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                    January 17, 2006 





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                  A Touch of the Poet 
                  December 08, 2005
                  By Leonard Jacobs

                  Cornelius Melody, at the center of Eugene O'Neill's A Touch of 
                  the Poet, is often cited by scholars as a test run for the 
                  role of James Tyrone in the dramatist's Long Day's Journey 
                  Into Night. O'Neill projected Poet to be the fifth of an 
                  11-play, multicentury cycle tracing five generations of an 
                  Irish family. It is one of only two cycle plays he completed, 
                  along with More Stately Mansions.

                  Like Tyrone, Melody is complex, bedeviling — which is why 
                  O'Neill wrote Poet over eight years, creating The Iceman 
                  Cometh, Hughie, Long Day's Journey Into Night, and A Moon for 
                  the Misbegotten in between. If Doug Hughes' production is 
                  oddly uneven, it helps to understand Melody's antecedents 
                  while watching the charismatic Gabriel Byrne, back on Broadway 
                  for the first time since A Moon for the Misbegotten in 2000, 
                  as Melody.



                  In 1828 near Boston, Melody is the immigrant son of a 
                  saloonkeeper who achieved social prominence in Ireland. In the 
                  Napoleonic wars, Melody served under the legendary Duke of 
                  Wellington. Had a sexual indiscretion not forced his 
                  expulsion, sullying his reputation, Melody's valor at the 
                  storied Battle of Talavera would be unstained.

                  But it was stained and, 20 years later, his surroundings — set 
                  and costume designer Santo Loquasto's shabby tavern — yield 
                  clues to how far he's fallen: the gray color scheme; his 
                  peasant wife, Nora (Dearbhla Molloy), benumbed to his 
                  drinking; his daughter Sara (Emily Bergl), sent to finishing 
                  school to lose her brogue and now disgusted by her father's 
                  grandiose delusions and long-gone fortune.

                  Unseen is Simon Harford, the Yankee scion who has taken ill, 
                  taken a room, and taken an interest in Sara, who returns his 
                  love, plenty of poesy composed between them. When Melody — 
                  whose face, O'Neill wrote, is like "an embittered Byronic 
                  hero" — unknowingly meets Simon's mother, Deborah (the 
                  luminous Kathryn Meisle), he thinks his charms are intact, 
                  that she'll sniff his wealth despite his poverty. "I'll wager 
                  my all against a penny that even among the fish-blooded 
                  Yankees there's not a man whose heart doesn't catch flame from 
                  your beauty!" he brags. "Is this — what the Irish call 
                  blarney?" she replies. Melody is all blarney, and as O'Neill 
                  has it, the curse of self-realization means self-destruction.

                  Earlier, Byrne's confrontational scenes with Bergl are all 
                  about the play's florid language — the two-word insults 
                  ("bogtrotting peasant"), the whimpering apologies, the 
                  portrait of a man with a hollowed-out core. When the Harfords' 
                  attorney, Nicholas Gadsby (the blithe John Horton), offers 
                  money to stop the union of Sara and Simon, Melody, clad in his 
                  resplendent major's uniform, cracks, and out come all 
                  O'Neill's themes — the Irish immigrant's inferiority, the 
                  drinking curse, the delusions of grandeur — until Melody, near 
                  suicidal, speaks again in a brogue, thick as soup. And Byrne 
                  gives a Learlike performance as a man unable to weather such a 
                  thunderous storm.

                  The production is uneven because the other performances fall 
                  short of Byrne's. For example, subplots involving the men who 
                  frequent the tavern — played by Daniel Stewart Sherman, Ciaran 
                  O'Reilly, and Randall Newsome, and particularly Byron 
                  Jennings' Jamie Cregan, whose character has a special tie to 
                  Melody — have little urgency; the accents seem mighty thick. 
                  Molloy's Nora beckons our empathy, but her pivotal moments 
                  come opposite Sara, and Bergl is grotesquely modernistic in 
                  her acting — that flouncy walk, those clipped cadences. Hughes 
                  stages the play precisely, but this is ultimately Byrne's 
                  show. Fortunately, his Melody is an extraordinary tune.



                  Presented by Roundabout Theatre Company at Studio 54, 254 W. 
                  54th St., NYC. Dec. 8-Jan. 29. Tue.-Sat., 8 p.m.; Wed., Sat., 
                  and Sun., 2 p.m. (212) 719-1300. Casting by Jim Carnahan, CSA 








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                        An Evening With...Hugh Laurie 
                        January 17, 2006
                        'Back Stage West' will present a Q&A Hugh Laurie, the 
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