|
Click to view larger image
Mandy Patinkin is the only actor I have ever met whose
apartment looks like I could afford to live in it.. Perhaps that's because
for the past 10 years, this amazingly versatile, but underappreciated,
performer has been making the kinds of films that could have made him
a star, but haven't yet made him a star. These include Yentl,
in which he toiled in vain opposite Barbra Streisand, The Princess
Bride, in which he played the loopy Spanish swordsman Inigo Montoya,
Dick Tracy, in which he played back-up piano to Madonna's Breathless
Mahoney, The House on Carroll Street, in which he played a sinister
commie hunter, and Daniel, in which he played a hunted commie.
He was also seen -- though perhaps not recognized -- as James Caan's
mutant sidekick in Alien Nation.
Patinkin performed marvelously in all these films,
yet for one reason or another none of them brought him the kind of renown
he enjoys on Broadway, due to his performances as Che in Evita,
and as Georges Seurat in Sunday in the Park With George, which
Stephen Sondheim wrote expressly for Patinkin. To date, Patinkin has
not been able to turn the same trick in Hollywood. His has been a respectable
though not especially lucrative career, a reality reflected in his living
quarters: tasteful, eclectic, charming, but they won't make "Lifestyles
of the Rich and Famous."
Over here are some paintings by his two little boys.
Over there in a corner is a giant paitnbrush the cast of Sunday in
the Park With George gave him as a going-away present. On the wall
is an Edward G. Robinson tie lifted from a movie set. If it seems a
bit muggy in here, that's because the air conditioner isn't on; we'll
just let those gentle breezes ripple in from Central Park.
Patinkin, soon to appear as one of George Sand's lovers
in Impromptu, and as a crook in Herbert Ross's True Colors,
is a joy to interview. Scrunched up on a chair in the music room --
piano, tapes, sheet music -- where he has been working on his second
album, he fields questions as if he enjoys doing it. A lot of them are
of the "Gee, isn't this kind of a funny career you've got going here,
Mandy?" variety. Like playing that mutant cop with the cauliflower,
freckled skull in Alien Nation. Now that must have had your agent's
phone ringing off the hook.
Patinkin grins and says that though he has never let
his two boys see Alien Nation because he thinks the film is too
violent, which it is, he did let the boys -- four and seven at the time
-- accompany him to the set where he would go to the makeup room every
morning to get weirded up.
"It was horrible," he recalls. "Five hours of makeup
and then 13 hours on the set, including some days when we didn't even
shoot my scenes. Anyway, I had my kids on the set and one of them fell
asleep. He was asleep for a really long time, because by the time he
woke up I had all the makeup on. So he comes to and looks at me as an
alien, and the first thing he says is, 'Daddy, Isaac has that toy and
you said I could play with it.' My other son didn't think I looked like
an alien either. I said, 'Isaac, don't you think I look a little bit
different?' And he said, 'Yeah, but you don't look like an alien. You
see, Dad [and here the voice drops to a whisper], aliens are blue.'"
Alas, Patinkin has always had a demanding public. A
legend on Broadway since the 1970s, he is widely acknowledged to have
the best stage singing voice of his generation. But, it seems, Hollywood
could care less about his singing voice. When asked if directors and
producers are aware of his reputation as a singer, he says, "I honestly
don't know." On the coast, Patinkin had his first shot at the big time
a decade ago, but the shot passed quickly after Yentl and Daniel
failed to make box-office history. His most satisfying performance to
date was as the zany Spanish duelist in Rob Reiner's intermittently
hilarious The Princess Bride, the film with the most smashing
swordfight in recent memory. How long did it take to shoot that scene?
"Six months," beams Patinkin, explaining that he and
Cary Elwes had to learn to duel with both hands, and used to practice
during lunch breaks on the set. "Every single bit of sword play is ours.
The flip is the only thing that's a stunt man." Was it fun? "My heart
broke everytime Rob said, 'Cut, we got it.'"
"It's hard, it's real hard," he says, without rancor.
"I ask myself: Why don't I get these parts? Am I any good? Am I kidding
myself? My agent says, 'It's the movie business; you gotta get the right
part. When the right part comes along, things'll be easier for you.'"
Patinkin, seated a few feet from a drawing by Henry Fonda, adds, "Look
at Jessica Tandy's career. She had to wait 70 years, but she finally
got the right part."
The remark is telling. Jessica Tandy may not have raked
in the kind of bucks Ava Gardner once did, but hers has been an enviable
career, and while Patinkin does not enjoy the renown of a Tom Cruise
or Mel Gibson, he still has the kind of career most actors would kill
for. Henry Winkler, to name just one. John Ritter, to name another.
When he speaks of his earlier roles, one detects the
disappointment so common in transplanted Broadway stars who expects
every film project to be noble and memorable, only to find them playing
six times a week on Showtime. He thinks The House on Carroll Street
could have been a very good picture, but got screwed up by an idiotic
love story and by the fact that the real goal of the film was to "get
Roy Cohn," the New York attorney instrumental in getting screenwriter
Walter Berstein blacklisted during the '50s. He remains proud of Daniel
-- but allows its timing could have been better: the early years of
the Reagan Era were hardly the best environment for movies deploring
the excesses of right-wing cranks.
In that film, Patinkin plays a character patterned
after Julius Rosenberg, the alleged Soviet spy executed with his wife
Ethel for espionage. The scenes in which the Rosenbergs say goodbye
to their children were actually filmed in Sing Sing penitentiary in
suburban New York, and, characteristically, Patinkin played the scene
not as a martyred Jew but as a helpless parent.
"The key moment was when I had to say goodbye to the
kids," recalls Patinkin. "Sidney Lumet was kind of worried about me
-- he even had a stretcher ready -- because I was making all kinds of
excuses not to do the scene, smoking cigarettes... I was completely
flipped out. We did the scene in one take. Afterwards, we got outside
the door and I fell down, and Sidney came over to me and I just started
weeping and he held me in his arms. And I remember saying to him, 'A
real human being had to really say goodbye to his children, and it was
real and nobody said, 'Cut!'"
Patinkin concedes that at earlier points in his career
he may not have been the easiest to work with. Though he believes that
Mike Nichols always wanted Jack Nicholson, not him, for the part of
Carl Bernstein in the doomed 1986 comedy, Heartburn, Patinkin
thinks he could have handled the way things went on that troubled shoot
a bit better.
"Monday Near the Park With Mandy"
Movieline
December 1990
By G. Borg
Nice place, though -- a converted penthouse that consists
of two units grafted together in a modestly fashionable neighborhood on
Manhattan's Upper West Side. The walls are plain white except along the
moldings where a painter friend has done some of the pastel, neo-impressionist
Raoul Dufy stuff that painter friends do. There are lots of books, lots
of kitchen utensils, lots of cassettes, lots of toys. Basically, the place
looks like the apartment that you, or Mandy, had in college, before chrome
bookshelves and terra cotta planters were invented. It does not look like
Crispin Glover's apartment. No gynecological implements. No stirrups.
Seated amidst a bunch of tapes, a Yamaha piano, and
sheet music for his December concerts at Avery-Fisher hall (with a 42-piece
band), Patinkin is clearly baffled and disappointed that his excellent
reviews in The Princess Bride didn't result in more big roles.
| "From the very first day, Nichols was saying to me, 'Do
it like... oh, you know how Jack Nicholson does that stuff,'" recalls
Patinkin. "So he fired me and hired Nicholson. Jack wasn't very good in
the movie and for me to see one of my favorite actors struggling was a
great lesson to me. It wasn't his fault. It was the fault of the material.
But Nicholson did it anyway. He made his $5 million. And it didn't hurt
his career."
All of which taught Patinkin that you sometimes have to go with the flow, especially when the movie project you had high hopes for -- as Patinkin did for, say Alien Nation -- ends up as just another cops & robbers & Martians Saturday matinee movie. Patinkin says it would have been worse had he not persuaded the powers-that-be to let him reshoot a couple of scenes. With a resigned sigh, he explains, "It's kind of like when you go out and buy an old apartment, and you put on a coat of paint, and buy some new curtains and fixtures and shutters. It's still a beat-up old apartment, but it makes you feel better." If you make movies, some of them will prove disappointing -- that's the name of that particular game. But there have been times when Patinkin really had to bit the bullet, as on Yentl, when Barbra Streisand was belting out nine -- count 'em -- nine interchangeably unforgivable songs, and Patinkin wasn't given so much as a quarter refrain to hum. "It killed me that I didn't sing in Yentl," he says. "We talked about it, we talked about it, but it just kind of disappeared. I forgot about it, but don't think it didn't kill me." Later, he adds, "I don't have a fucking clue why I didn't get to sing in that movie." Patinkin recently endured another of life's cruel ironies when he sang a duet in Dick Tracy with Madonna, who, whatever her other gifts, can't sing worth spit. "The frustrating part of it was that three-quarters of that song was me," recalls Patinkin, who does not share this writer's contempt for Madonna's singing or acting. "You see us together, but it cuts away as soon as I start to sing again." Does it bother him? "Yeah, it kills me, but you say to yourself, 'Hey, I'm not the main role in the film, I'm not the star.' Besides, her songs were cut up in the film, too." Patinkin can soon be seen in Impromptu, a film about the love affair between novelist George Sand and pianist/composer Frederic Chopin. "I play Alfred de Musset, a tortured, alcoholic poet who dreams of being with Sand forever, but who knows it can never be," says Patinkin. "It's directed by James Lapine, who did Sunday in the Park With George. It's hard to believe it's his first movie." True Colors is not Herbert Ross's first movie. In this tale of two lawyers -- one good, one bad -- Patinkin plays a corrupt local businessman who drags one of the lawyers down into the gutter, and is then destroyed by the other. "He's kind of a Mafia-type fellow," notes the actor, "and eventually he gets prosecuted, as many of these people do." Does Patinkin have any film projects lined up for the future? "I have none. I have none. I have none," he laughs. "That's three nones: N-O-N-E." What we have here is a guy who's an intelligent, versatile, stage actor, a phenomenally gifted singer, a devoted husband, a loving father, and a cordial host. What we have is a guy who is loyal to his friends, devoted to his craft, and willing to take artistic risks to prevent his gifts from stagnating. What we have here is a guy who could be in the wrong business. Patinkin doesn't try to hide that he's clearly miffed over the fact that he turned down various film offers while waiting to hear from Oliver Stone about the role of Che in the on-again, off-again film version of Evita. "I put away six or seven months waiting and waiting, turning down this and that, saying I can't do it, because I'm waiting to hear about Evita," he notes. "I did Winter's Tale on stage which put me in the crapper financially, and here I am off to England to do another theater piece." If Disney has their way -- and they usually do -- Madonna will reportedly star in Evita, so there remains the possibility on the distant horizon. But, for now, it's off to semi-rural England to appear in Peter Hall's musical version of Ionesco's Rhinoceros, whose hero is a man trying to avoid turning into a rhinoceros. It's set in an L.A. mall, and called, of all things, Born Again. "I love the idea of one man trying to struggle against the herd," declares Patinkin. "Which is what I try to do every single day of my life." |
|
|
Navigation Menu
|