Marcia Haufrecht[1] is an American actress, playwright and director, as well as a noted acting teacher and coach.[2] A life member of The Actors Studio,[3] and a longtime member of The Ensemble Studio Theatre,[4] she is also the founder and artistic director of the Off-Off-Broadway company (and venue), The Common Basis Theatre (originally The Common Ground Theatre).[5][6]
Early life
Haufrecht was the first of three children born to Herbert and Judith Haufreucht,[a] the former a noted pianist, composer, folklorist and editor.[8][9] A Manahattan native, born and bred, Haufrecht attended Performing Arts High School, graduating in 1954 as a dancer.
Career
Dance
Haufrecht said that Broadway was scarcely clamoring for "a barefoot, modern dancer",[10] much less for one of Haufrecht's diminutive stature and limited experience.[11] She made her Off-Broadway debut as an actress that September at the Cherry Lane Theatre, with a small part in the Studio 12 [b] limited-run revival of Jean-Paul Sartre's The Flies.[15] Her Broadway and her professional dancing debuts occurred two months later, when she was signed for the musical, Plain and Fancy.[16] The show's choreographer, Helen Tamiris (a former colleague of Haufrecht's father) was instrumental in being included in the show.[10] The show's producers changed Haufrecht's professional name to Howard, and so she remained for at least six years.[17]
In the summer of 1955, Haufrecht toured nationally with Can-Can,[18][19] a part that she attributed to fortuitous timing:
I think the only reason they hired me was because it was in the dead of summer, and the only people that showed up to the audition were strippers; they weren't really dancers. So they had to hire me; I was the only dancer that showed up.[11]
Before she was 20, Haufrecht turned her attention to acting, as she told The Montreal Gazette in 1969, "because I hated being part of the background. I felt so superfluous. And I felt I had something to say... It was my ego."[20] In 2012, Haufrecht said that her early career change, however rewarding in the long run, was born of necessity:
After I was done with Can-Can, I auditioned for a lot of shows, and I couldn't get anything... One day, I auditioned - I don't know if it was Damn Yankees - [but] it was a Bob Fosse show. And I'm down to the last fifteen and he needed twelve, or something like that. He pulls me aside and says, "I'd love to use you, Marcia. You're a wonderful dancer, you really are. But you're too short." I said to myself, "That's it; I'm outta here. I'm not dancing anymore." [11]
Acting
Within a year or so, Haufrecht was working with Nola Chilton, a New York-based acting teacher and director.[c] Haufrecht studied with Chilton for approximately four years, culminating in her participation in an Off-Broadway revival of Sidney Kingsley's Dead End, staged by Chilton.[20][33]
Village Voice critic Michael Smith, praised both performance (including Haufrecht's "spectacularly destroyed whore") and production.[34] However, she seriously contemplated giving up acting altogether because of dissatisfaction with her own contribution and with the quality of her work in general and her perceived lack of progress. Quickly dissuaded by her colleagues, Leibman in particular, Haufrecht followed the latter's advice and joined him at The Actors Studio to meet with studio director Lee Strasberg. Allowed to sit in on sessions on an interim basis, Haufrecht eventually earned her full membership via audition.[35]
In April 2001, more than 20 years after its first production, Tennessee Williams' Will Mr. Merriweather Return from Memphis? premiered in New York at Haufrecht's Common Basis Theatre, with Haufrecht starring. Daily News critic Howard Kissel wrote, "The play's heady combination of black humor and poetry is best handled by Marcia Haufrecht, as the woman pining for her former boarder."[48] Ken Jaworski of Off-Off-Broadway Review added:
As Louise McBride, Marcia Haufrecht was exquisite: a frail woman struggling to appear strong, an aging southern belle masking loneliness behind false laughter. "Even in a dream one can suffer," Louise claims. Haufrecht embodied the premise, projecting a drowsy, fatigued lonesomeness with each action and word.[49]
The previous month, Haufrecht had garnered even stronger praise from Off-Off-Broadway Review's Doug DeVita as Common Basis staged another, less heralded premiere, Grace Cavalieri's Pinecrest Rest Haven:[50]
A frail-looking woman, her white hair tied up in a simple purple ribbon, enters a peach-and-white nursing-home waiting room and plaintively asks if anyone has seen her husband. The question, asked with a heartbreaking, bewildered innocence by the haunting Marcia Haufrecht, is a startlingly lucid depiction of the loss of clarity that can come with advanced age... the one thing this production had going for it was the presence of Haufrecht, who effortlessly rose above the obvious material and gave a luminous, moving performance of concise truth... As the late, great Madeline Kahn once said about her own work: "I have appeared in crap, but I have never treated it as such. Never." Haufrecht obviously goes by that same standard, and her performance displayed a level of professionalism that most actors would do well to emulate.[51]
Writing
From a playwright whose initial motivation had simply been to provide – at a director/colleague's request – an interesting acting vehicle for herself,[52] Haufrecht's plays have been produced in New York City by Common Basis Theatre,[53] The Ensemble Studio Theatre,[54][55][56][57] and The Actors Studio,[58] and, in upstate New York, by Performing Arts of Woodstock.[59] Around the country, her work has been performed in Texas,[60] Florida,[45] in San Francisco,[18] and, in Southern California, by Company of Angels[61] and CSU Fullerton.[18] Abroad, her plays have been staged in New Zealand,[62] Australia at La Mama in Melbourne,[63] and at the Kultur im Gugg in Austria.[18]
Directing
As a director, Haufrecht has staged both original works and revivals at The Ensemble Studio Theatre,[64] The Actors Studio,[58]The Barrow Street Theatre,[65] The Common Basis Theatre,[53][66] and in Australia,[67] Portugal,[68] and Austria .[18]
^Judging from Google News Archive searches for each spelling, the Haufreucht family as a whole seems to have dropped the second 'u' as of the mid-1940s. The latest article featuring the original spelling occurs in 1946.[7]
^Formerly Theatre 12, and prior to that, the 12th Street Players,[12][13] Studio 12's chief components, director Denis Vaughan and set designer Bert Greene, would go on to greater fame as cookbook authors and owners of an upscale Amagansett eatery catering to a celebrity clientele.[14]
^The name of this ad hoc 'company' would appear to be an inside joke by director Chilton, at the expense of Equity Library Theatre, under whose auspices this production had been prepared and was to have been presented, presumably at its customary venue, the Lenox Hill Playhouse. Instead, at the eleventh hour, ELT's managing director Lyle Dye Jr. pulled the plug, calling the production "not quite up to standard," even professing concern for the actors' - and ELT's - "reputations."[33] Speaking nine years later, Haufrecht maintained that ELT simply found the show too violent.[20] In any event, Chilton's rapidly implemented response - a sit-in by the director and her entire, suddenly 'orphaned' 45-member cast in front of the Lenox Hill Playhouse - led Actors Equity to override ELT, forcing the latter to provide an alternate venue.[33] Chilton and her cast were roundly applauded for their efforts in a review published in the Village Voice (which also made a point of contrasting Chilton's production favorably with the sort of showcase fare typically offered by ELT).[34]
^Cody, Gabrielle H.; Sprinchorn, editors, Evert (2007). "Avant-Garde Drama". The Columbia encyclopedia of modern drama: A-L. New York: Columbia University Press. p. 96. ISBN978-0231144223. {{cite book}}: |last2= has generic name (help)
^Patterson, David; Berger, Alan L.; Cargas, Sarita, editors (2002). "Sobol, Joshua (1939- )". Encyclopedia of Holocaust Literature. Westport, CT: Oryx Press. p. 189. ISBN1-57356-257-2. Chilton Encyclopedia of Holocaust.{{cite book}}: |first3= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^Promethea Bound and Sisyphus Too: production details. AusStage. Retrieved 2013-01-02. "World premiere of a new work by Marcia Haufrecht, direct from the New York Actors' Studio."
^Peterson, Bettelou. "Soap Stars". The Calgary Herald. January 11, 1987. Retrieved 2013-01-01.
^The Never Was Girl by Amanda Armstrong: about. AmandaArmstrong.com.au. Retrieved 2013-01-02. "She also has a Bachelor of Arts majoring in drama at La Trobe University, Melbourne, is a Graduate of the Australian Music Examination Board (Contemporary Vocalist) and studied as a young actor with Marcia Haufrecht from The Actors Studio (New York)."
^Eduardo Condorcet CV: Additional Qualifications. econdorcet.com. Retrieved 2013-01-02. "2003 Method Acting - Advanced Workshop + EMDR" - with Marcia Haufrecht (Actors Studio, New York) - Teatro de Trinidade - Lisboa."
^Elmano Sancho CVArchived 2014-08-19 at the Wayback Machine. ElmanoSancho.com. Retrieved 2013-01-02. "2004. Interpretation Workshop leaded [sic] by Marcia Haufrecht."
^Linda Valadas CV: Education. docs.google.com. Retrieved 2013-01-02. "2000 & 08 Method Acting Workshop led by Marcia Haufrecht (student of Lee Strasberg) New York and Lisbon."