On the Washington DC production …
EG: “We did the play back in March (2024) at the Shakespeare Theater Company in Washington, directed by Arin Arbus. That was really daunting. It's a lot of text, right? … each one of us have roles that are longer than King Lear, probably close to Hamlet. So, it took two months to learn it, because it's not just straight dialogue. It's narrative. You become characters. It's a juggling act really and so that style of storytelling was very different. It's very Greek. I think that's my sense of it. It's like, let's gather around a fire and we're going to tell you the story of America through the eyes of these three brothers, and we'll take on the character as we go. We had maybe three and a half, four weeks of rehearsal to put it together. So we had to work ahead of time to be ready to get it up. … we worked very quickly and efficiently. And the design for those who have seen the Broadway production—it's now reopening on the West End—Sam Mendez directed it originally in a sort of acrylic box that moved very sort of contemporary. We did it on the proscenium. It was more open.”
Moving the show to the Guthrie …
EG: “We were very fortunate that the Guthrie was interested in bringing our team up here. We had to replace one actor. René Thornton Jr. was very fortunate to book (the national tour of) Harry Potter. We have William Sturdivant an actor from the Minneapolis area who's terrific. … Mark Nelson and I, who have done the play before, are finding different nuances. But we're shifting from a proscenium to a thrust. So that's challenging to unlearn what we knew … to open it up and change the space. And there's a much more intimate, direct connection to the audience in this configuration than the proscenium. It's the same set. They had to make some modifications. There are a lot of rear projections. So there is a sort of proscenium section of this thrust and the rear projection screens are there.”
Playing Multiple Characters …
EG: “The challenging ones are the ones that you have to turn on a dime and then let it go. And you have to want to find some way to establish it as quickly as you can. … changing the voice or changing the physicality, that's the challenge of keeping the balls up in the air. It really is juggling. Not only is it epic, Homeric—because the original novel is written by an Italian—there's also the Virgil tradition,. There is the Commedia tradition. There is Fellini. There is circus. It really feels like a circus. You're juggling lines, you're juggling characters and the magic of it is to be able to transform in a beat and then let it go in a beat.”
Performing at the Guthrie Theater…
EG: ”I've wanted to work here since I was a young actor. Many of the actors that I admired and watched and emulated and learned from and, in some cases, had the privilege of working with came from the Guthrie, whether it was with Tony Guthrie or Michael Lanham, Garland Wright, Joe Dowling. I have worked with Joe several times. It has been a destination. … The regional theater movement was sort of anchored by Arena Stage in Washington, the Goodman in Chicago, and the Guthrie in Minneapolis. And it took me forty years, but I finally got the trifecta. … It's a thrill and the new building is spectacular. The architecture is really interesting. I have not had a chance yet to explore Minneapolis because we are in rehearsal, but I am looking forward to maybe getting to a Vikings game.”
The Future …
EG: “There are some roles I'd like to do. I would like to get a shot at a play like Death of Salesman … or Prospero or Falstaff. I've done Falstaff in (Henry IV) Part 1. I'd like to finish that. Lear. … There are a few still out there … some got away… like Brutus and Iago, but, you know, maybe there's a chance for Iago. I don't know. I'll do the older version of Iago. Maybe he's just an old grouchy man, who knows.?”
This content has been edited for clarity and length.
PHOTO|Joshua Cummins
GUTHRIE THEATER
presents
THE LEHMAN TRILOGY
September 14 (Previews)
September 19-October 13, 2024
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