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Tony-winner Robert Sean Leonard returns to Bergen County and Broadway

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JANUARY 31, 2016    LAST UPDATED: SUNDAY, JANUARY 31, 2016, 1:21 AM
BY ROBERT FELDBERG
RECORD COLUMNIST |
THE RECORD

Tony-winning actor Robert Sean Leonard is experiencing not one, but two homecomings.

The more literal is his return from California – where he played Dr. James Wilson in eight seasons of “House” — to Ridgewood, where he was raised.

“My brother, who’s a cop in Ho-Ho-Kus, called about two years ago to tell me that he heard that this lovely old Victorian house near where we grew up was for sale. So I just called the owners, cold, and asked if they were thinking of moving,” Leonard said, with a brief look of mortification on his face as he recalled his audacity. “They said they weren’t, but I told them that if they ever did want to sell, to give me a call.”

A year ago they did, and last month Leonard, his wife Gabriella and their two daughters, Eleanor, 7, and Claudia, 3, moved in.

In the midst of unpacking boxes, though, Leonard was often absent, because of his other homecoming – his first role on the New York stage since returning from Los Angeles.

He’s appearing in “Prodigal Son,” which was written and is being directed by John Patrick Shanley, the author of “Doubt.” Now in previews, the drama opens Feb. 9 at the Manhattan Theatre Club’s off-Broadway space at the New York City Center.

With a kind of full-circle neatness, Leonard, whose breakout role was a prep-school student in the 1989 film “Dead Poets Society,” portrays a prep-school teacher in the play, which is based on Shanley’s own experience as a working-class Bronx boy attending a New England private school.

“I was told that Shanley was interested in me,” Leonard said. “I read the script and I liked it; it’s a very unique play, very surprising. Kind of like a ‘Twilight Zone’ episode.”

Leonard, who started out as a child actor, is known for his enthusiasm for stage acting, and he’s built an impressive list of Broadway successes.

He made his debut replacing Matthew Broderick in Neil Simon’s “Brighton Beach Memoirs,” and his subsequent plays have included “Arcadia,” “The Iceman Cometh,” “Long Day’s Journey Into Night” and “The Invention of Love,” for which he won his Tony. During a break from “House,” he came to New York to do “Born Yesterday.”

Many of the plays he’s done, on Broadway and elsewhere, are revivals of classics, which, he said, made “Prodigal Son” a different kind of challenge.

“Working with an author who’s breathing is an unusual experience for me,” he said,

At 46, Leonard still has an enormously engaging boy-next-door quality. He’s unstintingly praising of other actors, enthusiastic, good-humored and unassuming — he kept apologizing for being late for our interview at the theater (he hadn’t seen the message moving the start time up a half-hour), and he good-naturedly posed for a photographer right after walking in, without even a glance at a mirror.

https://www.northjersey.com/arts-and-entertainment/celebrities/he-s-come-home-to-ridgewood-and-to-n-y-stage-1.1502976

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Glen Rock actor has made a mark in true-crime genre

Charlie Sara

JANUARY 24, 2016    LAST UPDATED: SUNDAY, JANUARY 24, 2016, 1:21 AM
BY VIRGINIA ROHAN
STAFF WRITER |
THE RECORD

Dying may be easy — from a theatrical standpoint — but playing dead can be oh-so-hard.

Just ask Glen Rock’s Charlie Sara, who portrayed murder victim Paul Duncsak in an Investigation Discovery show’s re-creation of one of Bergen County’s most notorious homicide cases. In 2006, Duncsak was ambushed inside his Ramsey home, a crime for which his former father-in-law was convicted.

“He murdered [him] in very close quarters in the entry foyer of his home, and it was close-range gunshots, six of them, one to the groin,” Sara recalls of one gruesome scene he shot, for a 2015 episode of the ID series “I’d Kill for You,” at a mansion in Sparta. “And then the hardest part was laying on a cold marble floor for about four hours as they shot camera angles of the dead body.”

Sara, a professionally trained actor who owns and operates an ambulatory-care facility in Paramus, has since played a prosecutor and a murderer in two different ID shows. He is a part of two intertwining television trends — the huge popularity of the true-crime genre and the rise of Sparta Township, a Sussex County community with one of New Jersey’s lowest crime rates, as a filming locale.

“It’s one of the safest communities, but it’s the set for the re-creations of some very heinous crimes from all over the

country,” says Sparta police Lt. John-Paul Beebe, who, along with local Realtor Duffy Brennan, is credited with igniting the filming boom a few years ago, as a way to pump up the local economy.

https://www.northjersey.com/arts-and-entertainment/tv/glen-rock-actor-has-made-a-mark-in-true-crime-genre-1.1498145

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Actor and comedian Steve Guttenberg at Bookends in Ridgewood Tonight 7pm

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Actor and comedian Steve Guttenberg will be at Bookends Wednesday, September 10th @ 7:00pm

Actor and comedian from Three Men and a Baby ,Police Academy
Steve Guttenberg, will sign his new childrens book;
The Kids from D.I.S.C.O.Books available Sept. 9th

Call Bookends at 201-445-0726 with additional questions.

Bookends is a legendary New Jersey Landmark! We are known for our incredible author events and have hosted well over 1,000 authors in the past 15 years!

All books MUST be purchased from BOOKENDS for any of our events and a valid Bookends receipt must be presented for entry.

Appearing authors will only autograph books purchased at Bookends and must have valid Bookends Receipt. Availability & pricing for all autographed books subject to change. Bookends cannot guarantee that the books that are Autographed will always be First Printings.Autographed books purchased at Bookends are non-returnable.

While we try to ensure that all customers coming to Bookends’ signings will meet authors and get their books signed, we cannot guarantee that all attendees will meet the author or that all books will be signed. We cannot control inclement weather, author travel schedules or authors who leave prematurely.

Bookends, 211 E. Ridgewood Avenue, Ridgewood, NJ 07450 201-445-0726

Missed one of our events? We have Signed Books from some of our recent signings. Call the store to order 201-445-0726.

See Website for details at www.book-ends.com