Exit, stage left...
Gray, who laid bare his life and mingled
performance art with comedy in acclaimed monologues like "Swimming to Cambodia"
and "It's a Slippery Slope," was identified Monday through dental records and
X-rays.
The cause of his death
was still under investigation, said Ellen Borakove, a spokeswoman for the
medical examiner. But Gray was known to have been deeply troubled and had
attempted suicide before.
His
family told police he was last seen Saturday Jan. 10. Throughout his
disappearance, his wife, Kathleen Russo, had held out scant hope that he might
still be alive.
"Everyone that
looks like him from behind, I go up and check to make sure it's not him," Russo
said in a phone interview with The Associated Press about a week ago. "If
someone calls and hangs up, I always do star-69. You're always thinking,
'maybe."'
Gray's riveting live
performances generally featured only a desk and a glass of water as props.
Usually wearing his trademark plaid flannel shirt, the performer would never
move from the desk as he read in a soft, New England-flecked accent.
In more than a dozen monologues
starting in 1979, Gray told audiences about his childhood, "Sex and Death to the
Age 14"; his adventures as a young man, "Booze, Cars and College Girls"; and his
struggles as an actor, "A Personal History of the American Theater." Many were
published in book form and several were made into films.
"The man may be the ultimate
WASP neurotic, analyzing his actions with an intensity that would be
unpleasantly egomaniacal if it weren't so self-deprecatingly funny," Associated
Press Drama Critic Michael Kuchwara wrote in 1996. "He questions everything and
ends up more exhausted than satisfied."
Gray's greatest success was his
Obie-winning monologue "Swimming to Cambodia," which recounted in part his movie
role opposite Sam Waterston in "The Killing Fields." The monologue, developed
over two years of performance, became a film directed by Jonathan Demme.
His book "Gray's Anatomy,"
about his struggles with a serious eye problem, was also made into a film.
Gray turned a midlife crisis
into "It's a Slippery Slope," a 1997 monologue that mingled ski stories with
tales of his new role as a father.
He also had an active career in
Hollywood, with roles in films including David Byrne's "True Stories," "Beaches"
and "The Paper" — 38 film appearances in all. In the 1993 Steven
Soderbergh film "King of the Hill," he played an eccentric bachelor who kills
himself.
On Broadway, he
starred as the stage manager in the 1989 revival of "Our Town," a production
that won a Tony Award for best revival. In 2000, he was in the less-acclaimed
revival of Gore Vidal's 1960 political drama, "The Best Man."
But Gray's life in recent years
was marred by tragedy and depression.
A horrific head-on car crash
during a 2001 vacation in Ireland left him disheartened and in poor health, and
he tried jumping from a bridge near his Long Island home in October 2002.
He was twice hospitalized for
depression after the crash, and his suicide attempt canceled the run of a new
solo piece, "Black Spot."
Gray,
whose mother committed suicide when she was 52, spoke openly about considering
the same fate. In a 1997 interview, he even provided an epitaph for his
tombstone: "An American Original: Troubled, Inner-Directed and Cannot Type."
Gray was born on June 5, 1941,
one of three sons of a WASP couple in Barrington, R.I. His mother suffered a
pair of nervous breakdowns, committing suicide in 1967 after the second one.
Prior to her death, Gray began
pursuing an acting career at Emerson College in Boston. His first efforts at
one-man storytelling began with a select audience: his co-workers when he was a
dishwasher. The compulsively self-obsessed Gray would regale the other employees
with a blow-by-blow account of his day's events.
He landed his first stage role,
playing a psychotic in a summer stock production of "The Curious Savage," when a
combination of his dyslexia and nerves produced an all too real audition.
His mother's suicide sent Gray
into a lengthy period of depression that ended with his own nervous breakdown.
He worked in underground theater in Manhattan, eventually co-founding the
Wooster Group in 1979. There, he wrote an autobiographical trilogy of plays
about life in Rhode Island.
His
first monologue was "Sex and Death to the Age 14," mingling events like the
bombing of Hiroshima with the death of childhood pets. Gray was hailed as a new
brand of performance artist, working alone on a minimalist set.
In 1983, Gray won the role of
an American ambassador's aide in "The Killing Fields," the story of the bond
between a New York Times reporter and a Cambodian photographer.
The resulting monologue,
"Swimming to Cambodia," was widely hailed, with Washington Post reviewer David
Richards observing, "Talking about himself — with candor, humor,
imagination and the unfailingly bizarre image — he ends up talking about
all of us."
In addition to his
writing, Gray enjoyed skiing and drinking; he once told an interviewer that a 6
p.m. bloody Mary was a staple of his routine. But Gray plunged back into
despondency following his car accident, a crash during a vacation to mark his
60th birthday.
Gray, who was
not wearing a seat belt, suffered head trauma and a broken hip.
Gray is survived by Russo;
three children; and a brother, Rockwell Gray, an English professor in St. Louis.
Writer Spalding Gray's Body
FoundNEW YORK, March 8,
2004
The
body of actor-writer Spalding Gray was pulled from the East River over the
weekend, two months after he walked out of his Manhattan apartment and
disappeared. He was 62...
Posted: Thu - March 11, 2004 at 04:05 AM