TOM TITUS -- Theater
When you work in the general vicinity of the entertainment business,
occasionally you encounter an actor or writer whom you particularly
admire. I, for example, had the privilege of meeting two of my favorite
writers, television legend Rod Serling and stage scripter Oliver Hailey,
before their much-too-early passing.
Unfortunately, I never personally met Jason Miller, who succumbed to a
heart attack last week, but I felt a kinship to him nevertheless. We were
born the same year, and both grew up in sports-crazy Pennsylvania cities.
In later life, we both gravitated to writing, acting and directing --
though his was on a decidedly loftier level than my community theater
efforts.
My Keystone State experiences resulted in a play called “Summer
Lightning,” which was produced once, in Westminster. Miller’s became
“That Championship Season,” which won the Pulitzer Prize in 1973, the
same year he was nominated for an Oscar for his performance in “The
Exorcist.”
When you see as many plays as I do, it takes a lot to blow you away.
When I first reviewed “Championship Season” in 1975 at South Coast
Repertory, that’s precisely what happened to me -- I was stunned by its
visceral impact. This was a play I wanted to direct on the
community-theater level, and I got my chance the following year. Nearly a
decade later, I had the opportunity to play the role of the mayor in
another production of the play.
Miller’s literary intensity was matched by his dramatic power as an
actor. As Father Karras in “The Exorcist,” he was a dynamic presence. His
role actually was the lead, but because he was lesser known than Max Von
Sydow, who played the older priest, Miller received lower billing and was
nominated in the supporting category. He should have won.
Miller directed his own script for the movie version of “Championship
Season,” eliciting perhaps Robert Mitchum’s best performance as the
coach. The reuniting basketball players were an all-star team -- Bruce
Dern, Stacy Keach, Martin Sheen and Paul Sorvino -- and all rendered
terrific performances. Especially Keach, then at the height of his “Mike
Hammer” popularity, who was cast against type as a weakling junior high
principal.
With that sort of power, both as a writer and an actor, one might have
expected a career dotted with classic plays and performances. But, much
like Orson Welles after “Citizen Kane,” Miller’s later work never reached
that 1973 level.
I started wondering what had become of Jason Miller -- who is the
father of actor Jason Patric -- earlier this year when I reviewed his
one-act play, “Lou Gehrig Did Not Die of Cancer,” at Orange Coast
College. It had been nearly 30 years since “Championship Season,” and he
surely had done something significant with his prodigious talent.
Sadly, the next time I read his name, it was in the obituary column
(he died May 13). But for that one glorious year, 1973, Jason Miller
enjoyed his own championship season.
* TOM TITUS writes about and reviews local theater for the Daily
Pilot. His stories appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
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