Archive for the 'Sue Scott' Category

Las Cruces Newspaper Interview With Tim and Sue

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“A Prairie Home Companion’: From Lake Wobegon to Las Cruces
By S. Derrickson Moore/Sun-News reporter

LAS CRUCES — The folks of Lake Wobegon are coming for the first-ever Las Cruces live broadcast of “A Prairie Home Companion” from New Mexico State University’s Pan American Center on May 31.
Here on the Southwestern prairies, fans are eagerly awaiting the event, according to David O’Neill, “PHC’s” marketing director.
“We are very excited to be coming to Las Cruces and from the moment that Garrison (Keillor) made mention of our coming there in a New Year’s Eve special, we have been hearing from folks telling us how excited they are — we honestly have been given an incredible welcome have received a ton of the nicest messages from people in and around Las Cruces,” O’Neill said.
In phone interviews this week from their home base in Minneapolis, longtime cast members Tim Russell and Sue Scott talked about what it takes to bring the beloved PBS show to its fans every week.
“Usually we come into town the day before the show,” said Russell, whose motley crew of characters have been described by legendary show host and author Keillor as “the mafioso, callow youth, Yale smoothie, prickly curmudgeon, Paris boulevardier, Russian artiste, Swedish sourpuss and cowpoke president.”
This year, Russell has added some new voices to his repertoire.”Because it’s political season, I’m also doing John McCain and Barack Obama in addition to the current occupant” of the White House. “And sometimes I still bring out Al Gore,” said Russell, breaking into character to announce that “I didn’t really invent the Internet.”
He has a Monday through Friday show on a Minneapolis radio station and spends most weekends on the road with “PHC.”
“We’ve been on the road for the last six weeks,” said Russell, adding that broadcasts from the Midwestern environs envisioned by most “PHC” fans are rare these days.
“We actually do most of our shows on other locations: maybe 10 or 12 in the twin cities (Minneapolis-St. Paul) and all the rest, 24 or so, are on the road. I love to travel and enjoy going to museums in whatever city we’re in,” Russell said.
He said the show is full of surprises for the cast and rewrites continue until just before broadcast time.
“Garrison is a genius and what makes it fun for us is that we really don’t have to think about it. The writing is so good everything just falls into place. We’re always in hog heaven,” said Russell, who has been with the show since 1994.
There are also perks like the chance to hobnob with a highly diverse group of celebrities that range from legendary musicians to movie stars.
“Leon Redbone was just on the show,” said Russell.
He and Scott also have fond memories of the 2006 movie based on the show with an all-star cast that included Meryl Streep, Lily Tomlin and Lindsay Lohan.
“Lindsay calls me grandpa,” Russell reports.
Scott, a native of Tucson, Ariz., said she is looking forward to a visit to desert country. She’s been with the show since 1992 and said she has “the best job in show business. We are truly like a family. Some people have been with the show for 33 years, since the beginning. Garrison writes brilliant dialog and at 65 going on 66, he seems to have more energy and gets busier all the time.”
She has recently added Hillary Clinton to a list of characters that Keillor describes as “Lutheran lunch lady, grizzled waitress, supermodel, suburban mom, bimbo, harridan, harpy and siren.”
She and Russell also team as Barb and Jim, the popular Ketchup Advisory Board couple.
“I say that they are all my favorites because I don’t want any of my characters to feel left out. Tim is great with impersonations and I would say that I am more of a character actress. I try to find some kind of hook. Laura Bush is easier because of her thick Texas accent. Hillary is harder. I try to pick up something from her stump speeches,” she said.
Her adventures with “PHC” have included theme cruises with the cast and live broadcasts from exotic locales like Iceland.
“We broadcast to about 5 million fans in the United States but we’re aired in other English-speaking countries, on the BBC in London and in Ireland, Australia and New Zealand,” she said, and Internet streaming is making “PHC” a worldwide phenomenon.
She said an 18-wheeler with sets and equipment will roll into Las Cruces a few days before the May 31 broadcast, and a cast and crew of about 25 will gather for rehearsals on May 30.
“Garrison keeps doing rewrites and the script keeps evolving until broadcast time,” she said.
The “PHC” Web site recently announced that the musical guest will be Grammy Award-winning mandolin player and vocalist Chris Thile.
“We’ve been working to get this show here for three years. I’m really excited about this,” said Bobbie Welch, Pan Am’s special events coordinator, who reports that 3,000 of 4,500 available tickets were sold by this week.
“That includes almost all of the top-end tickets,” she said, adding that Pan Am officials are considering whether to open up additional seating areas to a maximum capacity of 5,300 seats for the show.

Cover Girl Sue Scott


imageActing Up
Veteran stage and voice actor Sue Scott gets ready to make her Hollywood debut, southwest Minneapolis style

By Erin Madsen Photos Todd Buchanan and Sarah Ause

Sue Scott glides into the café, quick to apologize for being late. I check the clock; she’s two minutes behind schedule. She just needs a second to grab some tea and half a chicken curry sandwich. She reappears, again apologizing since it’s taking forever to get the order. It’s only been one minute.

“This sandwich better be good,” Scott laughs, as she sits down. You can see Scott’s Southwest roots in her style—cowboy boots, a cow-hair belt, long jean skirt and green cable cardigan. She is comfortable. She’s tall, thin. There’s depth to her. She tells stories that make you want to listen.

For the last 14 years, more than four million listeners have dialed in to hear Scott’s vocal dexterity each week on Garrison Keillor’s “A Prairie Home Companion.” The radio show, broadcast live every Saturday evening, either from St. Paul’s Fitzgerald Theater or theaters across the country, will get a new audience when the Hollywood version, a fictional account of the show’s taping, opens June 9.

Just like the radio show, on which the 49-year-old develops and performs characters such as superhero reference librarian Ruth Harrison—a new recurring favorite of hers—Scott takes on the role of Donna, the make-up lady, in the film version of A Prairie Home Companion, co-written by Keillor, directed by Robert Altman, and starring an impressive ensemble cast that includes Lily Tomlin, Meryl Streep, Matthew Modine and Woody Harrelson.

“It was incredible fun to work with these people and the setting,” Scott says. “I was a stage actor … before I was a radio person. The scale and scope of [the movie] was something I had never been a part of. I’d marvel at … the amount of downtime, the stamina and endurance of these veterans in our field who do this all the time.

The cast was friendly and accessible, not to mention quick to compliment one another, Scott says. “Meryl Streep is a big fan of our radio show, and she told Tim Russell and I one night, ‘It’s so fun to meet you guys! I’ve been listening to your voices all these years.’ And Kevin Kline said something like that. And John C. Riley said, ‘I’ve been listening to you since I was a kid.’ And I went, ‘Careful. Don’t go there. You’re not that much younger than me.’ That was fun to be appreciated for what we do each week.”

While the film marks Scott’s Hollywood debut, the expert stage and voice actor has a list of credits that spans nearly 25 years in Minneapolis, where she lives with her husband, Ron Peluso, the artistic director for St. Paul’s Great American History Theatre. The couple, who’ve been together for 18 years, married for 10, live in a cozy rambler on the border of Minneapolis’s southwest lakes and St. Louis Park. (By coincidence, Tim Russell lives only two blocks away.) It’s an area that Scott has remained loyal to since 1982, when she was cast as a company member at the famed Dudley Riggs’ Brave New Workshop in Uptown.

Voices Carry
Anyone who watches Hollywood trailers or promos might have noticed, the film industry is luring celebrities to lend their voices to animated characters at an increasing rate. It’s a trend that Scott finds fascinating, namely because roles now being sought after were once a lesser … work form for actors. “In the old days, [celebrities] didn’t want that; that was left for people on our rung of the ladder,” she says. “You can listen to TV or movies and, oh, there’s Martin Sheen’s voice, oh, there’s so-and-so’s voice. They seek that out now.”

But that’s not to say there isn’t plenty of work available, Scott assures. In fact, she and Russell just signed L.A. agents—to compliment their local talent agents at Wehmann Agency—who can provide additional voice-work opportunities that cast a bigger net.

Scott considers “A Prairie Home Companion” to be a weekend gig, but she and the rest of the group pack a week’s worth of work into a day. They gather on Friday—either in St. Paul or a visiting theater—to go over the next night’s show. ” … It’s a great heads-up for us, gives us an idea of what to expect, the voices we need to create between Friday and Saturday,” she says.

The performers do get half an hour or so before Friday’s rehearsal to go over the script on their own. “So usually what we do is make quick vocal choices … based on what Garrison has written. There’s not a lot of time to [re-think your choices],” Scott says. “And then sometimes [Keillor] might guide you during rehearsal and say, ‘ … I think [the character] might be older than that,’ or my favorite, ‘I think she’s taller than that.’ At first you want to go, ‘Huh?’ And then I think, ‘OK, that’s a good challenge. I’m gonna make her sound taller.’”

After spending time working on the voices at home, Scott and the group convene again on Saturday afternoon so things can be rewritten, modified or simply polished. It’s not the last time things can change, she says, adding that sometimes the script can be rewritten backstage during the show. In times like that, having a background in improvisational theater comes in handy, even though Scott and Russell follow Keillor’s script. “As far as being ready to spin on a dime, I do think that my years in improv come into play,” she says. “And also all the years on the show. There are days, every once in a while, when everything’s sort of happening at the last minute and you think, ‘Boy, I’m glad I’m not a rookie.’”

Despite 14 years on the show, Scott considers herself to be fresh to it all, constantly learning and improving, striving for perfection, which she considers “a nice driving force.” She’s comfortable with the structure of the show, rarely gets nervous, but she does see how the experience has enriched her talents and skills. “I do think I’ve gotten better on the show, and I’ve certainly … added to my bag of tricks,” she says. “Am I sitting back on my laurels? Not at all. I still feel like the new kid.”

After Hours
Throughout the years, when the show would break from July through September for the season, Scott used to take on regional theater roles when schedules matched up. But lately, she’s been busy working on projects such as joining “A Prairie Home Companion” listeners for a cruise. The six-day cruise, filled with performances, workshops and “all things PHC,” took Scott to Nova Scotia last year, and will send her to Alaska this year and then Norway in 2007.

“We met some delightful people, a like-minded group of people,” Scott says of the trip to Nova Scotia. “The cruise line was complaining that the late-night bar and casino action was minimal in comparison to normal cruises. MPR listeners drink a lot of wine—not a big martini crowd or chugging margaritas, how-sick-can-I-get-later crowd. There were no belly-flop contests in the pool, or 20-year-olds running around barely clad. Yeah, it wasn’t that sort of crowd.”

On her personal down time, Scott retreats to her yard, which spans almost an acre, and is filled with 10 mature oak trees, several silver maples, and plenty of shade plants to keep the avid gardener busy. “I can have a Monday through Thursday when I’m in the yard all day. It’s a lot of work,” she says.

sueSince she travels a lot with the show, Scott says she prefers staying close to home during her time off. She and Peluso are “big DVD watchers” and like to hang out by the fireplace with a glass of wine. But they’ve created a new summer tradition: taking the black Mitsubishi Eclipse Spider they bought a few years ago for a two-week ramble across county and farm roads.

Due South
Scott’s deft humor and perceptiveness were fine-tuned growing up in Tucson, Ariz., where she remembers a creative, silly and thoughtful youth. Not your average reserved middle child, Scott excelled in theater and other performance outlets—even spending some time as a cheerleader for Cholla High School before enrolling at the University of Arizona to study theater.

“I was goofy. I was popular, but I was goofy. I was everyone’s friend—the silly one,” she says. “I was not the homecoming queen. However, [classmates] did nominate me to be homecoming queen just because there was this movement to say, ‘Why does it have to be … the pretty girls?’ And you go, ‘OK, that’s kind of a backhanded compliment.’ But I got enough nominations to actually be on the ballot with three other girls. I said, ‘Fine, I’ll be the token personality.’ I did not win. And I couldn’t be happier.”

Reality kept life’s breeziness grounded. Scott’s mother, Kay, suffered from severe rheumatoid arthritis from the time that Sue was born. Her younger brother, David, was born with spina bifida. Kay and David have both since passed away, but the struggles and limitations had a lasting effect on Scott, her father, Lee, and older sister Nancy. “There was a lot of focus on health needs and issues in our family,” she says. “But humor was encouraged, was the saving grace, was the levity that we needed to have in times of crisis. I think that informed my humor, and it also allowed me to grow up … with a clear picture that life is not about me. And I’m grateful for that.

“My brother was my biggest and best audience,” Scott continues. “And my parents—David had a very challenged life—and I know they, in hindsight, were just thrilled that we had so much humor in the home. A lot of it was about the handicaps and stuff, silly things that if people would hear us in the hallway, they’d go, ‘Oh my God! What are you talking about?’

“We’d go on vacations to California and there’d be two wheelchairs in the back of the station wagon that’d be banging all the way to California. It would drive you nuts! You’d have to pull over every 10 miles and move the pillows and towels [that were padding the chairs]. And that would work for a while and then the vibrations would start again—bang, bang, bang, bang, bang! That kind of stuff. And we would giggle and laugh. Other people would be like, ‘Don’t make fun of the fact that you have to have two wheelchairs in the back of your car.’ But that was life. I didn’t know life any differently. I thought every family had people like that.”

Despite geography, Scott remains very close to her father, a retired college professor, guidance counselor and Methodist minister, and her sister, who recently started her own special-ed tutoring business in Seattle.

Lakeside Living
For someone who grew up in the desert, where “you’re lucky if water comes out of the faucet,” Scott says that settling along Minneapolis’s chain of lakes area was a no-brainer when she arrived in the Twin Cities.

She and Peluso have a strong history with the area’s lakes: they were married in the Calhoun Beach Club’s solarium in July 1996. Passing up an outdoor wedding, Scott says she wanted the beauty of the outdoors without stressing about the weather. With open French windows, guests enjoyed the beauty of the day—made all the more special with Lee Scott officiating the ceremony and “A Prairie Home Companion” musician Pat Donohue playing the Wedding March on guitar. “It was just magical,” Sue Scott says.

After blowing past the hour and a half set aside for the interview (we’ve clocked 2 hours and 17 minutes), Scott is back to her old tricks, apologizing—this time for talking too much. We stand and continue talking as we head toward the door. She turns, hugs me like a good friend. “This was fun! We’ll have to get together again so you can tell me all about you.”

I know we’d have plenty to talk about. Because, as luck would have it, I wasn’t the homecoming queen either.

Sue Scott: Ready to Improvise & Do Makeup

PHC_05311_s“Prairie Home Companion” regular cast member and voice-over talent, Sue Scott is delighted to play “Donna, the makeup lady” in Robert Altman’s “Prairie Home Companion” movie that begins filming in July in St. Paul, Minnesota. As Scott told Minneapolis Star Tribune writer, Deborah Caulfield Rybak, “‘I don’t get to kiss anybody, but I’ll get to touch all their faces,’ she joked. ‘I’ll be putting makeup on all the guys.’” Scott is also looking forward to working with Robert Altman’s trademark improvisational filming technique. Read more from Sue Scott (and Tim Russell) regarding Altman’s film in “Hollywood converges on St. Paul’s Fitzgerald Theater.”

Hollywood converges on St. Paul’s Fitzgerald Theater
By Deborah Caulfield Rybak
Minneapolis Star Tribune

July 5 2005

ST. PAUL — It was high noon on a hot, sticky Thursday. Outside St. Paul’s Fitzgerald Theater, Exchange Street was quiet and deserted.

Inside, it was a different story. The Fitz, normally deserted on a weekday, was crawling with workers. Carpenters hammered in the basement, painters decked the lobby with dropcloths, and grips wrangled racks of high-powered lights onstage. Wires dangled from the balcony. Men huddled, hands clenched around Starbucks cups, conversing intently in a cinematic language unintelligible to the average person.

Their no-nonsense industriousness was entirely justified — time was of the essence. In a matter of days, it would be lights, camera, action for one of the most prestigious projects ever to be filmed in the Twin Cities. On Wednesday, cameras started rolling on “Prairie Home Companion,” a “comic fable” based on Garrison Keillor’s public-radio show.

The high-profile nature of the cast — including Meryl Streep, Kevin Kline, Lily Tomlin, Woody Harrelson and Lindsay Lohan — is matched by its behind-the-camera talent: storied director Robert Altman, who has made “M*A*S*H,” “Nashville” and “Gosford Park,” among dozens of other films.

Keillor wrote the screenplay and will play himself in the film, which is a backstage story about the last days of a radio variety show suddenly canceled after 30 years on the air. Plenty of other local talent will appear on screen, as well. “PHC” regulars Tim Russell and Sue Scott have small parts. Sound-effects wizard Tom Keith and the show’s band will appear as themselves. Frequent musical guests Robin and Linda Williams and Jearlyn Steele will perform.

In a classic case of art imitating, well, art, “PHC” the movie is coming together a lot like its radio inspiration — at the last minute. Financing took longer than expected and pushed back the start date several times, from last fall, to February, to June. Planning for the production has been crunched into a claustrophobic window practically on top of the movie’s start date.

Stars’ schedules were cramped as well, and some previously announced performers, such as Lyle Lovett, Tom Waits and Willie Nelson, had to drop out. Others, including Streep, will only be in town for a short time. As a result, a two- to three-month pre-production schedule was shortened to a paltry three weeks, and the shooting schedule also was cut short, to 25 days. Altman’s producers are used to filmmaking on the fly — it’s part of the director’s style.

“Bob works fast,” said producer Josh Astrachan. “He always has and he will be again now.”

Very little prep time

However, producer David Levy acknowledged that the tight schedule had “impacted our prep” and that “in a perfect world, we’d probably take another week of shooting time to get this done.”

Altman himself was silent on the matter. Levy said the director “didn’t feel he had anything to say about the film at this point in the production.”

“We shipped a semi load of stuff out of here three days ago — and now there’s this!” longtime Fitzgerald jack-of-all-trades Dan Zimmermann said wonderingly, as he gestured around the theater’s basement.

Where a regimented assortment of steel storage shelves, stacks of lumber and paint-can clutter had stood just days before, whimsy now reigned. It was a dressing room with freshly painted frog green walls, apparently furnished out of the 1940s. A worn Oriental carpet covered the concrete floor. Feather boas hung on the walls, and an orange-print scarf drooped languorously from an overhead light fixture. Racks of pink and black taffeta slips and other garish costumes stood at the ready, and several hat trees were semi-filled with an odd assortment of women’s chapeaux.

In short, they were just the kind of trappings you could find at a funky 30-year-old radio show that had been furnished at first with old theatrical odds and ends, then never updated.

Scott wandered around the newly transformed basement and marveled at the transition, especially that of the “PHC” lunchroom, which was now a makeup studio, the domain of her character, Donna, the makeup lady.

She expected to be cast as herself in the movie, and was delighted to get an actual role.

“I don’t get to kiss anybody, but I’ll get to touch all their faces,” she joked. “I’ll be putting makeup on all the guys.”

Russell described his character, Al, the stage manager, as “a dour personality; sort of Midwestern and not unlike my own, if you ask my wife.” An added plus: “I get a line with just about everyone in the film.”

The rushed schedule doesn’t faze him a bit. “Garrison runs his show on a tight time schedule, so this is pretty normal for us.”

Trademark technique

Scott got a full dose of Altman’s trademark filming technique during a recent meeting with the director. It’s one of the reasons that high-profile actors forgo big salaries to appear in his modestly budgeted films.

All of the actors wear microphones at all times, which produces Altman’s signature overlapping dialogue.

“He said there would be three to four cameras going at all times,” said Scott. “So we have to improvise even when we’re not in a scene.”

Also improvising will be extras chosen from the 1,000-plus people who registered with the production during the past two weeks. Debbie DeLisi, whose New York-based company is supervising extra casting, said, “the amount of interest and talent has amazed us.”

On the surface, Keillor and Altman differ dramatically.

Keillor is a soft-spoken, shy and often silent man whose gentle humor can mask a sardonic edge. Altman is a boisterous maverick whose frequent rants against mainstream Hollywood may explain why the gifted director hasn’t yet been honored with an Academy Award.

Keillor is a solitary writer whose words rarely are changed by anyone except him. Altman’s filmmaking style, which leaves room for unscripted moments that can transform a film, has often led to clashes with screenwriters.

Yet, it’s that last-minute editing style that brings both men together.

“He’s very open to surprises,” said Keillor in a recent e-mail. “I asked him if he’d accept my writing an angel into the movie and he thought about it and said, `Yes, but no aura.’ So she’s in [played by Virginia Madsen] and he’s come to like her a lot.”

Keillor also is prepared to see his screenplay change during filming — within limits.

“I draw the line at animals or small children. If he decides to include a dog on a leash held by a 10-year-old girl with long curly blond hair, we’ve got problems.”

Sue Scott in the New York Times: "She Speaks Fluent Prairie"

nytARTS AND LEISURE DESK | May 29, 2005, Sunday
TELEVISION/RADIO; She Speaks Fluent Prairie
By JOANNE KAUFMAN (NYT)

It’s a little after 3 p.m. on a Saturday in early April, and Sue Scott, as a “Prairie Home Companion” production assistant explains, “is doing her homework.”

Ms. Scott, the show’s sole female cast member, is cramming for the 6 p.m. performance, which involves getting in touch with the array of alter egos she plays on the weekly radio variety show. Ms. Scott, 48, who is in the middle of her 13th season, is known to the show’s listeners as the aptly named Sugar, the sweet if unrefined outer-borough-born girlfriend of Guy Noir, private detective. She is also Marlene Brower, a blue-collar Minnesotan who works as a spokeswoman for the duct tape industry and says “ja” more often than the farmer’s daughter, and Marlene’s successor, the super-model valley girl Cynthia Maxwell. In addition, she’s the fearsome and officious, full-of-herself psychologist Judith Flexner, a characterization inspired by the late astronomer Carl Sagan. And she is middle-American everywife Barb -”These are the good years for Jim and me” - in the faux public service spots sponsored by “The Catsup Board.”

All these, and sundry harried waitresses, harridans, hookers and harpies, sirens, sleazes, sob sisters and sexpots - the kind of woman whose jeans are so tight you can read the numbers on her driver’s license. Accents? Ms. Scott’s got a million of them, from the Deep South to the frozen North. But today she will be playing them at Town Hall in New York City, for a grateful audience of culture consumers. Though just part of the four-and-half-million fans nationwide, this demographic has shown itself to be so devoted to the show that the whole cast now swings through town each year for a monthlong victory lap, playing to sold-out houses and grateful applause…

…Figuring out how to play to the coasts without ridiculing the heartland can be a difficult balancing act. But Mr. Keillor gives Ms. Scott free rein to create her characters - “whatever it is I hear when I read the script,” she says. “I pulled Sugar out of the hat, based on everything from Gracie Allen to old movies and Broadway shows.”…

…Mr. Keillor decided, in the late 80’s, to move to New York and write full time. When he thought matters a few years later and returned to Minneapolis and to the Minnesota Public Radio microphone, “all the producers at the station knew who I was,” Ms. Scott says. “But they told me: ‘You’re on your own. It’s not an automatic in. Garrison needs to like you, Garrison needs to cast you, Garrison needs to hire you.”

He did, he did, he did. There was a cast party after Ms. Scott’s first show, and Mr. Keillor approached Ron Peluso, the actress’s husband and the artistic director of the History Theater in St. Paul, to offer congratulations. “He told him I had the Minnesota ‘o,’ but that I really had the ‘r.’ ” says Ms. Scott.

“And my husband said ‘Yeah, and she’s not even from here.’ Garrison had forgotten about my being from Tucson, and he said ‘She’s not from Minnesota?’ When I heard that I thought ‘Okay, my first week is my last week.’ “

Not a chance. “Sue Scott is my daughter’s hero,” Mr. Keillor wrote in an e-mail message. “She is 7, and in some ways so is Sue Scott. She is vibrant, Ethel Merman, Katharine Hepburn, Cherry Jones, Sue Scott - if you see them you know it’s them.”

Soon, it appears, more and more people will be seeing Ms. Scott. “Prairie Home Companion” is expanding its field of operations to include mid-week “concert versions” that are not intended for broadcast, and next month Robert Altman will begin shooting a movie based on the show. The cast includes Kevin Kline, Meryl Streep, Lily Tomlin, Lindsay Lohan, Woody Harrrelson, John C. Reilly - and Ms. Scott. “We were told originally we’d be playing ourselves, but it changes constantly,” said Ms. Scott.

… “I kind of watch what Garrison goes through,” Ms. Scott said, “people approaching him in a restaurant while he’s mid-bite and assuming he’ll drop what he’s doing and take a picture with them. I [usually] don’t have to go through that.

“One time after a Town Hall show, Tim and I went to a restaurant around the corner. It wasn’t very crowded, but there was a big table of people who were celebrating a birthday and had been to the broadcast. They recognized us and were sending over food and birthday cake and asking for pictures and autographs.”

Meanwhile, across the room sat Nathan Lane, whose presence went unnoticed and unheralded…”And Nathan was staring at us,” said Ms. Scott, “and I’m sure he was thinking ‘Who are these people?’ “

She shrugged and headed back onstage to rehearse a “Guy Noir” segment that has her cast as a self-centered Manhattanite. “She’s pushy, but I chose not to give her a big thick New York accent, which would be the expected thing,” Ms. Scott explained. “Now that I’ve said the part out loud, I may make some changes in tone and emphasis. But Garrison hasn’t corrected me.

“No news is good news.”

Copyright (c) 2005 by The New York Times Co. Reprinted with permission.