The League of Professional Theatre Women, is pleased that three-time Academy Award and three-time Tony Award nominee, Laura Linney sat down with James Naughton to discuss her extensive body of work in theatre, film and TV. The event took place on Monday, March 6 at 6:00 PM in the Bruno Walter Auditorium of the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts on 65th Street & Amsterdam Avenue.
Laura Linney is an American actress who works in film, television and theatre.
Upcoming projects for Linney include The Dinner, directed by Oren Moverman with Richard Gere, Steve Coogan and Rebecca Hall. The Dinner will debut in February 2017 at the Berlin International Film Festival, and premiere in the U.S. on May 5, 2017. She will also be seen in Ozark, a Netflix original series where she plays Wendy Byrde opposite Jason Bateman and Julia Garner, slated to debut in 2017. Linney will return Broadway in the Manhattan Theatre Club's spring revival of Lillian Hellman's The Little Foxes on April 19, 2017. Directed by Tony winner Daniel Sullivan, The Little Foxes will star Laura and Cynthia Nixon alternating in the lead roles of Regina Hubbard Giddens and Birdie Hubbard. Her recent film work includes Tom Ford's Nocturnal Animals, where she played Anne Sutton - Amy Adams' mother. While Linney's performance lasts only three minutes and 15 seconds, it was deemed "a one-scene wonder" by Entertainment Weekly. Other recent film credits include Sully, Genius, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of The Shadows, You Can Count On Me, Kinsey, The Savages, The Fifth Estate, Hyde Park On Hudson, The Squid And The Whale, Mystic River, Absolute Power, The Truman Show, Primal Fear, The Mothman Prophecies, Love Actually, P.S., The House Of Mirth, The Details and Congo, among many others.From Broadway and regional theater to television and films, James Naughton has won critical acclaim in dramas, comedies and musicals.
He is the winner of two Tony Awards as Best Actor in a Musical for his portrayal of media-savvy lawyer Billy Flynn in the Broadway hit Chicago (1997) and for his role as a film-noir era detective in City of Angels (1990), which also earned him a Drama Desk Award. He won the 1999 MAC Award as best male vocalist for his one-man concert show, Street of Dreams, presented by Mike Nichols, and recorded his CD, It's About Time, for DRG records. In 2014, he recorded his Live from Lincoln Center Special for PBS, James Naughton Sings Randy Newman.
A graduate oF Brown University and the Yale School of Drama, Naughton made his New York debut in Eugene O'Neill's masterpiece, Long Day's Journey Into Night, with Robert Ryan and Geraldine Fitzgerald, winning immediate recognition with Theatre World, New York Drama Critics and Vernon Rice Awards. On Broadway, he also starred as Willy Brandt in Democracy, and in Whose Life Is It Anyway, and I Love My Wife.
He directed two critically acclaimed Broadway productions: Arthur Miller's The Price, which was nominated for a Tony, and Thornton Wilder's Our Town, starring Paul Newman, which he also shot for Showtime. He has directed and acted extensively in Williamstown and in Westport, and played off-Broadway and in regional theatres for decades.
Naughton's film credits include Equity, Factory Girl, playing Sienna Miller's father, Childless, opposite Barbara Hershey, The Devil Wears Prada, First Wives Club, The Glass Menagerie, with JoAnne Woodward, The Good Mother, The Paper Chase, and Cat's Eye.
On TV, he starred in Planet of the Apes,'Who's The Boss?, Brooklyn Bridge, Making the Grade, Ally McBeal, The Cosby Mysteries, Damages, Gossip Girl, Hostages, and most recently, The Black List and The Affair."
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Photo Credit: Jody Christopherson
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