From Deseret News archives:

Twist of fate produced acting star

Published: Sunday, June 22, 2008 12:10 a.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
NEW YORK — If not for a twist of fate many years ago, Andre Braugher would likely be an engineer right now.

A very intense engineer but an engineer nonetheless.

It didn't happen only due to a chance encounter he had with Shakespeare while as an undergraduate at Stanford University.

The director of a student production of "Hamlet" begged Braugher to fill in for the role of Claudius when the original actor bowed out just before the debut.

Braugher, perhaps best know for his role of a Baltimore police detective in the acclaimed 1990s TV show "Homicide: Life on the Street," had just three days to learn his lines. When he finally hit the stage, he was ready to abandon his old life.

"I had a midlife crisis at 19. I just had to do this," says Braugher, now 45. "I found an emotional immediacy and resonance and joy in being on stage."

Braugher, the product of an all-boys Jesuit high school in Chicago, found there were some added benefits to a life as an actor that engineering couldn't match.

"People clap and they go out and have parties afterward and it's full of vivacious young women," he says, laughing. "Otherwise, it's just you and your slide rule and your T-1 calculator in the library."

Story continues below
His career trajectory forever changed. Braugher became a drama major and later got a master's from The Juilliard School. He then embarked on an Emmy- and Obie-winning career that has led him back this summer to where it all began: As Claudius in "Hamlet."

He co-stars in the Public Theater's free Shakespeare in the Park series, opposite Michael Stuhlbarg in the title role, Sam Waterston of "Law & Order" fame, Lauren Ambrose of "Six Feet Under" and Margaret Colin, currently on TV's "Gossip Girl."

It's Braugher's first time on stage in a dozen years and his sixth Shakespeare in Central Park, following appearances in "King John," "Much Ado About Nothing," "Measure for Measure," "Twelfth Night" and "Henry V," for which he won a 1997 Obie in the title role.

"Shakespeare has always been a great love of mine," he says during an interview on a bench in, appropriately enough, the park's Shakespeare Garden. He is dressed in jeans and an untucked, button-down shirt, his hair going slightly gray.

"It's like that fantasy we always have of going back to meet up with your old lover and it's all still the same," he says. "Well, I've met up with my old lover and it's just as delicious as it always was."

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

Image
Frank Franklin II, Associated Press

Andre Braugher was on track to become an engineer — until a chance encounter with Shakespeare.

previousnext

Latest comments

Powell skips police interview

Who goes camping with 2 young children in 10 degrees weather at midnight!?!

It is always frusterating to me when we automatically put the blame on the...

Conservatives rally against reform

I liked Cherilyn Eagar's comments re: Health care.. Holly Richardson did...

Letters: Palin doesn't owe GOP

"The libs were terrified of Reagan called him an airhead, a light weight, a...

TV man learns new tricks

I don't think it was all looks that took Arky out of the news. He knew alot...

If you obey the law you won't get pulled over.The times I have pulled over I...

HOORAY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Would that be because he recognizes that it's a dumb law and he needs to...

The problem is not just that they government takes our money for things that...

First of all he carries the gun all the time from what I hear. It is his and...

Advertisements