week that the trees around town are suddenly appearing (more and more) to be set with the white, twinkling fairy lights, the ice rinks are up and running...Rockefeller Center, Central Park and now Bryant Park as well. More and more Christmas displays are popping up in store windows and the big thing: The Radio City Music Hall Christmas Spectacular with the Rockettes, Santa Claus and The Living Nativity, is back onstage for another year! Ho, Ho and HO.

It may be only Nov. 9, but in New York it's already Christmas in Manhattan.

We're gearing up for another Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade, and that brings me back to the four times I participated in the parade:
1. On the Diana Ross float
2. On the Cinderella float (I was the coachman)
3. On the New York Daily News float.
4. And my final year, as the toy soldier saluting on The Santa Claus float at the end of the parade.

Good memories!

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

The Seagull on Broadway with Kristin Scott Thomas

Chekhov's The Seagull on Broadway with Kristin Scott Thomas (remember when she won the Oscar for The English Patient?) is a FABULOUS night in the theatre...wonderful. Don't miss it! It's at the Walter Kerr Theatre on West 48th Street near Broadway, just off Times Square. Also in the cast: Peter Sarsgaard.
Carey Mulligan as the haunting beauty "Nina" is a name to remember. We figured that Election Night was a good night to try for discount seats to this HOT Broadway ticket and we were right! $100 seats for $34 and there were lots of empty seats all around us, while the world outside had their Obama Orgasm.

Good theatre on Broadway now....

Good theatre on Broadway now!
August Osage County, Speed The Plow, Dividing the Estate, more:
In the last month I've been trying to ignore the dire predictions from the media that we're going to all be living in cardboard boxes due to the economic crisis by running off to see as much theatre as possible. The good news about the economic peril is: everything on Broadway is HALF PRICE right now!

AUGUST-OSAGE COUNTY- Wonderful family black comedy-drama. Do not miss this...fabulous. Came to Broadway from its original run in Chicago at the Steppenwolf Theatre. Tracy Letts' play is warm, funny, sad, shocking, and much more...the story of a very dysfunctional family in Oklahoma. Currently stars a large cast including Estelle Parsons, Robert Foxworth, Brian Kerwin and a few of the fabulous originals from Steppenwolf.

SPEED THE PLOW- the David Mamet play has been revived with a stellar cast. When I saw it originally back in the 1980s the power of the play was "overshadowed" by the casting of rock star Madonna...it was known as "the Madonna play"...this is no longer true...the story of fast-talking Hollywood producers is fast-paced with thrilling verbal acrobatics. Do not miss. Stars Jeremy Piven (from ENTOURAGE), Broadway star Raoul Esparza (who I met years ago thru friends when he first landed in NYC from Chicago), and Elizabeth Moss (Peggy from AMC's hit show MAD MEN).












DIVIDING THE ESTATE- Another wonderful black comedy about a dysfunctional family and their attempts to get along---with or without an inheritance. By Horton Foote, author of The Trip To Bountiful. Stars Elizabeth Ashley, Penny Fuller (a personal acquaintance), Gerald McRaney, Hallie Foote and others.


AMERICAN BUFFALO- Another Mamet play...revival of a play originally done by Al Pacino. Unfortunately, although the cast is first rate, the production is not thrilling...it's a little show that should have stayed in a little theatre Off Broadway somewhere. It's about small time con men/criminals planning a robbery. And that's all...nothing else happens. I've saved you $50. The actors are good...Cedric the Entertainer & John Leguizamo completely over-shadow young Haley Joel Osment (I see dead people), who is now grown up and attending NYU downtown. It's at the lovely old haunted Belasco Theatre on W. 44th St. The best part of the evening was before the show started when the announcer began saying: Mr. Mamet would like you all to turn your FUCKING cellphones off and KEEP them off. Thank You. I lost it, as did most of the audience. If only the show had that much punch and surprise.



Two weeks ago I went to ON BROADWAY, a one night celebration and fundraising show at CITY CENTER dedicated to "Career Transition for Dancers 23rd Anniversary Jubilee" starring Angela Lansbury, Tommy Tune, Brooke Shields, Jane Krakowski, Cheyenne Jackson, Baryshnikov and a host of Broadway names and talent. Lots of fun, great Broadway production numbers such as the thrilling opening tap number of 42nd Street, the Steam Heat number from Pajama Game and the Two Lost Souls number from Damn Yankees.

Last night I saw the latest Broadway tribute to songwriters David Shire and Richard Maltby Jr., held at Merkin Recital Hall, across from Juilliard. Recently I attended the Tribute to Tom Jones and Harvey Schmidt. This is a great format...on one side of the stage is a "living room set" ala the Tonight Show and on the other side of the stage is a piano and combo and a series of Broadway performers come out and entertain us with selections composed by this evening's guests, as they reminisce and tell funny stories of their careers.

Good theatre in town now!