TV'S BEAST RETURNS TO THE STAGE TO FLEX SOME THEATRICAL MUSCLE
AT ODYSSEY
by Michael Arkush
Los Angeles
Times, May 13, 1990
Poor ratings
killed the beast. Now he's back as "The Westwood Strangler."
Ron Perlman, who portrayed Vincent in CBS-TV's "Beauty
and the Beast" until its cancellation last year, has resurfaced
on stage in the new dark comedy "Self Storage" at
the Odyssey Theatre.
He wanted
to play the slimy Hollywood agent or the upstart producer in this
spoof of the film industry. Instead, director Dan Lauria (the father
on "Wonder Years") gave him the part of Cliff,
an unsuccessful actor masquerading as a serial killer.
"I don't
think I would have done the play without Ron, "Lauria said. "I can't
imagine anyone else doing that role. You needed someone who could
make a joke out of the role. Otherwise, the audience doesn't get it."
Cliff
is a scary sight, with his scruffy beard and staggering gait--a far
cry from elegant Vincent. Perlman adores him anyway.
"I find
I'm really starting to dig him," Perlman said. "I didn't dig him at
first, but.. I understand him now. I'm going to wind up loving him
by the time it's over."
In Cliff,
Perlman sees a part of himself -- the struggling, victimized actor.
That seems like a strange comment from a man who has attained more
fame and earned more money than he ever imagined. He has worked three
years on a television series, acted in several feature films (Quest
For Fire, The Name of the Rose), received two Emmy nominations
and won the 1986 Golden Globe Award of best actor in a dramatic series.
At 40,
Perlman retains the actor's insecurities. "This part scared me. I
really didn't think I'd be able to come up with what it took to play
the role," he said. He
recalled thinking, "They're going to find me out; I'm going to stink
out the joint."
On the
other hand, he doesn't worry as much anymore about audience reaction,
he said. Before, when he didn't give his best performance, Perlman
used to eat -- a lot.
"I've spent
22 years acting for other people," he said. "Now, I'm getting so old
that I don't care. It doesn't destroy me if people don't like it.
I work for my friends, and I figure if me and my friends like it,
then maybe other people will too. It's a tremendously liberating period
for an actor."
Time also
has liberated Perlman. Free from the rigorous schedule of a weekly
television series, he is able to pursue other acting possibilities.
"It's nice to move on, nice to know I can flex other muscles," he
said.
He blames
no one for the beast's demise. He thinks someday there might be a
feature film based on the show's characters. "We
were always teetering on the edge of acceptability," Perlman said,
"and then we teetered the wrong direction. I'm surprised at the tremendous
success that the show had. I liked it. I liked all the things I was
involved in, but none of them made money."
In "Self
Storage," Perlman is working for almost no pay. The production
is the second installment of a four-play series sponsored by Patchett-Kaufman
Entertainment to develop projects that might be turned into sitcoms
or movies.
Perlman
said that although he applauds PKE's efforts to produce high quality
theater -- Lauria essentially runs the project -- he has a little
trouble with the concept: "The purpose of it is crossover, the fact
we're doing theater that might have a afterlife… I'm doing this because
I think it's a funny play."
Perlman
complains that pure theater is dying out. "People are doing sitcoms
on stage rather than theater. You go to the theater, and it's as if
you were watching a sitcom at 8:30 on Channel 4."
Asked whether
"Self Storage" might contain some of the same sitcom
material he loathes Perlman said: "There's satire in it, which is
a much more sophisticated form than pure sitcom."
Perlman
said he thought moving from television to theater would be more difficult
but that he has relied on his stage experience to ease the transition.
He has performed on and off Broadway, playing the lead in the New
York premier of "The Architect and the Emperor of Assyria." He
has also performed the works of Shakespeare, Ibsen, Chekhov, Pinter
and Beckett.
Finding
Cliff, he said, has been tougher than playing most characters.
Usually, when assuming a role, Perlman tries to find an actual person
to model himself after or part of the fictional character within himself.
For "Self Storage," he went for the theatrics first
and adapted Cliff to that. Much of his role is physical--stumbling
across stage, speaking occasionally in grunts, staring like a ferocious
beast.
"You have
to find what it is in that person that you love in order to play him,"
Perlman said, "no matter how psychotic he is."