You don’t have to have a passion for Pagliacci to know the life of a clown has a tragic dimension. Without going to operatic extremes, The Comedian, a movie starring Robert DeNiro as a standup potty-mouthed performer, has a dark side. DeNiro developed the project with Art Linson over eight years, he said at a panel last week for The Comedians at the Plaza Athenee. Robert DeNiro’s comic side, honed in movies like Last Vegas to name one, and his huge heart as in his wise, sensitive father in say, Silver Linings Playbook, come together in this movie, especially playing opposite Leslie Mann.
The jazzy soundtrack is a good part of this movie’s pleasure. Taylor Hackford was part owner in a jazz club, he told the crowd, and jazz and comedy were complementary subversive entertainments. In a scene when DeNiro’s Jackie irons his pants, the music is Art Blakey, and throughout, Terence Blanchard, who worked with Blakey, performs. To put it mildly, I laughed. I cried.
As to DeNiro, he answered questions pensively. It was hard to tell whether or not he was pleased to see his work finally complete. The night before, at the Marriot Marquis opening night party for A Bronx Tale on Broadway, which he co-directed, he was firm to say he did nothing: Jerry Zaks did all the work.
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