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| re: Leonard Soloway’s Broadway | |
| Posted by: GreatMartin (greatmartin2003@yahoo.com) 03:02 pm EDT 08/21/20 | |
| In reply to: Leonard Soloway’s Broadway - raydan 01:53 pm EDT 08/21/20 | |
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| I watched it last night--enjoyable. Do you remember the name of the actor he and Elizabeth Ashley were 'fighting' over and if so whatever became of him?? LOL Also the woman who worked with him for so long? I didn't catch her name at the beginning and kept waiting for it to be repeated. |
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| The actor mentioned by Elizabeth Ashley was Stephen McHattie. | |
| Posted by: Amiens 02:40 pm EDT 08/22/20 | |
| In reply to: re: Leonard Soloway’s Broadway - GreatMartin 03:02 pm EDT 08/21/20 | |
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| Just googled him to see the latest on him. He's 74 years old and it appears that most of his work in recent decades has been in TV. I worked with him in the early 1980s on a production of Danton's Death at Baltimore's Center Stage, in which he played the title role. I loved this documentary! Thanks so much for the posts here which brought it to my attention. |
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| re: The actor mentioned by Elizabeth Ashley was Stephen McHattie. | |
| Posted by: dbdbdb 03:57 pm EDT 08/22/20 | |
| In reply to: The actor mentioned by Elizabeth Ashley was Stephen McHattie. - Amiens 02:40 pm EDT 08/22/20 | |
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| Stephen McHattie and Elizabeth Ashley appeared together Off-Broadway in The Milk Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore in 1982. The cast included Marian Seldes and Amanda Plummer. That was a whole lot of acting. | |
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| Ashley and Amanda Plummer got along? | |
| Posted by: bobby2 02:03 am EDT 08/23/20 | |
| In reply to: re: The actor mentioned by Elizabeth Ashley was Stephen McHattie. - dbdbdb 03:57 pm EDT 08/22/20 | |
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| I had an old clipping I'd cut out of the paper about chaos at Agnes of God (it was one my first non musical plays I saw and I was a superfan). It was a Liz Smith column saying that one actress was so volatile and unpredictable in the cast that another was threatening to leave the show. Ashley had been on Live at Five clearly stoned out of her mind (my family still quotes the interview--she refers to the cops arresting a guy as "they nabbed him!") I always figured Ashley was the erratic one. Where Page or Plummer the ones threatening to quit? |
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| re: Ashley and Amanda Plummer got along? | |
| Posted by: joerialto 08:24 pm EDT 08/23/20 | |
| In reply to: Ashley and Amanda Plummer got along? - bobby2 02:03 am EDT 08/23/20 | |
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| They must have made up because many years later they worked together on Michael Wilson’s production of ‘Eight by Tenn’ at Hartford Stage. | |
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| re: Ashley and Amanda Plummer got along? | |
| Posted by: Billhaven 09:22 pm EDT 08/23/20 | |
| In reply to: re: Ashley and Amanda Plummer got along? - joerialto 08:24 pm EDT 08/23/20 | |
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| And they worked in The Mild Train doesn't Stop Here Anymore at the WPA theater in 1987. | |
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| re: The actor mentioned by Elizabeth Ashley was Stephen McHattie. | |
| Posted by: showtunetrivia 11:39 pm EDT 08/22/20 | |
| In reply to: re: The actor mentioned by Elizabeth Ashley was Stephen McHattie. - dbdbdb 03:57 pm EDT 08/22/20 | |
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| I’ve liked McHattie ever since 1974, when he played the delightful younger brother Nicholas in the Richard Chamberlain THE LADY’S NOT FOR BURNING. But he’s legendary in Star Trek fame for his single episode of DEEP SPACE NINE as the suspicious Romulan Senator Vreenak, declaring “It’s a fake!l to Avery Brooks’ Captain Sisko’s attempt to fool them. Laura |
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| Judith Drasner | |
| Posted by: TheHarveyBoy 06:23 pm EDT 08/21/20 | |
| In reply to: re: Leonard Soloway’s Broadway - GreatMartin 03:02 pm EDT 08/21/20 | |
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| Judith Drasner was Leonard's long-time assistant and Company Manager. I just looked on IBDB and the last Broadway show she did was LOOPED with Leonard, March and April 2010. Nothing on IOBDB. | |
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| re: Judith Drasner | |
| Posted by: GreatMartin (greatmartin2003@yahoo.com) 11:00 pm EDT 08/21/20 | |
| In reply to: Judith Drasner - TheHarveyBoy 06:23 pm EDT 08/21/20 | |
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| Thank you. | |
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| re: Leonard Soloway’s Broadway | |
| Posted by: raydan 05:15 pm EDT 08/21/20 | |
| In reply to: re: Leonard Soloway’s Broadway - GreatMartin 03:02 pm EDT 08/21/20 | |
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| I don't recall but I enjoyed it so much I'll probably watch it again. I thought the most poignant moment for me was near the end of the film where he tells the Shubert brass that he's "done with the business" and was leaving NYC was shocking enough to create a stunned look on their faces. Being a young 65 years old myself, I totally understood their response of being relevant in our constantly changing world. I think about the out of work actors/Broadway staff in general today who are wondering how relevant they will be when Broadway reopens and/or if there is a place for them at the table after the seating has been rearranged after a long hiatus. |
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