Re: [情報] Jim Parsons要去百老匯了
The Normal Heart,百老匯舊劇新做,4/19要首演啦。
今天看到的比較詳盡的報導: http://0rz.tw/6vlbN(共三頁,最後一頁有本劇演員合照)
簡介一下。這齣戲背景設定是這樣的:
HIV+/AIDS 於80s的美國都會發生時,眾人毫無社會條件/病理內容面向的認知,
(甚至至今也還有各種汙名問題),如何應對?有何意義?這就是此劇核心要旨。
我們習慣的Sheldon──飾演他的Jim Parsons,
這回扮演南方年輕(演員已經38歲了XD)男同志Tommy,
這角色有著照護者特質,同時是個「南方婊子」──這是他的角色對自己的描述:
"I'm a hospital administrator, and I'm a Southern bitch."
據Jim所說,這是Tommy的一句台詞,
腦中想著Sheldon怎麼去說這句台詞,竟然沒什麼違和感 XD
總之,是個充滿行動力,精力充沛地給予照護與關愛的具奉獻感的角色,
比起Sheldon,這角色可能在價值觀上跟Jim本人比較接近些。
但同時也跟Sheldon有所相通,即某種急躁跟神經質的特色,
可能Jim會把一些Sheldon的肢體感拿來詮釋。
(Jim himself's an awkward mover anyway...)
這報導滿詳盡的,前部分介紹Jim的舞台經歷,接著說明本劇內容跟Jim的角色詮釋,
最後講到TBBT,提到Jim的莎士比亞舞台經驗對他詮釋Sheldon的影響,
以及他如何把Sheldon與Tommy的特質相連。
HIV+/AIDS並不只是男同志的問題,
其汙名也有社會文化成因──希望這齣劇如同Jim Parsons所說,
能夠好好辯證這點。
上述資訊來自以下所張貼的報導原文(如網址),因為很長就不摘譯囉:
STAGE TO SCREENS:
Jim Parsons of "The Big Bang Theory" Makes His Broadway Debut
By Christopher Wallenberg
19 Apr 2011
Emmy Award winner Jim Parsons, famed as the genius-nerd Sheldon of TV's "The
Big Bang Theory," is among the stars of The Normal Heart on Broadway.
*
A few months ago, Jim Parsons had what he calls a "Come to Jesus" call with
his manager and two of his agents. After more than six years away from
theatre, the Emmy Award winning actor who plays savant-like theoretical
physicist Sheldon on the hit CBS sitcom "The Big Bang Theory" felt that it
was time to scratch an itch he was having to return to the stage — and that
his three-month summer hiatus from "Big Bang" was a good opportunity to do it.
"I said, 'All signs point to me wanting to do some theatre this summer.' If
we see a movie that we all really like, I'm certainly open to that. But
nothing's on my radar right now that I'm excited about. The only thing that's
getting me excited, that's making my palms sweat, is when we talk about this
notion of doing a theatre show this summer," says Parsons, pausing for a
beat, and then with deft comic timing and charming self-deprecation, blurting
out, "Theatre show? Oh, God, I sound like my mother. Everybody's going to
think, Oh, this guy has never done a play before."
Indeed, despite that unintentionally comic "theatre show" reference, Parsons
is no stranger to the stage. He first got his start as an actor in the
Houston theatre scene, where he was a founding member of the Infernal
Bridegroom Theatre Co. and a regular at Stages Repertory Theatre, performing
in everything from Samuel Beckett's Endgame to Guys and Dolls. He later
studied classical theatre in a two-year program through the University of San
Diego and the Old Globe, and assayed roles in everything from The Tempest at
the Houston Shakespeare Festival to Tartuffe at La Jolla Playhouse.
"Doing live theatre has been such a part of my life for all of my adult
years," Parsons says. "And I think that it was only going to be a matter of
time before it reared its ugly head — that need to want to do theatre again."
Within a few days of that conference call with his agents and manager, they
got back to him with the possibility of starring in the just-announced
revival of The Normal Heart, Larry Kramer's landmark 1985 play about the
early days of the AIDS crisis. Parsons quickly jumped at the unique
opportunity, and a week later he ended up getting cast as young gay Southern
transplant Tommy Boatwright in the production, which begins previews on April
19 and opens on April 27 at the John Golden Theatre (co-starring Ellen
Barkin, Joe Mantello, John Benjamin Hickey and Lee Pace).
For Parsons, 38, it "was certainly a lesson — not like I needed one, because
it happens all the time — that you need to open your mouth and say what you
want. Because you've got a much a much better chance of getting it if you put
it out there. Yes, you take that risk of being disappointed at a certain
level. But there can be great rewards to putting it out there."
Parsons recalls this dynamic unfolding while he was working in theatre in
Houston, wanting to take the next step in his career, and thinking about
going to grad school for acting.
"I just felt that I needed to get out of town. But I was never really one to
just pack up my knapsack and hit the road. I'm brave, but I'm not that brave.
So I thought, you know, grad school would be a wonderful thing, not only an
excuse to get out of town, but a useful thing for me to do… And I remember
very distinctly making some sort of conscious decision to go ahead and share
with people [that] I was auditioning for grad schools and that I really
wanted to do this. It was one of the first examples in my life when I
realized that if you really put it out there and tell everybody that you want
something, you magnify for yourself how important it is, which probably makes
you work that much harder at it."
First produced at the Public Theater in 1985 to great acclaim, The Normal
Heart has been mounted several more times at Off-Broadway venues in the
intervening 25 years, in addition to dozens of regional stagings. The new
production, directed by Joel Grey (with an assist by George C. Wolfe), will
mark not only the 25th anniversary revival of Kramer's seminal work, but also
the play's Broadway debut.
Set in the months between July 1981 and May 1984, The Normal Heart examines
the fraught, distressing and devastating advent of the AIDS epidemic in a
frightened gay community, through the stories of a group of gay men living in
New York City, one of the epicenters of the disease outbreak in its early
days.
Led by an uncompromisingly strident writer/activist, Ned Weeks, who's a
stand-in for Kramer himself, the ragtag group of activists argue and debate
over the tactics of their fight to spotlight the burgeoning epidemic (angry
public confrontation versus behind-the-scenes politics and cajoling). In the
end, they refuse to let doctors, politicians and the press hide the truth of
the AIDS crisis behind a wall of silence and outright denial. Many of the
themes of the play — from gay marriage, to the broken healthcare system, to
the disease crisis itself — are still as relevant today as they were when
the play first premiered 25 years ago.
"It's just a wonderful play — fiery and fast-paced," Parsons says. "The
whole piece has this wonderful passionate energy about it that really sucks
you in. There's also this doom about it, because there's this thing that
they're trying to work at and fix and get the word out as fast as they can."
With this defiant play of outspoken agitprop, Kramer, who in 1987 co-founded
the radical AIDS activist group ACT-UP, gave voice to a minority group that
had been violently discriminated against for hundreds of years and that was
beginning to suffer from a devastating plague the likes of which had never
been seen. "There's this bogeyman out there that's killing people. And
there's no real medical information for what's going on," Parsons says. "We
can't see it, but we see what happens; there's death coming from it, but what
is it? And nobody can be very specific about exactly how this thing is
happening. And people don't know how to stop it and how to even protect
yourself from it."
In the early days of the epidemic, Kramer had helped establish the Gay Men's
Health Crisis, but later criticized the group for their tactics, which he saw
as impotent and tepid in response to a seemingly indifferent government. (The
character of Ned works for a similar organization in the play.) Kramer's
ACT-UP became one of the most outspoken and effective direct action groups
fighting the AIDS crisis, staging dramatic and creative protests that were
widely covered by the national media. (In 1989, seven members infiltrated the
New York Stock Exchange and chained themselves to a VIP balcony to protest
the high price of AZT, the only approved AIDS drug at the time.)
"I had read the play several times before I started to realize that these
very articulate and well-thought-out arguments from other characters to Ned,
about what Ned is saying, were also written by Larry. And obviously I sound
like an idiot when I say that out loud," says Parsons, with charming
self-deprecation. "But I am so impressed with his ability to present such
cogent arguments from diametrically opposed sides of these issues — and all
coming from the same mind."
In a 2004 review of a revival of The Normal Heart, New York Times critic Ben
Brantley called Parsons' character, Tommy Boatwright, "a droll, drawling gay
boy who emerges as a figure of refreshing sanity" in the play. Says Parsons,
"One of his other first lines is, 'I'm a hospital administrator, and I'm a
Southern bitch.' I mean, you might as well print that on a T-shirt and wear
it. So he's flying his Southern flag very proudly."
Parsons points out that in his character's first scene in The Normal Heart,
during a meeting of activists as the epidemic is beginning to unfold, Tommy
says that "he's interested in setting up a telephone hotline because there
are going to be scared patients out there who are going to need information
and comforting, who are going to need somebody to talk to and to listen to
them and maybe help guide then when they are first diagnosed or first have an
onset of symptoms."
To Parsons, it speaks to a real "care-taking side" to Tommy's personality.
"He obviously has gifts in that area and feels a calling towards that area.
And I don't think it's too armchair psychologist to say that providing
comfort to others obviously provides him some comfort in this scary time of
uncertainty. This is something that he can do — and he feels that he can do
it well — helping to provide information and comfort to those who are scared
and sick. He is very interested in kind of getting down and dirty with it.
Whatever happens or however we solve this crisis, we have to 'take care of
these people and 'and hold the dying patient,' as he says."
Parsons says that Tommy's way of coping with the crisis "just so happens to
be a very practical way of dealing with the situation that's also eminently
and immediately useful. Tommy is trying to make his own difference in a way
that has an immediate effect. It can provide immediate comfort; it can
provide immediate assistance. And I think audiences will connect with that."
In his own life, Parsons says that he personally copes with challenges or
hurdles in life in a similar manner as Tommy. "I really like to be able to
take action. The sitting around and the worrying is just dismal — and
frankly it can send you into a catatonic state. His way of coping is to just
keep moving. But I don't know that [Tommy's way of coping] is any less
neurotic. But I do think that it's more visibly, immediately useful in a way.
You see that something's actually getting done."
To play the socially awkward Sheldon on "The Big Bang Theory" — a role that
has captured him an Emmy Award and a Golden Globe for lead actor in a comedy
series during the past year — Parsons has drawn extensively on his
background in theatre. The role requires Parsons to intuitively understand
and be able to nail the complex rhythms of the way that Sheldon speaks and to
capture the stiff, awkward physical mannerisms that he exhibits.
In that way, Parsons says that some of Sheldon's rhythmic, crisp, and
quick-witted dialogue reminds him of the rhythm and the density of doing
Shakespeare. "Most of Shakespeare is written in iambic pentameter, so there's
this built-in rhythm in there. And I feel that's similar to some of what they
do with our [show], although obviously in a very different way," he says.
"The denseness of some of these heavier speeches that Sheldon has, especially
when there's a science term or description stuck in there that I don't fully
understand or have to try to understand. Those lines present a challenge
week-in and week-out. But it is a challenge that I not only relish the chance
to take on but feel that I am equipped for. Because, like I said, it reminds
me of looking at and working on some of the passages in Shakespeare. Where
sometimes I would go, 'My word! I don't know what that means!' But then I
would go and find out and really put it together. It's obviously very
different than Shakespeare. But the way I was forced to approach Shakespeare
is very similar in my mind to the way I'm forced to approach some aspects of
Sheldon [on 'Big Bang']."
Before "The Big Bang Theory" came along in 2007, Parsons was a struggling
young actor trying to land his big break in either television, film or
theatre. He had moved to New York City in the early 2000s, after grad school
in San Diego, and had done some work Off-Broadway. In 2004, he had a
memorable one-scene role as Jean Smart's Klingon-speaking boyfriend (garbed
in a medieval knight outfit) in Zach Braff's directorial debut "Garden
State." And, in 2004-05, had did a seven-episode arc on the series "Judging
Amy." Each year, he would audition for as many as 15 pilots per season. But
nothing clicked until "Big Bang" launched into the stratosphere following its
debut in 2007.
"I did jump up and down when I got this part, which is not my normal reaction
to things," says Parsons. "But I was specifically excited about the pilot for
'Big Bang,' because when you go in for 16 pilots, and you've done that for a
few years in a row, you very quickly realize that there may be a lot of parts
you can play, but the ones that you match up with really well are pretty
rare."
On this odd-couple style show, brainy but socially awkward Sheldon and
Leonard (Johnny Galecki) are roommates and fellow scientists who may
understand the laws of quantum physics, but when it comes to social
interaction (especially of the romantic kind) they're clueless. At first, the
two are content to hang around with their fellow CalTech geeks and play games
of Klingon Boggle. But when Leonard befriends Penny (Kaley Cuoco), the
free-spirited blonde beauty who lives across the hall, their well-ordered
world gets turned upside down.
As the eccentric, obsessive-compulsive Sheldon, who has an IQ of 187, a host
of trademark idiosyncrasies, and a scathing (if sometime esoteric) wit,
Parsons found a near-perfect match for his skills as a physical comedian and
his deft hand at idiosyncratic, rhythmic line readings.
"When I read Sheldon, I knew immediately that I could really play this part.
I thought, 'I can really bring these words to life.' I just immediately
connected with the way [that] this character talked. Not what he said,
because I didn't understand most of what he said, frankly. But I did
understand the way in which he was saying it. And so I was very excited to go
in for it. And I was very obviously gratified when I got the part."
While Parsons doesn't speak Klingon, read comic books, or worship superheroes
like Sheldon, he acknowledges that he does have a few obsessive compulsive
tendencies — but usually about things like playing the piano, doing
crossword puzzles, or discussing politics.
While "Big Bang" shoots in front of a live audience for each show, there are
cameras in between the actors and the audience. And the actors are given as
many takes as they need to nail a scene or a bit of dialogue. The actors are
also shooting a new show, with a new story, every week. So Parsons is looking
forward to returning to the stage and the opportunity to explore a character
and his journey in a deeper way — to really get a chance to melt into a
character.
"I find that refreshing right now — this idea of getting to do this [play]
over a 12-week period of time and getting the opportunity to experience new
discoveries about the character. Like when we're doing ['Big Bang'], we do it
to the best of our ability and do the best takes that we can, and then it's
gone. What would you have discovered about the character in one more week?
What would you have discovered in two more weeks? So I'm really looking
forward to getting to spend that kind of time with one character and saying
the same words every time. And hopefully that will help me develop a deep
connection with what's going on with my character and in the play. And I am
so excited about the idea that 'the show must go on.' There are no retakes.
It's scary at times, but I like the pressure of the theatrical moment — that
it's happening now. And [then] tomorrow you'll have another crack at it."
--
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