There are certain things we are supposed to do to live cultured lives: spend a year in New York City, see Paris with someone you love and to that, it's not too much to add, see Al Pacino on Broadway in "The Merchant of Venice," which is now slightly easier since the run was extended to Feb. 20.
Pacino performed this play last summer in Central Park at The Public Theater. He is Shylock. Every pore of his being pretty much screams the moneylender of Renaissance Venice. He gives an amazing performance in a play that, at three hours, could be shorter.
Still, who wants to mess with Shakespeare? Director Daniel Sullivan's interpretation at the Broadhurst Theater is artful. The story revolves around Antonio (Byron Jennings), a merchant who is positive his investments will pay off soon, so he lends his younger friend, Bassanio (David Harbour), money he doesn't have.
Pacino performed this play last summer in Central Park at The Public Theater. He is Shylock. Every pore of his being pretty much screams the moneylender of Renaissance Venice. He gives an amazing performance in a play that, at three hours, could be shorter.
Still, who wants to mess with Shakespeare? Director Daniel Sullivan's interpretation at the Broadhurst Theater is artful. The story revolves around Antonio (Byron Jennings), a merchant who is positive his investments will pay off soon, so he lends his younger friend, Bassanio (David Harbour), money he doesn't have.
- 1/6/2011
- by editorial@zap2it.com
- Pop2it
Al Pacino has won rave reviews for his Broadway performance in The Merchant Of Venice, with critics praising the Hollywood actor's turn as "dynamic" and one of the best of the season.
The Godfather star tackles the role of Shylock opposite actress Lily Rabe in the Shakespeare play.
The show officially launched at New York's Broadhurst Theatre earlier this month but the press opening was postponed until Saturday, after Rabe was forced to take a leave of absence following the death of her actress mother, Jill Clayburgh, days before the scheduled date.
But the delay has not affected the pair's chemistry on stage and critics have given The Merchant of Venice top marks.
The New York Times' Ben Brantley writes, "Giving what promises to be the performances of this season, Lily Rabe, as Portia the heiress, and Al Pacino, as Shylock the usurer, invest the much-parsed trial scene of this fascinating, irksome work with a passion and an anger that purge it of preconceptions."
He adds the play "feels utterly fluid and original."
The Wall Street Journal hails Pacino as "a galvanic Shylock", while the New York Post congratulates director Daniel Sullivan for producing a "fast-paced, engaging, accessible" play.
And the New York Daily News critic Joe Dziemianowicz admits he is in awe of Pacino: "He's an actor known for big whoo-ha-sized portraits, but Pacino is a study in control on stage. He makes his shaggy Shylock dynamic and believable. He's slightly eccentric, always compelling, right down to deliberate a singsongy cadence that seems intended to irritate."
It's the second time Pacino has wowed theatre critics this year - he led the cast in a production of The Merchant of Venice in New York's Central Park this summer.
The Godfather star tackles the role of Shylock opposite actress Lily Rabe in the Shakespeare play.
The show officially launched at New York's Broadhurst Theatre earlier this month but the press opening was postponed until Saturday, after Rabe was forced to take a leave of absence following the death of her actress mother, Jill Clayburgh, days before the scheduled date.
But the delay has not affected the pair's chemistry on stage and critics have given The Merchant of Venice top marks.
The New York Times' Ben Brantley writes, "Giving what promises to be the performances of this season, Lily Rabe, as Portia the heiress, and Al Pacino, as Shylock the usurer, invest the much-parsed trial scene of this fascinating, irksome work with a passion and an anger that purge it of preconceptions."
He adds the play "feels utterly fluid and original."
The Wall Street Journal hails Pacino as "a galvanic Shylock", while the New York Post congratulates director Daniel Sullivan for producing a "fast-paced, engaging, accessible" play.
And the New York Daily News critic Joe Dziemianowicz admits he is in awe of Pacino: "He's an actor known for big whoo-ha-sized portraits, but Pacino is a study in control on stage. He makes his shaggy Shylock dynamic and believable. He's slightly eccentric, always compelling, right down to deliberate a singsongy cadence that seems intended to irritate."
It's the second time Pacino has wowed theatre critics this year - he led the cast in a production of The Merchant of Venice in New York's Central Park this summer.
- 11/15/2010
- WENN
Time Stands Still, the acclaimed Tony nominated Best Play by Pulitzer Prize winner Donald Margulies, directed by Tony Award winner Daniel Sullivan, and starring Laura Linney, Brian d'Arcy James, Eric Bogosian, and Christina Ricci opens tonight, Thursday, October 7 at the Cort Theatre (138 W. 48th Street). The play resumed performances on Thursday, September 23 and BroadwayWorld is pleased to bring you these new clips featuring Christina Ricci!
- 10/7/2010
- BroadwayWorld.com
New York, Sep 13 – Christina Ricci is all set to star in Alicia Silverstone’s role in the Broadway play ‘Time Stands Still’.
“She’s played such a variety of roles on film,” the New York Daily News quoted ‘Time Stands Still’ director Daniel Sullivan as saying.
“You can see from those movies that she has intelligence and a wonderful sense of humor and can deploy it,” he added.
On Broadway, Ricci plays Mandy, an event planner whose publisher fiance (Eric Bogosian) has to defend her lightweight career to his war-correspondent.
“She’s played such a variety of roles on film,” the New York Daily News quoted ‘Time Stands Still’ director Daniel Sullivan as saying.
“You can see from those movies that she has intelligence and a wonderful sense of humor and can deploy it,” he added.
On Broadway, Ricci plays Mandy, an event planner whose publisher fiance (Eric Bogosian) has to defend her lightweight career to his war-correspondent.
- 9/13/2010
- by News
- RealBollywood.com
Al Pacino and 'The Merchant of Venice' are moving to Broadway.The Public Theatre has announced that following an eight-week run at Central Park's Delacorte Theatre, Pacino will relocate to Broadway as Shylock in the Shakespeare comedy this fall, reports CBS News.Opening Oct. 19 at the Broadhurst Theatre, the production will run through Jan. 9.The current production stars Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Lily Rabe and Byron Jennings.Directed by Daniel Sullivan, it will be produced by the Public Theatre with Jeffrey Richards and Jerry Frankel.
- 7/27/2010
- Filmicafe
Washington, July 27 – Al Pacino and ‘The Merchant of Venice’ are moving to Broadway.
The Public Theatre has announced that following an eight-week run at Central Park’s Delacorte Theatre, Pacino will relocate to Broadway as Shylock in the Shakespeare comedy this fall, reports CBS News.
Opening Oct. 19 at the Broadhurst Theatre, the production will run through Jan. 9.
The current production stars Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Lily Rabe and Byron Jennings.
Directed by Daniel Sullivan, it will be produced by the Public Theatre with Jeffrey Richards and Jerry Frankel. (Ani)...
The Public Theatre has announced that following an eight-week run at Central Park’s Delacorte Theatre, Pacino will relocate to Broadway as Shylock in the Shakespeare comedy this fall, reports CBS News.
Opening Oct. 19 at the Broadhurst Theatre, the production will run through Jan. 9.
The current production stars Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Lily Rabe and Byron Jennings.
Directed by Daniel Sullivan, it will be produced by the Public Theatre with Jeffrey Richards and Jerry Frankel. (Ani)...
- 7/27/2010
- by News
- RealBollywood.com
New York -- Al Pacino and "The Merchant of Venice" will soon be on the move.The Public Theater announced Monday that following an eight-week run at Central Park's Delacorte Theater, Pacino will relocate to Broadway as Shylock in the Shakespeare comedy this fall.Opening Oct. 19 at the Broadhurst Theatre, the production will run through Jan. 9. No further casting announcements were made.Directed by Daniel Sullivan, it will be produced by the Public Theater with Jeffrey Richards and Jerry Frankel.Copyright 2010 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
- 7/26/2010
- backstage.com
Tate Donovan is returning to Broadway for the first time in over a decade, starring opposite Oscar winner Frances McDormand in the world premiere of Good People.
The Damages star will play Mike, a past fling of McDormand's character Marge, in the new David Lindsay-Abaire play, about the hopes and struggles of making it in America.
The production will be directed by Tony winner Daniel Sullivan.
Donovan last appeared on Broadway in the 1999 production of David Hare play Amy’s View, which co-starred Judi Dench and Samantha Bond.
Good People is scheduled to begin previews on 8 February with opening night set for 3 March.
The Damages star will play Mike, a past fling of McDormand's character Marge, in the new David Lindsay-Abaire play, about the hopes and struggles of making it in America.
The production will be directed by Tony winner Daniel Sullivan.
Donovan last appeared on Broadway in the 1999 production of David Hare play Amy’s View, which co-starred Judi Dench and Samantha Bond.
Good People is scheduled to begin previews on 8 February with opening night set for 3 March.
- 7/15/2010
- WENN
Fargo star Frances McDormand has become the latest film star to make stage plans. She's committed to star in the Manhattan Theatre Club's world premiere production of Good People, a play written by David Lindsay-Abaire and directed by Daniel Sullivan. The plan will open March 3 at Mtc's Samuel J. Friedman Theatre on West 47th Street. She'll play a struggling South Boston woman who has lost another job and sees a potential end to her struggles in an old fling who has escaped the neighborhood and made his fortune. Lindsay-Abaire, one of the writers who took a crack at the [...]...
- 7/7/2010
- by MIKE FLEMING
- Deadline
Noel Gallagher's stage attacker has been given a 12-month house arrest sentence. Daniel Sullivan shoved the former Oasis rocker from behind during a performance at the V Festival in Toronto in 2008.
Gallagher was playing with his former band in September 2008 at the music festival when he was suddenly pushed from behind and fell on the monitor speakers. His brother and bandmate Liam, along with the security personnel, pursued Sullivan and took him away.
The now-solo singer was taken to the hospital following the attack. He suffered three broken ribs. The band was also forced to postpone their subsequent concerts.
Sullivan pleaded guilty to assault causing bodily harm during a hearing in November last year. At the hearing at the Ontario Court of Justice Thursday, he was sentenced to 12 months of house arrest.
Gallagher was playing with his former band in September 2008 at the music festival when he was suddenly pushed from behind and fell on the monitor speakers. His brother and bandmate Liam, along with the security personnel, pursued Sullivan and took him away.
The now-solo singer was taken to the hospital following the attack. He suffered three broken ribs. The band was also forced to postpone their subsequent concerts.
Sullivan pleaded guilty to assault causing bodily harm during a hearing in November last year. At the hearing at the Ontario Court of Justice Thursday, he was sentenced to 12 months of house arrest.
- 4/22/2010
- icelebz.com
A man who attacked former Oasis guitarist Noel Gallagher on stage has been sentenced to 12 months house arrest, says the BBC. The musician suffered three broken ribs after being pushed by Daniel Sullivan while performing at Toronto's 2008 Virgin Music Festival. The band were forced to scrap later concerts in Paris and New York due to Gallagher's injuries. Sullivan had earlier pleaded guilty to causing bodily harm. (more)...
- 4/21/2010
- by By Mike Moody
- Digital Spy
Noel Gallagher has delivered a witness statement to a court describing his injuries from a gig in 2008. The former Oasis guitarist and songwriter was attacked by crowd member Daniel Sullivan at the V Festival in Canada, suffering three cracked ribs. The Sun quotes Gallagher as claiming: "I would describe the impact and shock as feeling as if I had been hit by a bus. "I ended up in a heap. I have been told (more)...
- 3/24/2010
- by By Paul Millar
- Digital Spy
With the start of rehearsals for the 2010 season of New York's Shakespeare in the Park just a few weeks away, all of us at the Public Theater's Shakespeare Initiative have started singing this year's version of our favorite Lovin' Spoonful song:Hot town, summer in the city,Al Pacino's neck gettin' dirty and gritty.Pacino will play Shylock in "The Merchant of Venice" in a production directed by Daniel Sullivan that will run at Central Park's Delacorte Theater alongside "The Winter's Tale," directed by Michael Greif. A single company will perform both plays in rotating repertory—the first time the Public has assembled a Shakespeare rep company since Joe Papp's Delacorte productions of the "Henry VI" plays in 1972. (Due to scheduling conflicts, Pacino will appear only in "Merchant.")For most New Yorkers, summer in the city may well mean "People lookin' half dead/Walkin' on the sidewalk/Hotter than a match head,...
- 2/24/2010
- backstage.com
Noel Gallagher has been given permission speak in court before the sentencing of the man who assaulted him during a concert in 2008. A Toronto judge has approved a request from the former Oasis guitarist to read a victim impact statement before 48-year-old Pickering building contractor Daniel Sullivan is sentenced, the Toronto Star reports. Sullivan's defence lawyer had asked Ontario Justice Richard Schneider to reject Gallagher's request and said that the musician should not "control the proceedings", (more)...
- 2/8/2010
- by By Mayer Nissim
- Digital Spy
As if the reality of media layoffs and waning newspaper readerships wasn't enough of a reason for journalists to take up drinking, along comes Broadway's, Time Stands Still, a play that focuses on the emotional breakdown of a war correspondent. Written by Donald Margulies and directed by Daniel Sullivan, Time Stands Still touches on the always relevant, yet often sidelined, subject of journalism. This at a time when the profession is battling e-readers and blogs -- formats that erase the desire for hard copy newspapers and day-late stories. While Time Stands Still lacks enough focus to drive home the point that hard working journalists give up comfort and love to pursue their calling, the subject is touched upon throughout the play. Laura Linney tackles the role of a war photojournalist that has recently suffered a near-death experience while reporting from the Middle...
- 2/2/2010
- by James Sims
- Huffington Post
In my house, we can recite lines from Clueless at whim, so to see Alicia Silverstone all grown up among the formidable theater talents in Donald Margulies' new play, Time Stands Still, is an Occasion. This fine Manhattan Theatre Club production, superbly directed by Daniel Sullivan at the Samuel J. Friedman Theatre opens with Sarah Goodwin (the excellent Laura Linney) in a full leg cast with facial wounds, a war photographer who has been badly injured by a roadside bomb in Iraq, entering the Williamsburg loft she shares with James Dodd (the equally excellent Brian D'Arcy James), a war journalist. Particularly attentive to her, and admittedly feeling guilty because he left Iraq before the incident, he has retrieved her from hospital in Germany. With silver tipped hair, Richard Ehrlich (an excellent Eric Bogosian), Sarah's former lover and editor, arrives with his new...
- 1/30/2010
- by Regina Weinreich
- Huffington Post
A man has admitted that he was drunk when he attacked Noel Gallagher during an Oasis gig in Canada last year. Daniel Sullivan pleaded guilty to assault causing bodily harm after tackling the guitarist at the Virgin Festival in September 2008 in Toronto. In a statement, lawyer Ruth Neilson said: "Sullivan managed to make his way up to the main stage area, run past the electrical cords set up along the stage, pass the drum kit and lunge toward Noel Gallagher, shoving him violently from behind with great force." She went on to say that the accused then (more)...
- 11/21/2009
- by By Rebecca Routledge
- Digital Spy
Lilting, lovely soundtrack from this summer’s Shakespeare in the Park production Each summer, a star-studded cast in conjunction with the Public Theater mounts a Shakespeare play in Central Park, for which people wait in the ticket line for hours. Brooklyn band Hem worked closely with Daniel Sullivan, the director of this year’s critically acclaimed Twelfth Night (starring Anne Hathaway, Audra McDonald, David Pittu, Jon Patrick Walker, and Raul Esparza), to create a soundtrack for the production, which has now been recorded and released....
- 11/10/2009
- Pastemagazine.com
Primary Stages (Casey Childs, Founder & Executive Producer; Andrew Leynse, Artistic Director; Elliot Fox, Managing Director) continues its 25th anniversary season of new works celebrating the female playwright with the New York premiere of The Night Watcher, written and performed by Charlayne Woodard. A solo play, The Night Watcher is directed by Tony Award-winner Daniel Sullivan. Performances begin Tuesday, September 22, 2009 for a limited run through Saturday, October 31, 2009 at Primary Stages. Opening night is Tuesday, October 6, 2009 at 7:00 p.m.
- 9/21/2009
- BroadwayWorld.com
Primary Stages (Casey Childs, Founder & Executive Producer; Andrew Leynse, Artistic Director; Elliot Fox, Managing Director) continues its 25th anniversary season of new works celebrating the female playwright with the New York premiere of The Night Watcher, written and performed by Charlayne Woodard. An inspiring solo play, The Night Watcher is directed by Tony Award-winner Daniel Sullivan. Performances begin Tuesday, September 22, 2009 for a limited run through Saturday, October 31, 2009 at Primary Stages at 59E59 Theaters (59 East 59th Street, between Park and Madison Avenues). Opening night is set for Tuesday, October 6, 2009 at 7:00 p.m.
- 8/24/2009
- BroadwayWorld.com
Just came from the closing night performance of Twelfth Night in Central Park, produced by the New York Shakespeare Festival/Public Theatre and it...was...fantastic. To bring together this wonderful cast of some of the great performers in the American theatre and watch them create one of the best shows I have seen in the Park in quite some time was a rare treat. Audra McDonald, Raul Esparza, Julie White, Jay O. Sanders, Michael Cumpsty, Hamish Linklater, David Pittu and Anne Hathaway were all remarkable. The entire cast, direction and production were remarkable. I left the theatre wondering, "Is there any piece Daniel Sullivan cannot direct?" To watch Anne Hathaway take her place alongside some of the greatest Broadway performers of her generation was something to see. Hathaway is not even 27 years old, yet seems to do nearly everything right, whether...
- 7/13/2009
- by Alec Baldwin
- Huffington Post
Emmy and Golden Globe Award winner Laura Linney ("John Adams," The Savages) will play the lead role in Manhattan Theatre Club's upcoming New York premiere of Time Stands Still by Pulitzer Prize winning playwright Donald Margulies. The limited engagement, to be directed by Tony winner Daniel Sullivan (Accent on Youth, Sight Unseen on Broadway, Brooklyn Boy, Dinner with Friends) will begin previews at Mtc's Samuel J. Friedman Theatre (261 West 47th Street) on Tuesday, January 5, 2010 in preparation for a Thursday, January 28, 2010 opening night. The production had previously been announced to play Mtc's New York City Center - Stage I.
- 6/30/2009
- BroadwayWorld.com
Primary Stages (Casey Childs, Founder & Executive Producer; Andrew Leynse, Artistic Director; Elliot Fox, Managing Director) is pleased to announce the addition of two directors to the 25th Anniversary Season celebrating the works of female playwrights: Pam MacKinnon will helm the world premiere production of A Lifetime Burning by Cusi Cram and Tony Award-winner Daniel Sullivan will stage the New York premiere of Charlayne Woodard's solo performance piece, The Night Watcher.
- 6/16/2009
- BroadwayWorld.com
The Public Theater (Artistic Director Oskar Eustis; Executive Director Andrew D. Hamingson) announced additional casting today for the Shakespeare in the Park production of Twelfth Night, directed by Daniel Sullivan. Herb Foster will play Valentine; Kevin Kelly will play Sea Captain; Tony nominee Stark Sands will play Sebastian; Baylen Thomas will play Curio; Jon Patrick Walker will play Fabian; and Tony Award winner Julie White will play Maria. Twelfth Night will feature original music by symphonic folk-rock band Hem.
- 4/30/2009
- BroadwayWorld.com
Manhattan Theatre Club is pleased to announce guests and dates for After Words, the popular discussion series at the Samuel J. Friedman Theatre (261 West 47th Street), which will feature friends, colleagues and scholars of the work of Samson Raphaelson. The series will kick off this Saturday, April 18 following the matinee performance of Accent On Youth with Grafton Nunes, Founding Dean of the Emerson College School of the Arts, and Daniel Sullivan, the Tony Award winning director of Accent On Youth. The discussion will be moderated by Lisa McNulty, Mtc's Artistic Associate.
- 4/17/2009
- BroadwayWorld.com
The Public Theater announced initial casting today for the Shakespeare in the Park production of Twelfth Night, directed by Daniel Sullivan and featuring the previously announced Anne Hathaway as Viola. Twelfth Night will run June 10-July 12 at the Delacorte Theater in Central Park with an official press opening on Thursday, June 25 at 8 p.m. Bank of America will return as lead sponsor of Shakespeare in the Park 2009.
- 4/15/2009
- BroadwayWorld.com
The Public Theater (Artistic Director Oskar Eustis; Executive Director Andrew D. Hamingson) announced today that the 2009 Shakespeare in the Park summer season will begin in June with a new production of William Shakespeare?s Twelfth Night directed by Daniel Sullivan and featuring Academy Award nominee Anne Hathaway as Viola. Twelfth Night will run June 9-July 12 at the Delacorte Theater in Central Park. In August, JoAnne Akalaitis will return to direct Euripides?s The Bacchae, translated by Nicholas Rudall, and featuring original music by Philip Glass. The Bacchae will run August 11-September 6.
- 2/12/2009
- BroadwayWorld.com
When he started playing around on the guitar, David Harbour says, he was doing so out of a sense of appreciation, to figure out how the greats like Eddie Van Halen and the metal guitarists do what they do. Even so, the 33-year-old film and stage actor knows his interest in a subject is rarely just idle curiosity."When I fall in love with something, I can get very single-minded and single-focused and sort of go into a zone about it," says Harbour, who makes his L.A. stage debut in the world premiere of the Donald Margulies play Time Stands Still at the Geffen Playhouse. "I just had to buy a crappy guitar from Guitar Center and just sort of see what they were doing."In terms of seeing movies or plays, I don't have that same sort of mystery that other people get when they watch," he continues.
- 2/12/2009
- by Evan Henerson
- backstage.com
The lure of a world premiere play by Pulitzer winner Donald Margulies (Dinner with Friends) directed by Tony Award winner Daniel Sullivan (Proof) is enticing enough to convince actors Anna Gunn (HBO's Deadwood, AMC's Breaking Bad), Alicia Silverstone (Clueless, Miss Match), David Harbour (Quantum of Solace, Revolutionary Road, State of Play) and Robin Thomas (Damages, Murphy Brown) to temporarily forgo the screens for a stint at the Geffen Playhouse. The second produced work in the Geffen's ongoing commission program, Time Stands Still opens February 11, 2009 on the theater's main stage.
- 1/21/2009
- BroadwayWorld.com
Keith Carradine is still probably best known for his role as a womanizing folk singer in the 1975 Robert Altman film Nashville, for which he also wrote and sang the Oscar-winning song "I'm Easy." Now he's about to play the mercurial, menacing Dr. Alex Farquhar in an Off-Broadway production of Anthony Horowitz's Mindgame, a mystery-thriller with twists and turns galore and no shortage of black comedy. "There is an implicit level of violence — a capacity for violence — that lies beneath his character," says Carradine. "There's the changeability of his nature. I thought that would be challenging and fun to do, more out of the pocket for me." In fact, Carradine was initially offered another, meeker role to play. Born in San Mateo, Calif., the 59-year-old actor says he has grappled with typecasting throughout his career, usually playing the sensitive anti-hero: "But also there was this rural patina applied to me.
- 10/31/2008
- by Simi Horwitz
- backstage.com
The man who pushed over Noel Gallagher during Oasis's set at Toronto's V Festival reportedly hid from security under the stage. Daniel Sullivan, 47, shoved Gallagher to the floor during the group's performance of 'Morning Glory'. He was later charged with assault. Virgin Canada spokesman Nathan Rosenberg declined to confirm how Sullivan breached security, saying that it may encourage other would-be attackers. "These (more)...
- 9/10/2008
- by By Simon Reynolds
- Digital Spy
The man who pushed over Noel Gallagher during Oasis's set at Toronto's V Festival reportedly hid from security under the stage. Daniel Sullivan, 47, shoved Gallagher to the floor during the group's performance of 'Morning Glory'. He was later charged with assault. Virgin Canada spokesman Nathan Rosenberg declined to confirm how Sullivan breached security, saying that it may encourage other would-be attackers. "These (more)...
- 9/10/2008
- by By Simon Reynolds
- Digital Spy
A man has been charged with assault after Noel Gallagher was knocked down on stage at a gig in Canada at the weekend. Toronto police confirmed that 47-year-old Daniel Sullivan has been charged in connection with the stage invasion. He is alleged to have shoved the Oasis guitarist to the ground before being pulled away by the band’s security. The incident took place during (more)...
- 9/9/2008
- by By Sarah Rollo
- Digital Spy
Boston Legal fans are already counting down to September 22, when ABC’s Boston Legal returns to television screens with its fifth season. Additionally, Boston Legal’s fourth season DVD will be available for purchase a day later on September 23. A couple of months ago, Fox announced that they will be releasing a 5-disc set containing the grueling fourth season of Boston Legal. The DVD is presented in Anamorphic Widescreen, with audio tracks in English Dolby Surround Sound and French Dolby Surround. The 926-minute, 20 episode-long season follows John Larroquette as he is recruited into the Boston office of Crane (William Shatner), Poole and Schmidt as a lawyer and love interest of Shirley Schmidt (Candice Bergen).
Meanwhile, another Boston Legal actor was supposedly set to appear on Broadway, but recent reports say that he has pulled out of that particular stint.
Variety reported last week that Craig Bierko, who appeared on Boston Legal as Jeffrey Coho,...
Meanwhile, another Boston Legal actor was supposedly set to appear on Broadway, but recent reports say that he has pulled out of that particular stint.
Variety reported last week that Craig Bierko, who appeared on Boston Legal as Jeffrey Coho,...
- 9/8/2008
- by BuddyTV
- buddytv.com
IMDb.com, Inc. takes no responsibility for the content or accuracy of the above news articles, Tweets, or blog posts. This content is published for the entertainment of our users only. The news articles, Tweets, and blog posts do not represent IMDb's opinions nor can we guarantee that the reporting therein is completely factual. Please visit the source responsible for the item in question to report any concerns you may have regarding content or accuracy.