How do you feel about being recently honored by the ARPA International Film Festival with their Lifetime Achievement Award?
I’m always honored to be singled out.
How was your overall experience at ARPA as the man of the hour? Was it an overwhelming experience, or are you used to it?
No, I’ve gotten used to it, but it’s always nice to have a fresh one.
How much of your work is in entertainment and how much of it is activism?
I’m not that active right now. I show up when they call me or ask me.
You were a two-term president of the Screen Actors Guild in the ‘80s. How do you feel the Guild is doing considering the challenges it faces now?
First of all, I did not celebrate the merger (SAG and AFTRA). It was not done as we had been seeking a merger all these years, to get it done with the proper portability of pension and health pay. None of that took place. It’s now like 160,000 members, and I don’t find them that outspokenly strong to merit a strike. If you strike, make it mean something. I don’t think the advances they have made in the context they have achieved are that good or important. My jury is still out.
I met you at an ACLU fundraiser over 10 years ago. Are you still active with ACLU?
No, they don’t call me. The people who I knew at ACLU, most of them, retired. They left. I’m not familiar with the new crew.
Do you have any major regrets?
No. I regret that when I came in as president [of the Screen Actors Guild], I wasn’t more versed in the intricacies of running a union, of knowing how to play the union. I did a lot of running fast, but I’m still learning.
What new project(s) do you have coming up?
Well, I do two shows: “A Man and His Prostate,” which Ed Weinberger wrote, which is always successful. Joe Proctor and Samuel Warren wrote a fine piece called “God Help Us,” in which I play God. It involves a man and a woman who have been lovers in the past, but who disagree intensely with each other’s positions; one is a fascist and one is an extreme liberal. So those promote well and show well. These are good times for political jokes, and they are well written.
You are pretty busy these days, correct?
Not really. I tour with two different shows. But before the holidays, the phones are off. It’ll pick up after the New Year.
What are some of your favorite charities and causes?
I feel very strongly about environmental organizations. Defenders of Wildlife is my chief activity; I’m on the board. I’m supportive wherever I can be or whenever I have the money, or any peace effort in the Middle East. I was very saddened at the [pull out] by the United States from the Iran nuclear agreement and knew it would happen once Trump took in John Bolton as an adviser. So other than wildlife and Central American issues that I can contribute to, and the union of course, that’s about the only activity I can register.
Tell me a secret—a good one!
Donald Trump was born in Libya. It’s true.
For more information about “A Man and His Prostate,” please visit AManAndHisProstate.com. For more information about “God Help Us,” please visit GodHelpUs.net.