Post by caitlen on May 25, 2009 0:44:40 GMT -5
Eric Bogosian pumped up by ‘Perforated Heart’
By Ira Kantor
Monday, May 25, 2009
In his new novel, “Perforated Heart,” playwright and Obie-winning actor Eric Bogosian introduces readers to Richard Morris, a middle-aged, womanizing author pining for the fame of his younger days while recuperating from heart surgery.
On the surface, Bogosian - who has taken turns on off-Broadway stages and film and television screens - may not have much in common with his character. But he created Morris as a means to reflect on his own creative restraints.
“As a guy who’s led a fairly domestic life for the last 30 years, I often would wonder, ‘Would I have been a better writer if I wasn’t changing diapers?’ ” the Pulitzer Prize nominee told the Herald in a phone interview from Chicago. Bogosian, 56, was in the Windy City on a book tour, which brings the Woburn native back to his home turf for readings and a performance next week. “I love my family life, but there are times when I think I need to be working more,” Bogosian said.
Known for his manic one-man shows (“Sex, Drugs, Rock & Roll” and “Drinking In America”) and acclaimed plays “Talk Radio” and “SubUrbia,” Bogosian spent nearly three decades as a dramatic volcano of social commentary. But he’s achieved far greater celebrity moving from the theater world to TV’s “Law and Order: Criminal Intent,” where he plays police Capt. Danny Ross. He says it’s his trickiest role yet.
“I’m very interested in the much more measured and steady and subtle acting that’s required for ‘Law and Order,’ ” he said. “And I’m not going to say it’s a small thing, because it isn’t. I need to prepare very carefully for things that I don’t even know anybody notices that I’m doing.”
Bogosian has no plans to stop writing plays anytime soon - he has a short piece premiering Friday at the Berkshire Playwrights Lab in Great Barrington - but, he says, writing novels gives him a different creative experience.
“I felt limited to some degree, with plays, as to what I can really talk about and think about,” he said. “I get to go into things that are a little more complicated in books. “But I don’t need to have an establishment tell me whether my work is good or not. I need the establishment to embrace my work so I can do more of it.”
Eric Bogosian reads from “Perforated Heart,” Tuesday, 7 p.m., at Woburn Public Library (Tickets $10; $5 with student ID) and Thursday, 7 p.m., at Porter Square Books, Cambridge (free). He also performs “Bitter Honey,” Wednesday, 8 p.m., at the NextDoor Theater, Winchester ( Tickets: $45;781-729-6398.)
news.bostonherald.com/entertainment/books/view/2009_05_25_Eric_Bogosian_pumped_up_by_%E2%80%98Perforated_Heart_/srvc=home&position=also
By Ira Kantor
Monday, May 25, 2009
In his new novel, “Perforated Heart,” playwright and Obie-winning actor Eric Bogosian introduces readers to Richard Morris, a middle-aged, womanizing author pining for the fame of his younger days while recuperating from heart surgery.
On the surface, Bogosian - who has taken turns on off-Broadway stages and film and television screens - may not have much in common with his character. But he created Morris as a means to reflect on his own creative restraints.
“As a guy who’s led a fairly domestic life for the last 30 years, I often would wonder, ‘Would I have been a better writer if I wasn’t changing diapers?’ ” the Pulitzer Prize nominee told the Herald in a phone interview from Chicago. Bogosian, 56, was in the Windy City on a book tour, which brings the Woburn native back to his home turf for readings and a performance next week. “I love my family life, but there are times when I think I need to be working more,” Bogosian said.
Known for his manic one-man shows (“Sex, Drugs, Rock & Roll” and “Drinking In America”) and acclaimed plays “Talk Radio” and “SubUrbia,” Bogosian spent nearly three decades as a dramatic volcano of social commentary. But he’s achieved far greater celebrity moving from the theater world to TV’s “Law and Order: Criminal Intent,” where he plays police Capt. Danny Ross. He says it’s his trickiest role yet.
“I’m very interested in the much more measured and steady and subtle acting that’s required for ‘Law and Order,’ ” he said. “And I’m not going to say it’s a small thing, because it isn’t. I need to prepare very carefully for things that I don’t even know anybody notices that I’m doing.”
Bogosian has no plans to stop writing plays anytime soon - he has a short piece premiering Friday at the Berkshire Playwrights Lab in Great Barrington - but, he says, writing novels gives him a different creative experience.
“I felt limited to some degree, with plays, as to what I can really talk about and think about,” he said. “I get to go into things that are a little more complicated in books. “But I don’t need to have an establishment tell me whether my work is good or not. I need the establishment to embrace my work so I can do more of it.”
Eric Bogosian reads from “Perforated Heart,” Tuesday, 7 p.m., at Woburn Public Library (Tickets $10; $5 with student ID) and Thursday, 7 p.m., at Porter Square Books, Cambridge (free). He also performs “Bitter Honey,” Wednesday, 8 p.m., at the NextDoor Theater, Winchester ( Tickets: $45;781-729-6398.)
news.bostonherald.com/entertainment/books/view/2009_05_25_Eric_Bogosian_pumped_up_by_%E2%80%98Perforated_Heart_/srvc=home&position=also