Review: 'André Gregory,' minus the dinner - Los Angeles Times
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Review: ‘André Gregory,’ minus the dinner

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Watching “André Gregory: Before and After Dinner†often feels like visiting with an elegant, genial, slightly mystifying old friend. Too bad Cindy Kleine, the documentary’s producer-director-narrator — and Gregory’s wife — didn’t better organize this rangy survey of the eclectic actor, theater director, artist and raconteur.

While the title references Louis Malle’s 1981 classic “My Dinner With André,†which Gregory, now 78, co-wrote and starred in with collaborator and pal Wallace Shawn, Kleine spends little time on Gregory’s signature screen role.

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Her focus, such as it is, wavers between two main threads. The first: a rehearsal of Shawn’s adaptation of Ibsen’s “The Master Builder,†which Gregory worked on as an actor-director for 14 years (it was briefly performed for a few invitees, then filmed last year by Jonathan Demme). The second involves Gregory’s haunting relationship with his Russian Jewish parents, a mysterious father — and possible Nazi collaborator — and an angry mother. Both strands, like much else here, are intriguing, enjoyably Gregory-centric and somewhat inconclusive.

Rounding out the warm portrait are spotlights on Gregory’s early days directing experimental theater, his May-December romance with Kleine, a showing of his drawings, a mix of personal photos and film and theater clips, plus casual bits with cohorts and family members. But did we really need to see Mr. Gregory in his birthday suit?

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“André Gregory: Before and After Dinner.†No MPAA Rating. Running time: 1 hour, 48 minutes. At Laemmle’s Music Hall, Beverly Hills.

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