Actor Johnny Pruitt |
By Dan Hagen
At 19, not long out of Sullivan
High School, Johnny Pruitt figured if he could make it there, he’d make it
anywhere.
“There” being New York, New York,
a brass ring of a place to make it as an actor.
Dropping out of Webster
Conservatory of Theatre Arts in St. Louis, the young man went east in January
2001.
"Leaving school early was, at
the time, the easiest decision I remember ever making,” he recalled. “I was
enjoying my time at school, but opportunities came up in New York that really
anyone in my position would have jumped on. An agent and a place to live at 19
was a no-brainer.
“Thinking about doing something
like now at 30 — terrifying. At 19, not a care in the world, sounded fun,” he
said. “And I've tried to do my best to live up to that decision which drives
me.”
Pruitt’s boyish looks and assured
acting style won him in roles in films like “Kinsey,” “Confess,” “Whirlygirl”
and ”Once Upon a Time Never Comes Again” and in TV shows like “Boardwalk
Empire,” “30 Rock,” “Mercy,” “Ed,” “Chappelle’s Show,” “Law & Order” and
“Law & Order: Special Victims Unit.”
Now he wants to be a producer —
well, a co-producer and a co-star, with Percy Rodriguez, in “Death and McCootie,”
an original comedy-fantasy play to be performed at the prestigious New York
International Fringe Festival this summer. Written by Clayton Smith and Rodriguez
and directed by Michelle Boss, it’s “a film noir-style farce that goes a little
haywire when Edgar P. McCootie, P.I., matches (a lack of) wits with the Grim
Reaper in a desperate bid to escape his own death.”
“We're asking for donations to get
the show produced,” Pruitt said. “We have perks set up for every level of
donation and our gratitude will never go away. No amount is too small (or
large, ha)."
You can check the show out, and/or
donate, at www.deathandmccootie.com/
"This show represents a lot
for my partners and me,” Pruitt said. “This is the first time that I'm really
doing my own producing so the stakes are high. Usually I just show up and do
the job and leave. This is a lot more gratifying and personal. I use skills
that I’ve learned from everyone I've ever worked with. Especially those from
Little Theatre.”
The son of John Pruitt and Jean
Wood of Sullivan and the brother of SES teacher Melissa Haegan, Pruitt grew up
with and IN the Little Theatre, landing starring roles there in shows like “The
Jungle Book” while in his mid-teens.
Unlike young people from towns
without a professional theatre, Pruitt was able to learn that a viable acting
career was not merely possible for him, but plausible.
“It was something that was
available to me,” he said. “I still had to work at it and learn, but it
certainly made it seem like something that was attainable. And when you’re
young and fearless, it was a great combo for me, ha!
“From the first show I did at
LTOTS, which was the 40th anniversary season, I knew that this is what I was
going to do. Some of the people that I met working there are my best friends
and most trusted contacts today. Which makes any successes really special
because I share it with all of those people.
“My family have been always
supportive and enthusiastic as well. But there’s something about show biz type
folk who really understand each other. And I learned that at a pretty young age
at the Little Theatre. It would be hard to say that anything had a bigger
influence on life and career.”
Springboarding from the Little
Theatre, Pruitt appeared in productions with some familiar names, including
Liam Nesson, Peter Sarsgaard, Chris O’Donnell, Laura Linney, John Lithgow, Tim
Curry, Steve Buscemi and a favorite of Pruitt’s, Tina Fey.
Tina Fey |
“She remembered me from that
dinner when I asked her about it on the ‘30 Rock’ set.”
And while a fair number of actors
can claim to have worked with Alec Baldwin, how many can say they have appeared
with TWO Alec Baldwins?
“I didn’t have the nerve to tell
Baldwin that I had worked on ‘30 Rock’ prior to shooting the Capitol One
commercial with him. Just never got the opportunity, only being with him one
day.”
Pruitt played a man buying a
wedding ring with the advice of the two Baldwins, one of whom was busy flirting
with his fiancé.
"Alec Baldwin was cool and
easy,” Pruitt said. “A little intimidating at first as he’s known to have a bit
of a short fuse. But I shot with him on the last day of a four-day shoot so by
then, they were all at the end and he was in a good mood. He had one moment of
‘I’m here and ready why aren’t we shooting?’ but if you've ever shot anything,
no matter who you are, you've said that 100 times. It’s tedious but he was a pro
and dropped what was probably about $30,000 on jewelry for his girlfriend. All
in all, nice guy.”
And Pruitt had another reason to
be happy about that shoot. “Anytime you do a commercial with a celebrity, you
know it’s going to have a healthy run on TV.”
Great story...great subject...great writer...Honored to have known and worked with you both....
ReplyDeleteThank you, and back at you.
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