THEATRE PREVIEW
HAROLD
GOULD IN “THE SUBSTANCE OF FIRE” AT OLD GLOBE THEATRE
Published in KPBS On Air Magazine January
1996
'You can't make a living in theater,' his parents said. 'Unless, maybe, you teach.' So, after graduating from New York's State
College at Albany, and serving in the infantry in Eastern France, the dutiful
son, Harold Gould, went on to Cornell, and completed a Master's degree and
Ph.D. in Theatre. And he did, in fact,
teach. At Cornell, at Randolph Macon Women's College in Virginia, and at
UCLA. But once he arrived on the West
Coast, he decided to try his luck at making a living as an actor.
Cut to 1996. The 71
year-old Gould has appeared in more than 300 television shows, 20 films and 100
stage plays. But his doctorate wasn't
in vain. It brings him the perfect
measure of articulate erudition needed to play the imperious Isaac Geldhart,
centerpiece of “The Substance of Fire” by Jon Robin Baitz (through February 18,
on the Old Globe's Cassius Carter Centre Stage).
Geldhart is, according to New York Times theater critic Frank
Rich, "one of the most memorable and troubling characters to appear
onstage this season" (1991).
Geldhart, a holocaust survivor who has become a literary power-broker,
spews arcane illusions, laced with caustic wit and seething anger. He's a thrilling intellectual, emotional and
linguistic challenge for Gould.
"In the first half of the play," says Gould, "he is
cutting, sharp, almost brutally frank, combining contemporary argot with
elegant language. In the second half,
we see another aspect of the man. He's
kind of splayed open. More vulnerable,
struggling to find himself after he's cut off from what energized him and gave
him a reason for living."
Some critics have complained that the piece is more like two plays
than two acts. Not even the characters
remain the same, except for Geldhart, a man who lives every day with a profound
sense of guilt, anger and betrayal.
He battles his three emotionally scarred children for control of
his cerebral and specialized publishing house.
He loses. In act two, 3 1/2
years later, reclusive, depressed and alone, Isaac wrangles with a visiting
social worker. His ruthless
superciliousness and absolutism seem a long way from the affable, pensive
Gould.
"I relate to his keeping of high standards," says
Gould. "He believes that it's
necessary for people to operate at the highest level -- intellectually,
culturally, ethically and morally. He
hates the meretricious attitudes in our culture, and I relate to that... At times, he's a flawed individual. He can't relate in any compassionate way to
his children. He denigrates their
achievements. But I suppose every
parent finds that his kids don't come up to standards.....
"In the second part, he's struggling to gain connection to
human beings. It's such a trauma to be
uprooted by your kids.... Maybe he's
brought on his self-destruction. Maybe
he merits punishment. He excites a lot
of hostility and contempt. But he's
refreshing in that at least he's authentic; he's not a hypocrite. He's not very nice, but he is a very
interesting, very complex character.
That's what attracted me to him.
That, and the sharpness of the language."
After he saw the play in New York, Gould, who had earlier worked
at the Old Globe in “The Skin of Our Teeth” and “Love Letters”, called to say
he would love to do the role.
Everything was set for early 1992, but Baitz pulled the play as part of
a political/financial dispute between the Dramatists Guild (which represents
playwrights) and the League of Resident Theatres (organization of non-profit
theaters).
"The newness isn't there any more," says Gould. "The play's already been done in
regional theaters. But the challenge
still is. At my age, I'm only
interested in work that's challenging."
Recently, Gould has taken on two of the theater's great
challenges: Prospero in “The Tempest”
and “King Lear”. Those two
"tremendous and wonderful mines of discovery" took place at the Utah
Shakespeare Festival. The setting so
inspired Gould that he's building a home on the side of a mountain, two
thousand feet up from Cedar City, where the festival is held. He also has residences in Santa Monica, New
York and Palm Springs. He runs every
day, and works out with a personal trainer.
He and his wife of 45 years travel to Nebraska, Montana and Pasadena to
visit their children and grandchildren.
He doesn't seem to be slowing down, though he talks about it. He just did a Disney movie (an update of
"The Love Bug" with Dean Jones).
He periodically tours in Lynn Roth's one-man show, “Freud”. He and fellow-actor Alan Rosenberg are about
to take “Old Business”, a potent father-son confrontation, to Chicago and then
Off Broadway. And he can still be seen
on reruns of "Rhoda" and "The Golden Girls," as well as in
movie rentals of "The Sting," "Love and Death, "The Front
Page," and others. He relishes his
live readings of short stories and his extensive voiceover work.
He sounds content with what he's done and is doing. The Shakespeare was a life-affirming
experience. "It was an
eye-opener," Gould confesses.
"About my ability to imagine, to create, to call on my inner resources. And about my remaining capacity, and my
stamina." It's likely that Isaac
Geldhart will put all those skills to the test.
©1996 Patté Productions Inc.