Waterloo Region Record

A TV star tends to his theatre roots

McCormack is happy to return to the Stratford Festival for one night in The Fantastick­s

- DEBRA YEO

“I know it’s been a long time, but I want to tell you a story.”

That’s Eric McCormack’s message for the audience when he stars in a one-night-only presentati­on of “The Fantastick­s” at the Stratford Festival.

Toronto native McCormack is best known for the TV comedy “Will & Grace,” but back in 1985, he was just out of Ryerson theatre school and apprentici­ng at the festival. He left in 1989, but had long intended to return someday.

“I was talking to Antoni for years about coming back in some form or other, “McCormack says on the phone from Los Angeles, referring to Stratford artistic director Antoni Cimolino. “It never made sense in my schedule.”

The break came last fall, when McCormack was in Toronto to receive the festival’s Legacy Award. Cimolino told him about the Forum program, a series of one-off performanc­es, talks, tours, demonstrat­ions and other events meant to enhance the plays on the festival’s stages.

McCormack knew exactly what he wanted to do for the Forum: the 1960 musical “The Fantastick­s,” known for songs like “Try to Remember” and “Soon It’s Gonna Rain.”

“It occurred to me that my favourite musical is something that Stratford has never done in 65 years,” says McCormack, who starred in “The Music Man” on Broadway and describes musical theatre as “a passion.” He had performed “The Fantastick­s”

several times: in high school, in college and in Los Angeles nine years ago with Jason Alexander (Seinfeld) directing.

“I just loved the character, loved the music and I loved the poetry,” says McCormack, who will again play the narrator, El Gallo, at Stratford’s Avon Theatre on Oct. 30.

“I love sharing this poetry with an audience,” he adds. “Some of the poems in the piece that my character says are things that have stuck with me more than a lot of the Shakespear­e I’ve

learned over the years. You have the cliché of the old Shakespear­ean actor who pulls out his Lear. This is the closest I have to that.”

This version of the musical will resonate with McCormack in other ways. The Stratford performanc­e, billed as “The Fantastick­s in Concert With Eric McCormack,” is being directed by Richard Ouzounian, the Star’s former theatre critic. Ouzounian was also the last person to direct McCormack at Stratford in 1989, as Demetrius in “A Midsummer Night’s Dream.”

“It’s a show I love, but I’ve never done in my long and checkered career,” Ouzounian says about “The Fantastick­s,” which is the longest-running musical in the world, having played for more than 50 years off-Broadway. Its plot concerns a boy and a girl in love, and their fathers conspiring to bring them together by staging a feud and an abduction. Plans go awry; the young couple splits up and learns some hard life lessons before coming back together again. It’s usually performed with minimal props, which will be even more minimal in Stratford’s concert version.

“In some ways it’s timeless, in other ways it is dated as hell,” McCormack says.

Ouzounian has made changes to try to address that. The meddling fathers are now mothers. The doddering old actors who help with the abduction are now “oldschool” actors because “ageism is every bit as lousy as racism and sexism,” Ouzounian says. And instead of pretending to be an “American Indian,” the character of Mortimer now impersonat­es a Musketeer. “The Fantastick­s” authors themselves removed the word “rape” from the song El Gallo sings about plotting the abduction, “It Depends on What You Pay.”

Stratford’s staging will also have a subtext specific to McCormack himself, of him “coming back here after 29 years just like El Gallo comes back and looks at what his life was like, “Ouzounian says.

When he left — after new artistic director David William found his style of acting a little too “modern” — McCormack didn’t do so “with a heavy heart or a sense of failure. I had grown from someone who didn’t know himself, who just knew he was trying to please everybody else, to someone who had a much better idea of who he could be in the world.”

Returning to Stratford now “feels very personal and very subjective,” McCormack adds. “As much as I’ve done (“The Fantastick­s”) before I think it’s gonna feel very different this time and it is gonna feel like going home again.”

 ??  ?? Eric McCormack, right, in a scene from the 1989 Stratford Festival production of “A Midsummer Night’s Dream.”
Eric McCormack, right, in a scene from the 1989 Stratford Festival production of “A Midsummer Night’s Dream.”
 ?? AXELLE/BAUER-GRIFFIN FILMMAGIC ?? Eric McCormack says returning to Stratford is “gonna feel like going home again.”
AXELLE/BAUER-GRIFFIN FILMMAGIC Eric McCormack says returning to Stratford is “gonna feel like going home again.”

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