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Cue the Agonized Guy
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Consider the pageant of misery Krause has brought to life: in just three years, Six Feet Under's Nate Fisher has lost both his father and his wife whom he had to bury with his own hands to keep the evil mother-in-law from burning the corpse. In After the Fall, a revival of a 1964 Arthur Miller play and Krause's first turn on Broadway, he plays Quentin, a man whose two marriages break under the weight of the first wife's endless hectoring and the second's endless pill popping. Along the way, two characters commit suicide. As Quentin asks at the end of the first act, "Good God, can there be more?"
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You bet. In We Don't Live Here Anymore, Krause (it's Krau-zuh) plays Hank Evans, a writer navigating his way through a convulsing marriage. The new film features partner swapping, late-night screaming and a child who sleeps in his own dried urine because the mother (Laura Dern)--a woman with whom Evans has an affair is so distracted by her gin and her suffering that she forgets to change the sheets.
When Krause and I met a few hours before After the Fall's opening performance, I wondered how one actor channels so much pain without letting it sweep him away. How do you turn the emotional spigot on and off when pure bile is running through it? Krause has two answers. One is the practical response of a mature dad who grew up in Minnesota (Krause turns 39 this week and has a 2 1/2-year-old son, Roman): "Sometimes I do what I do just because it's my job." And like any job, getting up at 4 a.m. to shoot a scene can require "the sheer will just to pick my bones up." Krause is hot now, but he has actually had regular TV work for 14 years (ever since 1990, when he was on Carol Burnett's sketch comedy Carol & Company).
The other answer is that Krause believes his portrayals of laceration fulfill some moral obligation: "I think a lot of people are in agony, and if we only tell stories about ourselves that help us escape our lives, I don't think I'm doing my job. If you can be open about the agony and the anguish, maybe people can talk about it a little more freely and not be all alone. The less alone we all feel, the better off we all are."
Which sounds a little solipsistic the actor as national counselor. Krause is at his worst when he philosophizes, which is often. He issues such impenetrable platitudes as, "Some people are hanging onto 'I'm a Republican' or 'It is Allah's will.' But they have to realize, it's all just happening, and it's all just consciousness." Huh?
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