Tuesday 31 October 2006

AfterElton - 31/Oct/2006

[Source]

The Best Gay Relationship on TV?
Posted by Dennis Ayers, Managing Editor on October 31, 2006

Fifteen years after the ABC drama thirtysomething featured two gay men in bed together, ABC is delivering another groundbreaking gay story line via its new drama, Brothers & Sisters. The show, which was picked up for a full season on Oct. 16, revolves around the Walker family, a wealthy California clan forced to come together in the aftermath of their father's death. One of the family members is openly gay Kevin Walker (Matthew Rhys), who in the series' first six episodes has begun to develop a relationship with Scotty Wandell (Luke MacFarlane). The series has gone so far as to show the men kissing each other not once, but twice in the same episode  an unprecedented move for a prime-time drama.

In 1991, when thirtysomething showed two gay male characters in bed together, the scene resulted in a sponsor boycott, costing the network an estimated $1 million in lost ad revenue. In addition, ABC claimed to have received over 400 written complaints from outraged viewers. The negative reaction was so pronounced that ABC even pulled the episode from repeats. And the two gay characters featured in the scene? They were promptly written off the show.

Controversy surrounding the thirtysomething episode no doubt had a deterrent effect, making broadcast networks skittish of gay subject matter. The following year, FOX edited out a gay kiss from a Melrose Place episode before it could be aired, and cited ABC's ad revenue losses on the thirtysomething episode when asked to explain their decision.

Thankfully, things have now changed. The Brothers & Sisters episode “Date Night,” which aired on Oct. 22, included gay male characters kissing in two scenes. No advertisers threatened to pull out; no conservative groups launched a letter-writing campaign. Even gay publications took little notice (though the kiss was much discussed in the gay blogosphere).

The show's producers might have used the occasion to create some buzz for their show. They might have tipped everyone off with a press release. At the very least, they could have offered preview clips of the same-sex lip-locking on abc.com or hyped it in the previous week's trailer: “Next Week  on a very special episode of Brothers & Sisters …”

But the producers of Brothers & Sisters chose instead to treat the gay kissing scenes as no big deal  a nonevent in the context of a network drama. The episode “For the Children,” which aired on Oct. 29, included yet another gay kiss, demonstrating the show's ongoing willingness to incorporate mature, gay subject matter in the show. Again, no one in the press took much notice.

Interestingly, some of the creative talent from thirtysomething is also connected to Brothers & Sisters. Ken Olin serves as executive producer. Actress Patricia Wettig is a cast member. Even David Marshall Grant, an actor who played one of the gay characters in thirtysomething's controversial bedroom scene, now works as a story editor for Brothers & Sisters.

Though critics gave the pilot mixed reviews, the show has since found its creative stride, with the later episodes improving noticeably. The show has arrived in a seemingly lackluster year for scripted gay characters on network television, the number of which is at a 10-year low. But it's worth considering the quality of gay representation as well as the quantity, and here Brothers & Sisters gives us reason to cheer.

With substantial screen time for its gay characters, including sophisticated dialogue, realistic situations and palpable chemistry developing between Kevin and Scotty, Brothers & Sisters seems intent on delivering the most nuanced and unflinching (and satisfying) representation of a gay male relationship possibly ever seen on network television.

The rest of the Walker clan includes widow Nora (Sally Field) and four other adult Walker siblings; each has external conflicts to deal with (adultery, drug addiction, corporate intrigue, etc), but the main focus is on intra-family relationships and how each character grapples with their personal identity in the context of their family.

Middle brother Kevin is an integral part of the Walker clan. Dependable, reliable, often the family peacemaker and problem solver, Kevin also happens to be gay. In such a large cast, Kevin might have become merely an ancillary character. But careful attention has been paid to his character development and story arc. Kevin is front and center on Brothers & Sisters, and is arguably one of the show's best-written characters.

Credit for that surely goes to series creator, head writer and openly gay playwright, Jon Robin Baitz. In a recent interview with AfterElton.com, Baitz said that the decision to include a gay character was a nonissue for ABC and others involved with the show: “Nobody raised an eyebrow. It wasn't even remotely controversial … As a gay person, I'm not going to ignore who I am, since all writing is autobiographical.”

Just how much of Jon Robin Baitz is embodied in the character of Kevin Walker is unclear. But through the six episodes already aired, Baitz and his writing team have created an admirably three-dimensional character.

The series began with Kevin already out, personally and professionally, with his family completely supportive. The fact that Kevin's coming-out process (a staple for gay character story lines) is treated as back story is both unusual and refreshing. Now that obvious coming-out crises like workplace discrimination and family rejection can be dispensed with, there is an opportunity to tell different stories about the lives of gay men.

Here's what we know so far about Kevin: He's been out to his family since high school, but he came out under duress. His sister Kitty found out, then told everyone else in the Walker clan, forcing Kevin to own up to it.

His family's reaction was  and continues to be  supportive. In fact, the first thing his mother did upon learning he is gay was join PFLAG. Kevin actually hated having so much attention paid to his sexuality. As he said to Scotty in one scene, “I became the cause celebre  an exchange student in my own home.”

Kevin has a framed photograph of his ex-boyfriend in his law office. We don't know how long they were together or how long they have been apart, but we know the relationship ended because Kevin was unfaithful.

Despite being out, Kevin seems entirely devoid of stereotypically gay mannerisms. You might chalk this up to a straight actor being cast in the role, but Welsh actor Matthew Rhys has played gay before. In fact, in the 2001 movie Very Annie Mary, Rhys camps it up with fey gusto.

Kevin's “straight-acting” demeanor isn't simply a quirk of casting. Instead, it seems deliberate ? meant to convey an aspect (or symptom) of his identity. For Kevin, “straight-acting” is something he values in himself. He also seems to value it in others, judging by his noticeable discomfort around flamboyant gay men and his aversion to public displays of affection.

After six episodes, the impression one gets of Kevin Walker is that, for him, to a certain extent being gay is a weakness, a vulnerability that needs walling off from the rest of his life. It is internalized homophobia, and Kevin probably doesn't even recognize it in himself. His intellect, liberal politics and supportive family disguise the problem and help him to rationalize it away. He's not closeted; he's merely reserved.

This is a nuanced and complicated gay character: intellectually out, yet emotionally closeted. To explore this paradox, the show has introduced a romantic interest for Kevin. The recurring character, Scotty Wandell, makes a great foil because he is almost the exact opposite of Kevin. Where Kevin is reserved, Scotty is flamboyant and overtly gay.

When they first meet, Kevin is extremely uncomfortable in Scotty's presence, which isn't surprising since Scotty represents the very qualities Kevin may fear in himself. Scotty immediately pegs Kevin for a potential closet case.
Kevin: I'm not in the closet at all. I'm open and proud.
Scotty: You're not proud. You're trying to pass.
Scotty's snap assessment is at least partially accurate. He recognizes a flaw in Kevin that no one else on the show has yet to pick up on, including Kevin's supportive family and even Kevin himself.

Kevin and Scotty's diametrically opposed personalities make it tricky to plausibly bring them together as a couple. To its credit, the show doesn't simply throw them together. Kevin and Scotty interact only socially in Episodes 3 and 4, scenes that lay the groundwork for their romance. It's a slow build but, despite their differences, we begin to see chemistry between the two.

In Episode 5, Kevin and Scotty first kiss. The tender moment comes without fanfare or warning. Yet when Scotty leans over the table at an Indian restaurant and plants one on Kevin, it seems entirely plausible and natural. Alas, Kevin's negative reaction is equally plausible.

Uncomfortable at being outed in a public place, he bristles and pulls away. The two reconcile by the end of the episode, rewarding viewers with the second gay kiss of the evening. But the underlying issue  Kevin's internalized homophobia  has not been resolved. It will surely be the central conflict in the Kevin/Scotty relationship.

Gay male romantic relationships have been explored in depth on cable television on shows such as HBO's Six Feet Under, Showtime's Queer as Folk and Logo's Noah's Arc. And gay relationships have existed elsewhere on network television. Will & Grace is the obvious example, but Will did not develop an ongoing, serious relationship until the end of its run. Even then, the focus of Will & Grace remained on, well, Will and Grace.

Never has such a prominent gay character's relationship received so much screen time on a primetime drama. And in that respect, Brothers & Sisters represents something of a television landmark. Given that the show is only six episodes in to its first season, the future for gay representation on network television looks a little brighter  if only for one hour on Sunday nights.

Tuesday 24 October 2006

BumpShuck - 24/Oct/2006

[Source]

T.R. Knight and boyfriend
Posted on: October 24th, 2006 Joshua Holmes

T.R. Knight, who plays George on the ABC hit Grey’s Anatomy, and his boyfriend Luke MacFarlane from ABC’s Brothers and Sisters get in some quality shopping time together. Knight announced to PEOPLE magazine last week that he is in fact gay.


Monday 23 October 2006

Towleroad - 23/Oct/2006

[Source]
10/23/2006
T.R. Knight and Luke MacFarlane: TV's Hottest New Gay Couple?


Fresh off last week's announcement that he is gay, the paparazzi caught up with Grey's Anatomy actor TR Knight out with Brothers and Sisters actor Luke MacFarlane, andspeculation quickly arose as to whether Knight and MacFarlane are prime time's hottest new gay couple.

Gay Rights Watch - 23/Oct/2006

[Source]

TR Knight and Luke MacFarlane a Couple?
posted on Monday, October 23, 2006 at 6:25 PM.

TR Knight has been spotted with what some(another) are speculating is his new beau. None other than Brothers and Sisters actor Luke MacFarlane.

Now, as much as I hate the tabloids and the Bennifer syndrome... they sure are cute together. On the other hand there is absolutely no reason why two guys, one gay, one straight can't simply be out shopping together. So until there is official word...

SOCIALITE life - 23/Oct/2006

[Source]

T.R. Knight Has a Paparazzi Moment
By Cindi / October 23, 2006 8:40 am






T.R. Knight makes his first foray into public since he came out of the closet in the wake of the “Grey’s Anatomy” scandal. It looks as if he is going to be a target of the paparazzi, due to his unfortunate connection to the “Grey’s Anatomy” scandal. He happens to be with Luke MacFarlane who plays Scotty on ABC’s “Brothers and Sisters.” Cuteness.

More photos of T.R. Knight and Luke MacFarlane after the jump.

Written by Lauren Burch
(Image source)

Thursday 29 June 2006

Time Out New York - 29/Jun/2006

[Source]
The Busy World Is Hushed

Playwrights Horizons. By Keith Bunin. Dir. Mark Brokaw. With Jill Clayburgh, Hamish Linklater, Luke Macfarlane.

HOT UNDER THE COLLAR Clayburgh trades ideas with Linklater.
Photograph: Joan Marcus
Keith Bunin’s searching, perceptive and absorbing new play, The Busy World Is Hushed, borrows its title from an Episcopal benediction that views death as “peace at the last.” But the comfort afforded by such a prayer may be predicated on a certain fear of life. In Bunin’s tightly written interrogation of pain and belief, the role of God’s advocate is played by Hannah (Clayburgh), a sharp-minded minister who is constantly working to shore up her relationship with Jesus. “I’m often inclined to hire agnostics as my assistants,” she tells Brandt (Linklater) when he applies to ghostwrite her latest book. “It forces me to be more rigorous.” In the long aftermath of her husband’s suicide, Hannah’s religious determination functions as a balm and a shelter from the violence of the world.

The homecoming of Hannah’s wayward son, the dubious Thomas (Macfarlane)—whose fleeting obsessiveness is worryingly like his father’s—provides the catalyst for a series of unstable reactions that move the play forward in surprising, thought-provoking ways. One of New York’s essential playwrights, Bunin has written wonderful roles for his actors; as the gay, bookish Brandt, Linklater delivers a performance of tremendous warmth and self-deprecating humor, sending off sparks with the flinty Clayburgh (under Mark Brokaw’s crystalline direction). Rooting through the intricate tangle of motivations that undergird personal faith, Bunin offers an empathetic and fair-minded view of religion: not as some derisory opiate of the people but as morphine for someone in possibly mortal pain. — Adam Feldman

June 29, 2006

Tuesday 27 June 2006

Broadway World.com - 27/Jun/2006

[Source]
The Busy World Is Hushed: Mama, Don't Preach
Tuesday, June 27, 2006; Posted: 09:06 PM - by Michael Dale

"You'd be hard pressed to find a single word from the historical Jesus that condemns homosexuality. Any unpleasant rhetoric of that nature has been entirely invented by frightened bigots who need to make demons of their fellow men because they're too cowardly to confront the demons within their own souls."

So sayeth Hannah, the Episcopal Minister in Keith Bunin's The Busy World is Hushed who has such an inclusive, liberal interpretation of her faith she could probably get herself elected Pope of the Upper West Side.
It's such a showy example of impassioned speech-writing subbing for natural dialogue, that by the time the actress playing the role got around to "frightened bigots" I began to seriously wonder if the audience was going to applaud at the end. (They didn't.) The actress in question is Jill Clayburgh, quickly becoming one of New York's busiest high-profile thespians with her third major production in less than a year. Though Bunin's script contains many intriguing thoughts and clever passages, particularly in the lighter and very entertaining first act, Clayburgh must often deal with stilted lines like, "The Bible is a self-contradictory, haphazardly edited compilation," which tend to get a little – yes, I'll say it – preachy.

Though she readily admits he is completely unqualified for the job, Hannah hires Brandt (Hamish Linklater), a shy and intelligent gay man, to assist her in writing a book translating and interpreting a rare, long-lost gospel. Just when you're wondering why the devil she changed the job description to suit his talents, in comes her gay son, Thomas (Luke MacFarlane), dirty, bloody and with porcupine quills sticking out of his leg.

Thomas tends to disappear for days, weeks, months at a time playing a game he calls "Get Lost," where he'll hitch a ride or take a train off to the middle of nowhere, with only enough food for a day, and see if he can find his way home. Hannah hopes the presence of the handsome Brandt may give him a reason to stay put.

The guys do bond over the similar tragedies which contributed to each one's decreased religious faith. Thomas never knew his father, as Hannah's husband drowned before he was born. Brandt's father is currently hospitalized, dying a slow death.

When Hannah's intentions and a family secret are revealed in the second act, the conflicts between mother, son and employee/boyfriend are meant to explode, but punch-less dialogue and unclear motivations kill any potential fire in the play's climax.

Director Mark Brokaw's very good production covers up much of the play's clunkiness with fleet and frisky staging. The comic expository scenes fare the best, with Linklater's dry delivery. He and MacFarlane make for a sexy pair during their more playful moments, with the latter's free-spirited Thomas taking charge.

Clayburgh is very sympathetic as a mother who unsuccessfully depends on her faith to help her get through to her wandering son.

Allen Moyer's fine set, a roomy West 122nd Street apartment, is dominated by the organized clutter of hundreds of book and no shelves. Mary Louise Geiger's lights and Lewis Flinn's original music and sound design are both nicely atmospheric and Michael Krass delivers character-defining costumes.

The play's title comes from a prayer, which Brandt says is for the dutiful and weary. "It doesn't ask God for power or glory, just comfort and safety." Fortunately, playwright Brunin goes for something beyond comfort and safety, and despite its flaws the effort is admirable.

Photos by Joan Marcus: Top: Jill Clayburgh
Center: Hamish Linklater and Luke MacFarlane
Bottom: Jill Clayburgh, Luke MacFarlane and Hamish Linklater

Monday 26 June 2006

Edge New York - 26/Jun/2006

[Source]
The Busy World Is Hushed
by David Toussaint
EDGE Contributor
Monday Jun 26, 2006

Jill Clayburgh & Hamish Linklater in The
Busy World is Hushed at Playwrights
Horizon’s Mainstage Theatre.
If you’ve ever acted on stage, you’ll probably agree that the most thrilling times are when, just for a moment, you forget you’re in a scene, or worried about blocking, or what your next cue is. In that instant you’re just there, talking to someone else.

As an audience member, the most thrilling moments in theater are when you forget for a moment that you’re watching actors, that they’re reciting memorized lines, and that you’ve got to get home to walk the dog. For a moment, you’re just watching people engaged in conversation.

In The Busy World Is Hushed, at Playwrights Horizons, I experienced this second sensation a couple of times, and it was wonderful. When the blackout came to signal the end of Act One, I almost jumped, as I had literally forgotten that Intermission was looming. If the rest of Keith Bunin’s new play never lives up to those moments of beautiful forgetfulness, I’ll at least have that theater experience to savor.

Jill Clayburgh stars as Hannah, a minister writing a new book on Jesus (because we don’t have enough already - don’t shoot the messenger; the characters make that comment too). She hires a young, gay writer, Brandt (Hamish Linklater) to ghostwrite the story. Brandt is struggling with his own faith, as his father’s just been diagnosed with a brain tumor. He also falls madly in love with Hannah’s estranged and unsettled son, Thomas (Luke Macfarlane), who falls madly in love with him back.

Does this mean Church Lady’s going to rally up Satan? Hardly. Hannah’s thrilled at the coupling, as her son can’t seem to find his way through life and needs a solid rock like Brandt to keep him safe and sound. Hannah’s long-ago husband walked into (not on) the water years ago, and Thomas has never reconciled himself with the death or his mother’s religious beliefs.

That synopsis pretty much sums up most of the action of the play, as, in the end, not a lot more happens; and what does happen you will have most likely figured out during that intermission. One could leave Busy World halfway through, ask a companion how it all turns out, and not be much worse for the wear.

What starts out as a promising and ingratiating story, ends up with lots of compact clichés. When Clayburgh makes a terrific comment in the beginning of Act One about the 1970s having a lot to answer for, she almost seems to be pointing sarcastically at her own film career (the wonderfully psychobabble-ish An Unmarried Woman comes to mind) and the plays of that time (the homo-spiritual Mass Appeal comes to mind).

Both of those tales were dated quickly, and Busy World is their rebirth. Hannah holes herself up with her apartment of books (the Scenic Design by Allen Moyer is a wonderful hodge-podge of dusty file cabinets, wood ceilings, and stained-glass windows), unable to move out of theology and into the real world. Her own gay son can’t seem to stay anywhere for more than a second (Macfarlane is all trembles and frantic motion from the minute he walks onstage), and likens The Gospels to a ghost story. "Do you ever think the baby Jesus didn’t want all that attention?" he says to Mom in one of the play’s many clever one-liners. Brandt is the dutiful son (to his father, and to Hannah’s lack of one), whose faith struggles we’ve seen in everything from Woody Allen’s funniest films to the very un-funny The Exorcist.

Not that you have to come up with a new plot when you write a new play. After all, Woody Allen got his ideas from Tolstoy, and the Exorcist comes from, well, the bible. You do have to find a new way of approaching a subject. Since Bunin doesn’t give us anything new, we fall upon the direction and the actors for inspiration.

Clayburgh is a force to be reckoned with: Tiny and full of fire, she’s got that nice mix of sweet older woman who’d you help cross the street, and terrifying Bible belter. Both sides work to her advantage, as you know (like Brandt) that you’d learn a lot from this woman, but you’re not sure (like Thomas) you’d want her as your own mother. She strains a bit when she has her most dramatic moments, and you wonder if it’s because she’s looking for more dramatics where they don’t exist.

Macfarlane looks the part, but he’s miscast. Since Brandt falls in love with him immediately, you want to see the side that’s spiritually irresistible to him, not just physically. The heartbreak of these Lonesome Lotharios is that you get so caught up in being caught up, you almost don’t notice they’ve left you long ago. Since Macfarlane’s Thomas has pretty much left the building as soon as he enters it, we know that Brandt’s a doomed Juliet and wonder why he’s so blind as not to realize it himself. Almost.

Linklater does such an excellent job as the love-struck kid that he just about overcomes the plot and casting problems. As an actor, he’s physically all over the place, fingers curling, hair-pulling, eyes on both sides of the stage at once. Just when you want to slap some Stella Adler sense into him, he delivers a line so razor sharp and cued in, the whole room gets pulled into his focus. The result is effortless effort, when it works.

Which brings us back to the beginning. When Brandt and Hannah have their early on talks, both of them are so good you will get carried away with them. They could be talking about religion, homosexuality, or the weather. We don’t care. We’re just enjoying them. Director Mark Brokaw has built that beautiful space for them to create in, and they fill it up like God candy. For the rest of this play to be as entertaining, it would have taken more insight, stronger writing, and more risks. It would have taken a leap of faith.
Through July 9. Playwrights Horizons’ Mainstage Theater (416 W. 42nd Street). Tickets are $65. Call Ticket Central at 212-279-4200 or visit www.playwrightshorizons.org.

Sunday 25 June 2006

Playbill.com - 25/Jun/2006

[Source]
Busy World Marks Busy Clayburgh's Third NYC Appearance of the Season
By Kenneth Jones
25 Jun 2006

Jill Clayburgh in a scene from The 
Busy World Is Hushed at Playwrights 
Horizons.
Photo by Joan Marcus
Jill Clayburgh plays a minister and a mother in her Playwrights Horizons debut, the world premiere production of Keith Bunin's The Busy World Is Hushed, opening June 25.

Hannah, played by the two-time Academy Award nominee, "finds her faith at odds with that of Thomas, her estranged, wayward son (Luke Macfarlane)," according to Playwrights Horizons. "But when an inquisitive young writer (Hamish Linklater) hired to assist Hannah with her latest publication learns painful secrets from Hannah's past, she spies a risky, unconventional opportunity for reconciliation."

Previews began June 6.

Mark Brokaw (Reckless, Lobby Hero, How I Learned to Drive) directs on the PH Mainstage Theater on West 42nd Street in Manhattan.

Bunin's plays include The Credeaux Canvas and The World Over, both seen at Playwrights Horizons.

This is Clayburgh's third New York stage appearance in a year, having starred in Broadway's A Naked Girl on the Appian Way and Barefoot in the Park. She was nominated for two Academy Awards, four Golden Globes and two Emmy Awards for roles in "An Unmarried Woman," "Starting Over," "First Monday in October," "La Luna," "Hustling" and "Nip/Tuck."

Clayburgh is also remembered for Broadway's Pippin and The Rothschilds. She will be seen in the upcoming film adaptation of Augusten Burroughs' "Running with Scissors," scheduled for release in 2006.

Hamish Linklater plays Matthew on CBS' new hit comedy "The New Adventures of Old Christine," and appeared in Recent Tragic Events at Playwrights Horizons, the world premiere of The Violet Hour at South Coast Rep and in The Singing Forest at Long Wharf Theatre. Luke Macfarlane has been seen in FX's "Over There" and Juvenilia at Playwrights Horizons and Where Do We Live at The Vineyard.

The production will feature scenic design by Allen Moyer, costume design by Michael Krass, lighting design by Mary Louise Geiger and sound design and original music by Lewis Flinn. Production stage manager is David Sugarman.

The performance schedule for The Busy World Is Hushed is Tuesdays through Fridays at 8 PM, Saturdays at 2:30 & 8 PM and Sundays at 2:30 & 7:30 PM. Tickets are $65.

For more information, call (212) 279-4200 or visit www.playwrightshorizons.org.

Tuesday 6 June 2006

Playbill.com - 06/Jun/2006

[Source]
Clayburgh Is a Mother and Minister in Premiere of The Busy World Is Hushed in NYC
By Kenneth Jones
06 Jun 2006

Jill Clayburgh
Photo by Aubrey Reuben
Jill Clayburgh will make her Playwrights Horizons debut June 6 with the first preview of Keith Bunin's The Busy World Is Hushed, in which she plays a minister, Bible scholar and a mother.

In the world premiere, Hannah, played by two-time Academy Award nominee, "finds her faith at odds with that of Thomas, her estranged, wayward son (Luke Macfarlane)," according to Playwrights Horizons. "But when an inquisitive young writer (Hamish Linklater) hired to assist Hannah with her latest publication learns painful secrets from Hannah's past, she spies a risky, unconventional opportunity for reconciliation."

Mark Brokaw (Reckless, Lobby Hero, How I Learned to Drive) directs on the PH Mainstage Theater on West 42nd Street in Manhattan. Opening night is June 25. June 7 is a Pay What You Can performance.

Bunin's plays include The Credeaux Canvas and The World Over, both seen at Playwrights Horizons.

This is Clayburgh's third New York stage appearance in a year, having starred in Broadway's A Naked Girl on the Appian Way and Barefoot in the Park. She was nominated for two Academy Awards, four Golden Globes and two Emmy Awards for roles in "An Unmarried Woman," "Starting Over," "First Monday in October," "La Luna," "Hustling" and "Nip/Tuck."

Clayburgh is also remembered for Broadway's Pippin and The Rothschilds. She will be seen in the upcoming film adaptation of Augusten Burroughs' "Running with Scissors," scheduled for release in 2006.

Hamish Linklater plays Matthew on CBS' new hit comedy "The New Adventures of Old Christine," and appeared in Recent Tragic Events at Playwrights Horizons, the world premiere of The Violet Hour at South Coast Rep and in The Singing Forest at Long Wharf Theatre. Luke Macfarlane has been seen in FX's "Over There" and Juvenilia at Playwrights Horizons and Where Do We Live at The Vineyard.

The production will feature scenic design by Allen Moyer, costume design by Michael Krass, lighting design by Mary Louise Geiger and sound design and original music by Lewis Flinn. Production stage manager is David Sugarman.

The performance schedule for The Busy World Is Hushed will be Tuesdays through Fridays at 8 PM, Saturdays at 2:30 & 8 PM and Sundays at 2:30 & 7:30 PM. Tickets are $65.

For more information, call (212) 279-4200 or visit www.playwrightshorizons.org.

Tuesday 9 May 2006

Playbill.com - 09/May/2009

[Source]
Busy World, Busy Actress: Jill Clayburgh Steps Into Lahti Role in Playwrights Horizons Production
By Robert Simonson
09 May 2006

Jill Clayburgh
Photo by Aubrey Reuben
Jill Clayburgh, now on the Broadway boards in Barefoot in the Park, has replaced the departing Christine Lahti in the premiere of The Busy World Is Hushed by Keith Bunin at Playwrights Horizons.

Lahti had to withdraw from the production "due to family matters that necessitate her returning to the West Coast," according to the theatre.

Clayburgh ends her run in Barefoot on May 21. Busy World was to have begun previews on May 27. The new dates are: first preview on June 2; opening night on June 25; and closing night on July 9.

Busy World will be Clayburgh's third play this season, after Barefoot and A Naked Girl on the Appian Way.

The play by the author of The Credeaux Canvas and The World Over, both seen at Playwrights Horizons, will be directed by Mark Brokaw. Also in the play are Hamish Linklater and Luke Macfarlane.

"In The Busy World Is Hushed, Hannah (Clayburgh), a minister and bible scholar, finds her faith at odds with that of Thomas, her estranged, wayward son," according to Playwrights Horizons. "But when an inquisitive young writer hired to assist Hannah with her latest publication learns painful secrets from Hannah's past, she spies a risky, unconventional opportunity for reconciliation."

For more information, call (212) 279-4200 or visit www.playwrightshorizons.org.

Tuesday 21 March 2006

Western News - 21/Mar/2006

Source(http://communications.uwo.ca/western_news/story.html?listing_id=5552" not found)
TV war series Over There, featuring Luke MacFarlane, is released on DVD
University of Western Ontario
March 21st, 2006

His nickname was Dim but Pte. Frank (Dim) Dumphy was not a dim bulb.

Quite the opposite, says London, Ont.-born actor Luke MacFarlane, who played the erstwhile American soldier on Over There, last year's short-lived TV war series being released this week in a special DVD edition from Fox.

"They called him Dim because he went to Cornell and they figured he had to be stupid to end up in the army," says MacFarlane, 24.

In a lot of ways, he adds, Dumphy was the conscience of the show, one who was able to grasp the big picture. But he had personal problems, too. In one unforgettable scene, Dumphy is recording a video love letter to e-mail to his wife back home. The scene cuts to the video playing on a screen, the camera pulls back and there's his wife, in bed with another lover.

Few who watched are likely ever to forget the torso scene, either. An Iraqi insurgent is hit in the chest with a shoulder-launched missile. The top half of his body disappears in a cloud of smoke while the legs continue to walk ahead for several steps before collapsing.

Over There was one of the most talked about U.S. shows of the past season. Produced by Steven Bochco (NYPD Blue, LA Law) and set in Iraq, it was the first ever TV series to take place in an ongoing American war. But, after 13 intense episodes, it was cancelled by FX, the Fox TV spinoff channel. (It aired in Canada on History Television.)

MacFarlane, a graduate of New York's famous Juilliard theatre school, says he doesn't know why the show failed to click with enough viewers - perhaps Americans weren't ready for the war to be dramatized in prime time - but maintains that Fox's audience expectations were just too high.

"I think FX kinda backed themselves into a corner," he says. "They had to cut their losses and just run away."

Because the series attracted critical acclaim, MacFarlane says they thought they might get a renewal but, ultimately, the numbers did the talking.

There were other controversies, too.

Some veterans swore by the show's authenticity, others said it was bogus. Not surprisingly, MacFarlane says it was definitely authentic.

"Any group of people in a specific field are going to be watching out for details. And the army is filled with particularly intense people when it comes to details, you know?

"To the point that people will know if a tiny patch is on backwards. And to them, if a patch is on backwards the whole film is bogus."

MacFarlane says his father is a doctor (the director of student health services at the University of Western Ontario) and they certainly don't call in to complain if the wrong medical instrument is used on ER.

Bochco and company also went to great pains to insist that Over There was not political, was not any kind of indictment against the Bush administration's venture into Iraq, that it was a just story about grunts in any war.

But MacFarlane concedes that if any war film seems pro war, it's propaganda. If it's done well, then it's going to be by its nature anti-war.

"Steven Bochco is a really smart person and he knows exactly what to say. But I think that of course it was a political TV show. I don't think he was highlighting those parts of it but, yeah, you cannot make a TV show about a war that's going on and not have a political show."

The DVD contains all 13 episodes, some with audio commentaries, plus two behind-the-scenes featurettes.

MacFarlane, meanwhile, says it's pilot season in L.A. and he has his fingers crossed that he might make it into a new network series this coming fall. But he's not likely to invoke any home-town connection with fellow Londoner, Oscar winner Paul Haggis (Crash).

"Well, Paul is a scientologist so until I turn over to that I don't know if I'm going to get invited into the fold," he says with a laugh.