Toronto Star

OUT OF HIS ELEMENT (ARY)

David Arquette challenges himself by playing Sherlock Holmes,

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When you think of David Arquette playing someone with investigat­ive skills, you’re more likely to summon up the bumbling Deputy Dewey Riley from the Scream series than the master sleuth of 221B Baker Street.

Still, that’s who Arquette will play in Toronto starting Tuesday when he tackles the title role in Sherlock Holmes at the Ed Mirvish Theatre.

“I honestly never considered myself in the part,” laughs Arquette from California, where the show has been rehearsing. “I mean, me, Sherlock Holmes? Come on!”

He’s got a point. Arquette has had a varied career that’s included everything from acting to being a World Championsh­ip Wrestling star to singing in a rock band to designing a line of clothing to running a nightclub in L.A. called Bootsy Bellows (his late mother’s stage name when she was a burlesque dancer).

But a deerstalke­r-clad, meerschaum-smoking Victorian sleuth? Hardly, my good man.

“Look, he’s such a unique character,” reasons Arquette. “And he’s strangely contempora­ry. Look at how we’re obsessed with all these shows like CSI, all about forensics and profiling. That’s at the root of what Holmes does. And underneath all the surface stuff, he’s a strangely honest man and people like that in their heroes.”

Arquette has never really been known for stage work, although he did get great reviews for his 1999 turn as Dr. Frank N. Furter in a Los Angeles production of The Rocky Horror Show and starred opposite Annette Bening in a 2010 Hollywood mounting of The Female of the Species.

“I wanted to challenge myself,” is how he explains his return to live performanc­e. “I love the interactio­n with audience. There’s something that brings me back to an older time and place.”

He might very well be referring to his highly colourful upbringing at the hands of two eccentric performers, Lewis Arquette and Brenda Olivia Nowak.

“Yeah, I was born on a commune in Virginia,” re- calls Arquette. “It was super backwoods, our whole family lived in a one-room cabin . . . It was tight. Unglamorou­s. Real poverty, man.”

He shared it with four brothers and sisters, all of whom have made their mark in show business.

David, at 44, is the youngest, followed by Alexis, 46, a transgende­r woman who sometimes performs as Eva Destructio­n. Then comes Patricia (recent Oscar winner for Boyhood and star of CSI: Cyber) at 47, Richmond at 52 (last seen in National Lampoon Presents: Surf Party) and big sister Rosanna, 56, still best recalled for Desperatel­y Seeking Susan opposite Madonna.

“My dad was my hero, a brilliant, complicate­d man who had his flaws,” Arquette says, but he has also chronicled his father’s substance abuse and his mother’s tendency toward violence.

He thinks some of his father’s difficulti­es might have stemmed from a complicate­d relationsh­ip with his own father, Cliff Arquette, known to fans of The Jack Paar Tonight Show and Hollywood Squares as country bumpkin Charlie Weaver.

Arquette got into movies early and by 21 was appearing in such films as Buffy the Vampire Slayer. But making the first instalment of Scream in 1996 changed his life in a couple of important ways.

He got truly noticed for the first time as the feckless Dewey.

And he fell in love with his co-star, Courteney Cox, whom he married in 1999, separated from in 2010 and divorced in 2013.

Equally as tempestuou­s was his career with World Championsh­ip Wrestling, an adjunct to his 2000 film about the sport, Ready to Rumble.

“I started getting into scenarios I wasn’t ready for. I was even the world champion for a couple of weeks. How’s that for crazy? I had fun, I guess, but I’m glad I got out when I did.”

After that, issues with substance abuse began popping up until he finally checked himself into rehab in 2010, appearing on Oprah and Jay Leno’s Tonight Show in 2011 to discuss his recovery.

Two years later, he was on Howard Stern admitting he had relapsed.

He drifts into the subject by mentioning that the play “deals with Sherlock’s (drug) addiction in some of its darker moments.”

“Did you see that documentar­y about Amy Winehouse?” he asks. “There’s a great line at the end from Tony Bennett. He says, ‘If you stick around long enough, life teaches you how to live it.’

“But there’s a lot of figuring out how to do that. What works in life. How to find happiness. How to be a reliable and dependable partner. There is a lot of trial and error. A lot.”

Elementary, my dear Arquette. Go to mirvish.com/shows/sherlockho­lmes or call 416-872-1212 for informatio­n about Sherlock Holmes.

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David Arquette, best known for his role in the series, plays Sherlock Holmes in the Ed Mirvish Theatre production.
Scream David Arquette, best known for his role in the series, plays Sherlock Holmes in the Ed Mirvish Theatre production.

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