Juggling stage,TV and film keeps work fresh for actor Whitford

NEW YORK - It's midmorning on a sunny spring day, and Bradley Whitford arrives a little late for an interview looking downright exhausted.

The day before was his first two-performance day in the Broadway revival of Boeing-Boeing, he explains, and it took a lot out of him. That's an understatement, really, because the play - a farce about a swinging 1960s bachelor in Paris juggling three stewardess fiancees - is incredibly physical. The actors race around the stage, slamming doors, hopping over furniture and kissing passionately. At one point, Whitford does a gorilla impression while crawling, in a suit, on the floor.

"I feel like I ran a marathon, but in a good way," he says as he orders breakfast at a diner on Manhattan's East Side near his temporary apartment. (He lives in Los Angeles with his wife, Malcolm in the Middle star Jane Kaczmarek, and their three children.)

Whitford is best known for his Emmy-winning role as Josh Lyman on NBC's The West Wing. The show was canceled in 2006, after seven years on the air, something that made Whitford sad at the time.

"In retrospect, especially when something goes beyond your hopes in terms of what it's about, the writing and the people you're working with, you really don't want your banana to turn brown," Whitford says. "It was sad for it to end, but I think it happened at the right time."

He then co-starred with Matthew Perry and Amanda Peet in West Wing creator Aaron Sorkin's NBC drama Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip. The show disappeared quickly.

"It was a hard time," Whitford says. "I think if West Wing came along right now it wouldn't have been picked up. It's too expensive. Unless it's a massive hit right out of the gate, the networks get nervous."

While much of his fame comes from his TV roles, he's no stranger to the stage or film, and he likes toskip among mediums.

"I think being on stage encourages you to be audacious, and the interesting thing about acting in front of a camera is you can't lie, you can't fake it," he says. "You have to be truthful in a way that on stage when you're projecting, it's not the same thing."

Whitford grew up in Madison, Wis., studied English literature and drama at Wesleyan University, and then earned a master's degree in theater from the Juilliard School.

His first professional performance was in the 1985 off-Broadway production of Curse of the Starving Class with Kathy Bates. From there, he says, he has tried to do at least three or four plays a year, although it was difficult during West Wing because the cast had only two months off a year.

Still, he managed to perform in the original Three Days of Rain at the Manhattan Theatre Club, Measure for Measure at Lincoln Center Theater and the title role in Coriolanus at the Folger Theatre in Washington.

His screen credits includeThe Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants, Little Manhattan, Scent of a Woman, Billy Madison and Presumed Innocent. He's also in the new Showtime production of An American Crime with Catherine Keener.

Now he's appearing in the role of Bernard in Boeing-Boeing. The comedy - a translation by Beverley Cross and Francis Evans from a French play by Marc Camoletti - was on stage almost 50 years ago. It ran for seven years in London's West End, but died after less than a month on Broadway in 1965. A film version was made that same year with Tony Curtis (as Bernard) and Jerry Lewis (as Robert).

The show was a big hit in London again last year in a version directed by Matthew Warchus, known for his direction of the plays of Yasmina Reza.

Christine Baranski plays a longsuffering French housekeeper, who must be an air traffic controller, so to speak, for Whitford's Bernard, a successful businessman living in Paris. His old friend Robert (Mark Rylance) comes to visit just as the stewardesses' schedules changeand mayhem ensues.

Warchus brought over Rylance from the recent British production to play Robert and cast Kathryn Hahn as the American stewardess, Mary McCormack as the German and Gina Gershon as the Italian.

"It's just as the sexual revolution was about to burst, and it's an interesting moment, if you think about it," Whitford says. "These women actually have all the sexual power before assertiveness kicked in and the role rejection kicked in."

The play requires expert timing and lots of physical movement, and there were many unanswered questions when the actors arrived to rehearse, including where Whitford's character should be based. The other actors speak with various accents, but Bernard, in the Broadway version, is American.

"I had no idea when I started where my guy was from," Whitford says. "At a week in, we were still talking about it. But we decided the audience needed a touch point, a guy to relate to."

The show's physical aspectswere also difficult to rehearse. "It's a lot of fun in front of an audience, but in a grim rehearsal room, it creates a lot of neuroses," he says.

"There's a lot of math involved in this. The door needs to slam, the props need to be set up. It's very tricky. But you're an idiot if you don't treat the play as sort of a living, growing thing."

Style, Pages 66 on 05/18/2008

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