Andy García Archives - Cultural Attaché https://culturalattache.co/tag/andy-garcia/ The Guide to Arts and Culture events in and around Los Angeles Sat, 11 Jan 2020 00:03:29 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 Distilling “Key Largo” with Writer Jeffrey Hatcher https://culturalattache.co/2019/11/26/distilling-key-largo-with-writer-jeffrey-hatcher/ https://culturalattache.co/2019/11/26/distilling-key-largo-with-writer-jeffrey-hatcher/#respond Tue, 26 Nov 2019 15:23:30 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=7413 "Both the film and the play have a virus - this horrible gangster. If he doesn't get stopped he will ruin everything he touches."

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John Huston’s 1948 film Key Largo is perhaps best remembered as the final on-screen pairing of Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall. But there was something in this story that struck a nerve with Andy Garcia and writer Jeffrey Hatcher. Together they reworked the film (and the play on which it was based – more about that below) into a hit play running through December 15th at the Geffen Playhouse.

Maxwell Anderson, a Pulitzer Prize-winning writer and lyricist perhaps best known for Knickerbocker Holiday and Anne of a Thousand Days, wrote Key Largo the play. The show made its Broadway debut in 1939 and ran for just 105 performances. His Key Largo was set during the Spanish Civil War. John Huston re-worked the play to be a post-World War II crime drama film.

As I learned from my conversation last week with Hatcher, elements of both the play and the film found their way into Key Largo at the Geffen Playhouse. Here are edited excerpts from that talk.

How and why did an unsuccessful Broadway play become a film classic and a project that inspired you and Andy Garcia?

Jeffrey Hatcher and Andy Garcia co-wrote this new adaptation of "Key Largo"
Writer Jeffrey Hatcher (Courtesy of the Geffen Playhouse)

Both the film and the play have a virus – this horrible gangster. In the [Anderson] play it is Murillo but in ours it is Rocco (Garcia). If he doesn’t get stopped he will ruin everything he touches. There is also the character of McCloud (Danny Pino) who is disillusioned and has done bad things and feels himself a coward and he might kill himself. But he finds a second chance to redeem himself. Both say a lot about corruption, racism and both have a sense of what makes a juicy part.

Many of the changes found in your play stem from the changes Huston made. What did he get right with the film that you admired and what did Anderson get right with his play?

That’s interesting. The Huston film structurally is actually better for us than the play. The organization of the events is very streamlined. What Huston got right was that if you want to have a successful hero, you have to have a successful adversary. The Johnny Rocco they came up with is much more successful. In the original Murillo is much more vicious. Andy has speeches that come straight from the play, but he doesn’t have the braggadocio from the film. Huston got Gaye Dawn right (Claire Trevor won an Oscar for her performance; Joely Fisher plays the part in this play). That couple [she and Rocco] is really what makes the film somehow.

Joely Fisher, Stephen Borrello, Louis Mustillo & Andy Garcia in “Key Largo” (Photo by Jeff Lorch)

You told Playwrights Center in 2017 that “if you are dealing with lesser-known source material you have more leeway for creative license.” This is a beloved film, but it is also a very old film. Did Key Largo count as lesser-known source material?

It struck me that it did actually. Although I had seen it before, I knew vaguely the outlines of it, but it never impressed itself on my memory the same way Casablanca or The Big Sleep did. Some people call it noir, but it is lesser noir. The Bogart & Bacall pairing doesn’t have logically dramatic tension. There are some things they say to each other that don’t make sense. I think they really were coasting on their own image.

There are lines in the play that resonated as commentary on what’s going on in the world today – lines about truthfulness and loyalty. Is Key Largo making a commentary on how crazy things are now?

Only unconsciously really. We did talk about Trump in rehearsal, but really no. We were supposed to do the show next spring and everyone’s schedule changed and we moved it up – fast. Sometimes the zeitgeist is more about the subject matter. One of the reasons you are drawn to it may have to do with the zeitgeist of the world you are living in; you find the gems and they are highlighted by the present day.

Hatcher & Garcia worked quickly on "Key Largo"
Andy Garcia in “Key Largo” (Photo by Jeff Lorch)

There is a speech where Andy goes, “I’m always alone. I’m all by myself.” I think that was something he ad-libbed one day. You are aware of the way Trump repeats himself. How does that leech into your brain? Or is that the same rhetorical fallback of complete narcissists? We’ve been living in this bathwater for too many years, but perhaps this is the way we drain the bathtub.

As a writer who has adapted numerous projects for both films and stage, what is your priority in unlocking the best way to adapt for either form?

I tend to think that moment comes fairly early. I’m adapting Dial M For Murder (a play later turned into an Alfred Hitchcock film) for The Old Globe. It’s a pretty perfect script. Like any well-constructed play you fiddle with the structure at your own peril. If the idea is there in the first couple of days, great. If I have to sweat it through, I feel like I haven’t cracked it. Usually with a play it is understanding the setting.

John Huston's 1948 film "Key Largo" inspired this play
Writer/director/actor John Huston (Courtesy of needpix.com)

John Huston once said, “I don’t try to guess what a million people will like. It’s hard enough to know what I like.” Does that sum up the writer’s challenge and do you feel the same way?

Because I’m in the theatre, I’m always aware of when [an audience] fidgets or laugh or not laugh. I wish I could be like that, but I’m clocking what they are doing. Certainly if you have a flop the studio won’t write you a check the next time!

All photos of Key Largo by Jeff Lorch/Courtesy of the Geffen Playhouse

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Key Largo https://culturalattache.co/2019/11/04/key-largo/ https://culturalattache.co/2019/11/04/key-largo/#respond Mon, 04 Nov 2019 15:59:13 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=7260 Geffen Playhouse

November 5th - December 15th

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“When your head says one thing and your whole life says another, your head always loses.” If that line sounds remotely familiar, you have seen the 1948 John Huston film, Key Largo. That film, and the Maxwell Anderson play that was adapted for the screen, serve as the inspiration for a new stage version of Key Largo. Written by Jeffrey Hatcher and Andy Garcia, Key Largo begins previews this week at the Geffen Playhouse in advance of its official opening on November 14th.

"Key Largo" is adapted by Jeffrey Hatcher and Andy Garcia
Andy Garcia stars in and co-wrote “Key Largo”

Frank McCloud (Danny Pino) is a veteran returning from his service in World War II. He goes to Key Largo, Florida to console the widow of a friend. When he gets to the hotel he finds that Johnny Rocco (Garcia) and his fellow mobsters have overtaken the hotel. An oncoming hurricane has Key Largo in its crosshairs and McCloud has to overcome both the impending weather and the gangsters.

Pino and Garcia are taking on roles made famous by Humphrey Bogart and Edward G. Robinson. Fans of the film might remember that Lauren Bacall, Lionel Barrymore and Claire Trevor (who won an Academy Award for her performance) also appeared in the film. Those roles are being played by Rose McIver, Tony Plana and Joely Fisher.

"Key Largo" is directed by Doug Hughes
John Lee Beatty’s scenic design for “Key Largo”

But don’t expect this to be a strict adaptation of either the film or the original play. This play is billed as a “bold reimagining” of the Anderson play.

Doug Hughes, the director of such Broadway shows as DoubtJunkThe Father and the Geffen Playhouse production of Farragut North leads this production. Arturo Sandoval has composed the music for the production.

Key Largo will play at the Geffen Playhouse through December 10th.

For tickets go here. Note that at press time many performances were already close to sold out.

All images courtesy of the Geffen Playhouse.

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Andy Garcia and the CineSon All Stars https://culturalattache.co/2018/08/05/andy-garcia-cineson-stars-2/ https://culturalattache.co/2018/08/05/andy-garcia-cineson-stars-2/#respond Sun, 05 Aug 2018 19:53:12 +0000 http://culturalattache.co/?p=3599 Geffen Playhouse

August 10-11

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If you only know Andy Garcia from his roles in such films as The UntouchablesOceans Eleven and currently in Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again, then you are missing out on the other side of him. His deep connection to the music of his native Cuba run deep. He will be celebrating the 100th anniversary of Israel “Cachao” Lopez on Friday and Saturday night in two concerts at the Geffen Playhouse with the CineSon All Stars.

Cachao, as he was affectionally nicknamed, was a groundbreaking Afro-Cuban bassist. Along with his brother Orestes, they created the mambo rhythm. Members of Cachao’s band are part of the CineSon All Stars.

Garcia won a Grammy Award in 2004 for Best Tropical Latin Album for ¡Ahora Si! 

If you are thinking you’ll have a quiet night, just relaxing to some music, think again. You’ll be hard-pressed not to be dancing in the aisles.

Photo Courtesy of RAM Entertainment

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Andy García & Cineson All-Stars https://culturalattache.co/2018/01/02/andy-garcia-cineson-stars/ https://culturalattache.co/2018/01/02/andy-garcia-cineson-stars/#respond Tue, 02 Jan 2018 16:34:04 +0000 http://culturalattache.co/?p=1643 Catalina Bar & Grill

January 5-6

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Most people know Andy García as the actor who appeared in Ocean’s ElevenThe Godfather Part III and When a Man Loves a Woman. But the actor, who was born in Cuba, is an accomplished musician and singer and a fierce advocate of the music from his home country.

This weekend (Friday and Saturday to be exact) he takes to the stage with the Cineson All-Stars at Catalina Bar & Grill in Hollywood.

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