Famous
people, aware that they are being looked at and appraised, can never be
natural again—every action, every glance, creates a ripple. This sort
of self-consciousness produces unpredictable effects. There are those
who are lifted up by the attention, such as Catherine Zeta-Jones, and
those who reject it, becoming anti-celebrity celebrities, such as
Daniel Day-Lewis, who once shunned acting to cobble shoes in Italy.
Which brings us to Matthew Broderick. He represents an unusual breed,
the idle celebrity, neither opposed to his fame nor especially
motivated by it. He’s the reed bending in the wind.
Take, for example, his latest career move. As Leo Bloom in The Producers,
Broderick became one of the biggest draws on Broadway. So what does he
do for an encore? He signs up for an Off Broadway comedy, The Foreigner,
and begins a series of intense rehearsals in unglamorous surroundings.
On a recent afternoon, he was sitting around a folding table with his
fellow cast members, eating a deli salad. He was chatting quietly,
dressed in a red T-shirt, unshaven, and at ease. This is not a guy who
wants to be Tom Cruise, or even John Cusack, but he’s not aggressively
anti-star, either. He’ll answer questions, pose for photographs, do
what he’s asked.
On this day, Broderick is initially wary, using distraction, it seems, as a defense. But when the words Sarah, Jessica, and Parker are not immediately strung together, he starts to engage. He joined this production of The Foreigner, he says, because he thought he had too much time off before his next project, a movie version of The Producers.
(Directed by Mel Brooks, it will be the first production shot at the
refurbished Brooklyn Navy Yard.) He’s looking forward to having one
more chance at playing Leo Bloom, but he’s worried that he and Nathan
Lane won’t be performing in front of an audience. “It will be like we
are missing a character,” he says. “I have a love-hate thing with the
audience. Sometimes I get annoyed that I am desperate for their love.”
When he’s doing a play, he keeps his days simple. After a show, he’ll
go out for dinner with friends at Joe Allen or Angus McIndoes and then
take a long time walking home. In the summer, he plays on the Naked
Angels theater group’s softball team. He bats lefty, throws lefty. His
famous wife is a lefty, too, and, so, potentially, is their son, James.
Broderick is one of those New Yorkers who
could barely survive living anywhere else. It also suits his preferred
mode of celebrity. With the right baseball cap and the judicious use of
Town Cars, Manhattan offers a famous person the chance at a halfway
normal life. Broderick was actually born here. His father was an actor
(best known as the dad on the seventies sitcom Family) and his
mother was a playwright. For outsiders, New York is the repository of
our dreams, the place we come to be the person we’re supposed to be.
For natives, it’s home, the contours of their memories. Riding in cabs,
strolling Fifth Avenue, acting in plays, directing movies, living in a
loft: It’s just what people (or their parents) do. Broderick is the
kind of local who sticks close to his childhood friends and refuses to
use real-estate acronyms.
Except for a year that he spent in
Los Angeles, Broderick has lived his entire life in Greenwich Village.
His townhouse is a short walk from that of his best friend since grade
school, Kenneth Lonergan (the playwright and director). They talk on
the phone several times a day. Broderick also has idiosyncratic New
York habits: He went to Film Forum often when he lived two blocks away,
but now that he lives six blocks away, he never goes. He has highly
developed opinions about what is appropriate in the city. (“Mountain
bikes are not acceptable, unless they have thin tires.”) He rides a
Vespa to avoid traffic, buys a tabloid for the subway, and believes the
West Village has gotten “too posh.” Most nights, he prefers to stay in,
putting his son to bed.
With the success of Sex and the City and The Producers,
Broderick’s cover has been blown. When he walks his son to the
playground, the photographers are waiting. It’s almost as though the
city has let him down. Sure, he gets recognized on the street, but New
Yorkers usually keep their distance, occasionally dropping a snide
comment: “I like some of your work.” E. B. White described the special
anonymity of the city in the opening line of his essay “Here Is New
York”: “On any person who desires such queer prizes, New York will
bestow the gift of loneliness and the gift of privacy.” It’s a funny
showbiz irony that Broderick is married to Parker, given that his
vision of New York—the local deli, the bad coffee, the deserted street
on Sunday—is gradually being replaced by her Sex and the City
version: the glass-fronted boutiques, the tell-all brunch, the women
searching for men with French souls and American bank accounts. It’s no
longer enough to survive in the city: We also have to be fabulous.
Broderick describes a childhood that only
a New Yorker could feel nostalgic for: “There wasn’t this fear of being
abducted. I will say, though, that I was constantly mugged and robbed.
My prize baseball mitt, my skateboard, my new bike. They were all taken
from me.” He would roughhouse with friends and play handball against
the Washington Square arch. “I know it sounds like I grew up in the
thirties,” he says, “but I actually did that stuff.” His mother took
him to the Met, the Frick, the old planetarium, and Gilbert and
Sullivan shows. But most of this time involved “lying around in Central
Park, charging food to parents, and going to the movies.”
Broderick went to a progressive school on
the Upper West Side called Walden, now defunct. In the afternoon, he
and Lonergan applied themselves at Marty Reisman’s table-tennis palace
on 96th Street and Broadway. “The place was downstairs, huge,”
Broderick recalled. “Reisman wore this big pimpy hat, like Streets of San Francisco,
and aviator glasses.” Broderick still plays a lot of “pong” at his gym.
It’s a sport that suits him: boyish and old-school and occasionally
competitive and intense. At Walden, Broderick quit football after an
injury and tried acting. As a senior, he decided to take a year off to
see what would happen.
Broderick’s
first success was on the New York stage, but then came Ferris Bueller.
Despite his talents, he has never really escaped the matrix of this
breakthrough role. He made a few attempts at big-budget stardom, but at
42, he’s become the anti-Ferris, a specialist in dweebs. There was his
turn as the bank-branch manager in You Can Count on Me, the sexually desperate high-school teacher in Election, and, most successfully, as the drippy accountant in The Producers.
One wonders where the smirk has gone. It’s tempting to send a text
message to the Treo cell phone he carries: “Save Ferris!” Discussing
his future, Broderick, true to form, doesn’t display any anxiety or
strong ambitions. “Kenny has a new play that he thinks I would be good
in,” he says, adding that he would like to meet his current favorite
director, Pedro Almodóvar, just to talk. Broderick sounds so casual
about his career that I almost think he’s bluffing, that there’s a
master plan he’s secretly working from. Can someone who has succeeded
the way he has be this passive about it? Near the end of one of our
conversations, I ask him what he’d do if he weren’t an actor, and he
stares into the middle distance and says, “I might be a garbageman.
I’ve always liked late at night. There’s something appealing about
hanging out on the back of the truck, going through the city streets,
all alone.”