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Butley has been with Lane long time
NEW YORK—Nicholas Martin, who knows about such things, calls Nathan Lane
"the last big stage star who can sell tickets."
"He's a real theater animal," explains Martin, who has just directed
Lane in the Broadway revival of Simon Gray's stark, sardonic comedy, "Butley,"
the tale of a complex man's emotional unraveling. "If there were actual
appreciators of the arts in government, I think Nathan would be on a
postage stamp," Martin says with a laugh. High praise for this actor,
who recently sat at a table in a Tribeca restaurant on a cold, rainy day
and talked, between bites of a ham-and-cheese sandwich, about "Butley,"
now on view at the Booth Theatre. The play has been with him for a long
time.
Back in the early 1970s, a teenage Lane saw a matinee of the original
Broadway production of "Butley," starring Alan Bates, the man who
created the role in London and later starred in the film version. "I
remember being thrown by the (English) accents and not exactly
understanding what was going on," Lane recalls, but he was mesmerized by
Bates and what Lane describes as the man's "sad journey." The play tells
the story of a desperate British academic who has lost his wife, his
boyfriend and pretty much his self-respect as he dismisses those around
him with savage, self-deprecating humor.
Flash forward years later to a time in the mid-1980s when Lane appeared
off-Broadway in another Simon Gray play, "The Common Pursuit." Author
and actor became friends, with the playwright telling the young
performer, "When you are old enough, you would make a terrific Butley."
But it wasn't until the late 1990s, after Gray wrote Lane a letter
saying, "Isn't it time we reconsider this project," that things began to
move forward. Enter Martin, artistic director of Boston's Huntington
Theatre Company. The two men had been friends for years, so Lane called
him after one of the actor's short-lived TV series expired. "I would
like to come to Boston to work on a serious play," he told the director.
They talked about three plays: Eugene O'Neill's lengthy "A Moon for the
Misbegotten" — "I told Nathan I just couldn't spend that much time in a
rehearsal room," Martin jokes; "Cyrano de Bergerac" — "Still a good
idea," Martin says, and "Butley," which got the director's vote. The
production opened in Boston in fall 2003 and became the biggest selling
ticket the Huntington ever had, according to Martin. Lane's potency at
the box-office, buoyed undoubtedly by the gargantuan success of "The
Producers" in 2001, was demonstrated again with the 2005 Broadway
revival of Neil Simon's "The Odd Couple" and again this fall with "Butley,"
which, despite sniffling from a few critics, has done respectable
business. "It's been an emotional experience," Lane says of his current
production, which is indelibly linked to his stage beginnings. "Simon
and I have been friends for a long time and have always stayed in touch.
And then, each night, I look over and see Dana Ivey (now in the cast of
`Butley') with whom.—Agencies |