Special FeaturesFROM THE ARCHIVES: Stockard Channing on Defying Her Family to Become a StarIn this 1997 interview, the Tony and Emmy winner talks her uphill climb to success, finding her strength onstage, and living without regret.
April 16, 2017
Digging into the archives, we unearth the original articles printed in the Playbills of yesteryear.
As the most recent revival of Lillian Hellmanâs The Little Foxes prepares to open on Broadway at Manhattan Theatre Clubâs Samuel J. Friedman Theatre starring Laura Linney and Cynthia Nixon (in repertory as Regina and Birdie), we look back on the 1997 revival starring Stockard Channing. Channing starred as Regina Giddens; Frances Conroy was her Birdie, Jack O'Brien her director. In this article from the April 1997 Playbill, OâBrien heralds the singularity of Channing, her incomparable career, and their joint decision to revive the play in the first place.
No one doubted sparks would fly creating Lincoln Center Theaterâs revival of Lillian Hellmanâs The Little Foxes.
Stockard Channingâfollowing Talluah Bankhead, Bette Davis (in the film) and, subsequently, Anne Bancroft and Elizabeth Taylor as that belle of mean and avarice, Regina Giddensâhas a reputation for having a strong mind, which inevitably leads to clashes.
âNot necessarily,â says OâBrien, artistic director of San Diegoâs Old Globe Theatre. âFireworks, yes! Stockardâs someone with a firm grasp on the wheel, and damn good driving gloves. Sheâs constructed a career by choosing roles that work for her.â
Star and director agree Reginaâs uniqueness has yet to be fully explored. âSheâs thought of as older,â notes OâBrien, âbut sheâs probably 40.â Wanting to create âexplosive forcesâ for the late nineties, âwe listened differently to the text. âLillyâs Regina wasnât a gorgon, an iron maiden or a figure of terror stalking up and down that staircase. And she isnât ours.â
Channing concurs. âShe was perfectly modulated Southern woman who knew how to use her charm and beautyâthe only wiles she was educated to exploit.â In Regina, she finds a striking resemblance. âMy family raised me to think a girl has only one chanceâmarry well. You know, have the house, kids, and live a very protected life.â
âWe always see Regina in the rear-view mirror,â adds OâBrien. âWe donât see the vibrant woman she was and how she achieved what she achieved.â
The same, happily, cannot be said of Channing, whose memorable performances have distinguished her as a versatile and charismatic actress. She first leapt off the screen in 1975âs The Fortune and followed with her tough-talking Rizzo in the 1978 movie of Grease. She received acclaim in the Roundaboutâs revival of Peter Nicholsâs A Day in the Death of Joe Egg, which, after its move to Broadway in 1986, won her a Best Actress Tony, and as Bunny, the blonde bimbo, in LCTâs 1986 revival of John Guareâs The House of Blue Leaves (featured Tony nomination). In 1988 she starred in Alan Acykbournâs Woman in Mind, and in 1990 the role of an art patron unraveled by a con artist in Guareâs Six Degreeâs of Separation brought her a Best Actress Tony nomination and an Olivier nomination in London. Guare was so impressed in Channingâs Ouisa Kittredge that he stipulated she play the part (to an Oscar-nominated turn) in the film âbecause she was so sublime it would be stupid not to use her.â More recently, she returned to LCT as the riveting spymaster Hapgood in Tom Stoppardâs 1994 play.
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Susan Stockard of Park Avenue hadnât planned on being an actress until studying American history at Radcliffe, where she first smelled the greasepaint. At Harvard, she became hooked. Joining Theatre Company of Boston, she combined her maiden name with her married name to become Stockard Channing.
âMy family discouraged me,â she said, âbut I didnât want to be one of those who say, âIf I could live it all over again, it would be different.ââ Struggling four years for recognition, âI never doubted that when the opportunity came, Iâd succeed.â
In the midst of her second marriage, she went from Off-Broadway (in Elaine May and Terrence McNallyâs one-acts Adaption/Next) to a chorus spot in the 1971 New York Shakespeare Festival musical adaption of Two Gentlemen of Verona with lyrics by John Guare, who co-wrote the book. On the move to Broadway, Channing understudied Julia (with Puerto Rican accent). She was featured in 1973âs No Hard Feelings, directed by Abe Burrows (his last play). It lasted one night. She co-starred in the Verona tour, which brought her excellent notices in Los Angeles.
After several bits, Channing broke into film in The Fortune, directed by Mike Nichols. âI thought it would be one of the greatest movies of all time. It wasnât.â But the response to her dizzy flapper heiress (whom Jack Nicholson and Warren Beatty set out to murder for her money) âchanged my life.â
CBS touted her as âthe new Mary Tyler Mooreâ in a sitcom. It was canceled after a year. To stay close to film, she starred in West Coast productions of Vanities and Alan Acykbournâs Absurd Person Singular.
In her subsequent film and TV choices, thereâve been box-office failures and Emmy nominations. Through it all, she kept returning to the stage. âSome instinct keeps pulling me back,â she said. âItâs where I extract my strength.â
Channing says she doesnât find great difference between film, TV, and stage. âBoth have positives and negatives. When Iâm in a collaborative situation with creative people, I donât care what it is. It just took me a while to realize you donât take the next thing that comes along.â
In 1980, after several professional and personal disappointments, Channing returned to New York to start over, succeeding Lucie Arnaz in Theyâre Playing Our Song and hand-picked by director Arvin Brown to co-star in the 1981 revival of Joe Egg at New Havenâs Long Wharf. Four years later, opposite Jim Dale, she re-created the role of Sheila, the mother of a brain-damaged child, in New York.
Even after the later successes at LCT, there was disappointment. She obtained film rights to Hapgood, but in the end Stoppard decided it wasnât convertible.
âOnstage, it worked beautifully with its cinematic flow,â she said.
âBut it was a selective cinematic flow,â OâBrien, who directed, observed, ânot a literal one. I was able to evoke certain types of gritty filmic devices.â
Channing had invested her money and six months of time and energy. OâBrien saw how depressed she was. He told her, âSusie, play a great part.â
âWhat?â
âRegina, for Godâs sake!â
Simultaneously they said, âYes!â
Channing went to the Hellman estates the very next day. Soon all was set. But star and director arenât approaching this production as a mere revival.
âWhen you cast Stockard,â said OâBrien, âyouâve got an event and an associate producer. Sheâs powerful and brings a great gift: her amazing insight. And you better do your homework. However much you think youâre ready, sheâs got untold reserves. Like Regina, sheâs a clear-sighted woman in a fuzzy world. From the hem of the gown to the pictures out front, sheâll have an opinion. By and large, itâll be accurate!â
The 2017 revival of The Little Foxes is currently playing at the Samuel J. Friedman Theatre, with an official opening April 19. For discount tickets, click here.
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To mark the 80th birthday of composer-lyricist Stephen Sondheim in 2010, Playbill.com asked Broadway songwriters to do the impossibleâpick their favorite songs by the master.