Zachary Quinto: 'There's a tremendous fear around openly gay men in our industry' [View all]
Ihear Zachary Quinto before I see him. The voice of the actor who played Mr Spock in the rebooted Star Trek films comes thundering through the closed door of the central London rehearsal building a repurposed church as I sit outside waiting. Hes rehearsing the climactic scene from the play Best of Enemies, a restaging of the infamous Sixties TV confrontation between novelist and essayist Gore Vidal (Quinto) and right-wing TV host William F Buckley. The play moves at a tremendous clip, Quinto tells me shortly after. It feels like youre sitting on top of a locomotive, and you have no choice but to stay there. Judging by the combustible force I overheard, it certainly sounds that way.
The rehearsal breaks for lunch, and I am allowed in; Quinto follows me up a steep flight of steps to a small platform at the top of the building. He may have sounded ready for the Noël Coward Theatre, but the vibe is still very much come as you are: a pair of overalls and a beanie hat. The 45-year-old Quinto joined the production after its Broadway run, replacing Charles Edwards. Buckley, meanwhile, is played as before by David Harewood, in an intriguing piece of race-blind casting. Speaking to The Independent last year, Harewood described Best of Enemies as tough, noting that it included an enormous amount of lines. Its certainly chewy material, a change of step from the genre work for which Quinto is best known Heroes; American Horror Story; the Star Trekreboot. Written by James Graham, the play fictionalises the real-life 1968 ATV debates between Vidal and Buckley a vitriolic sparring session which culminated in Vidal calling his opponent a crypto-Nazi, and Buckley threatening violence and calling Vidal who identified as bisexual a queer.
The debate was, says Quinto, a portentous moment not just for the tenor of TV newscasting, but for the entire American political discourse. It was a revolutionary act in terms of the format of the news, Quinto explains. Consider what debate used to be, a generation or two ago: two people with different beliefs would have an opportunity to express their point of view in turn. Then look at where the last 55 years has taken us.
He continues: Its just continued to deteriorate, to the point where now, debate has largely just become about people screaming at one another and saying, Im right; youre wrong. Not only do I disagree with you, I hate you for your beliefs. I think television is the variable in that equation. It changed and in many ways denigrated the integrity of debate.
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