Kamis, 28 Februari 2008

PLAYBILL.COM'S BRIEF ENCOUNTER With Judith Ivey (Playbill)

For theatregoers who have put in two or three decades of service, Judith Ivey is an actress of note, a two-time Tony winner (Steamers, Hurlyburly) who has played in everything from David Rabe to Noel Coward. Theatregoers of only a few years standing, however, might view her as a rising director.

Recently, when Iveys name is announced in connection to a coming production, its as director. Recent behind-the-scenes credits include Kathleen Clarks Southern Comforts at Primary Stages, Lee Thunas Fugue at Cherry Lane, and Marisa Wegrzyns The Butcher of Baraboo at Second Stages Uptown Festival. Now, shes back with another Clark play, Secrets of a Soccer Mom and is preparing to stage the Broadway-aimed musical Vanities. Ivey talked to Playbill.com about her second career in theatre.

PLAYBILL.COM: YOUVE DIRECTED FIVE OR SIX THINGS IN THE PAST TWO YEARS. DO YOU CONSIDER YOURSELF MORE A DIRECTOR THAN AN ACTOR NOW?
Judith Ivey: Id like to. I had directed some things about ten years ago. Friends would ask me to direct them. I did it, but I never really actively pursued it. About five years ago, I thought, maybe I want to do this more seriously than I have. Fortunately, people want to hire me, so I keep building a resume.

PLAYBILL.COM: DOES ONE JOB JUST LEAD TO ANOTHER?
JI: Yes, I think so, even moreso than acting. I cant really credit my agents with going out and finding me work the way they do as an actress. But I think thats true of all directors, that the work begets the work.

Kathleen Clark and Judith Ivey
photo by Carol Rosegg
PLAYBILL.COM: SECRETS OF A SOCCER MOM IS YOUR SECOND PLAY BY KATHLEEN CLARK. I ASSUME YOU LIKE HER WORK.
JI: I think its about real people and real situations. Certainly in the case of Soccer Mom. People dont pay a lot of attention to the everyday. And I like that. I like all kinds of drama and comedy, but I really appreciate the way she lovingly writes about these people and hears them, the same way she did with the older couple in Southern Comforts. She appreciates the drama in the everyday, and Im kind of that way. Im always more of an observer than a participant.

PLAYBILL.COM: YOU ARE A SOCCER MOM YOURSELF, ARENT YOU?
JI: Yes. One kid is 18 and in college, and the other one is 14 and in eighth grade. Ive been all kind of sports moms. Ive been a tennis mom, a soccer mom, a swimming mom and a football mom now.

PLAYBILL.COM: YOU WERE RECENTLY ANNOUNCED AS THE DIRECTOR OF A BIG UPCOMING PROJECT, THE MUSICAL VERSION OF VANITIES. THAT WILL BRING YOU TO BROADWAY FOR THE FIRST TIME, AS A DIRECTOR. HOW DID YOU GET THE JOB?
JI: I directed Southern Comforts by Kathleen Clark and the composer of Vanities was at a show and looked at the back of the Playbill [where there is a list all the shows playing in town] and landed on "Southern Comforts directed by Judith Ivey," and had this brainstorm. He is good friends with some actresses with whom I had worked and they had sung my praises, so he decided it was worth exploring. I read the script. Vanities was a play that was hugely popular when I was a young actress. I was cast in a production, but I had already been offered another job, so I didnt do it. But I saw I dont know how many different friends in different productions of it.

PLAYBILL.COM: WOULD THIS BE YOUR FIRST MUSICAL AS DIRECTOR?
JI: No. But we wont talk about those [others]. (Laughs.) That was a long time ago. (Laughs.)

PLAYBILL.COM: DO YOU HAVE YOUR CAST
JI: We have two thirds of it. Well hopefully announce by the end of the month.

PLAYBILL.COM: I DONT MEAN TO PIGEONHOLE YOU, BUT ARE YOU INTERESTED IN PLAYS POPULATED BY FEMALE CHARACTERS?
JI: Its kind of a natural, in the way that for plays that are all male, they probably think of a male director first. But I think its a coincidence that Im spending this year with casts that have three women.

PLAYBILL.COM: WE WILL SEE YOU AS AN ACTRESS AGAIN SOON, WHEN YOU APPEAR IN NEW PRODUCTIONS OF ALBEES THE AMERICAN DREAM AND THE SANDBOX AT THE CHERRY LANE. THIS PROJECT IS A BIT LIKE TIME TRAVEL. THE SAME PLAYS WERE FIRST DONE AT THE CHERRY LANE MORE THAN 40 YEARS AGO.
JI: Its sort of the Cherry Lane mission, to hold on to its legacy. This is a throwaway society. People remember less and less about where things all began. So, I think its good to celebrate that, [to] keep it alive. I was not familiar with these two plays as I am with Albees other work. I did Martha in Whos Afraid of Virginia Woolf? at the Alley Theatre. Edward came down and asked if he could come in an edit it! He cut a scene out that he felt was too on-the-nose now. He said, "Some young playwright wrote that."

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