Michael Cumpsty: Over 15 Years with Roundabout

By: Feb. 04, 2014
Get Access To Every Broadway Story

Unlock access to every one of the hundreds of articles published daily on BroadwayWorld by logging in with one click.




Existing user? Just click login.

Michael Cumpsty's first appearance on a Roundabout stage was in 1987 as a "moonstruck poet" in the Off-Broadway production of George Bernard Shaw's Man and Superman. Since then, he has appeared in 17 Broadway shows including five Roundabout productions and has been nominated for a Tony Award and two Outer Critics Circle awards. Cumpsty's most recent appearance on Broadway is in Machinal, now playing at the American Airlines Theatre through March 2.

In our 1997 Tony-nominated revival of 1776, Cumpsty played John Dickenson, the "hard-nosed" British loyalist among the delegates debating the Declaration of Independence. Playbill writer Harry Haun observed that the character "couldn't find better representation" than through Michael Cumpsty. Haun highlighted Cumpsty's careful attention to language and precision in delivery, which allowed his Dickenson to be "the perfect pitchman for ideas and ideals."

Michael Cumpsty and the cast of 1776. Photo by Joan Marcus.

Cumpsty returned to Roundabout in 2005 in another Tony-nominated production, The Constant Wife. In the 1926 "unromantic" comedy, Cumpsty played an adulterous husband opposite Kate Burton as his betrothed, Constance. USA Today writer Elysa Gardener said, "Michael Cumpsty captures the unfaithful husband's buffoonery with his usual vigor and grace."

Kate Burton and Michael Cumpsty in The Constant Wife. Photo by Joan Marcus.

Stephen Sondheim's Sunday in the Park with George marked Cumpsty's third appearance in a Tony-nominated Roundabout production. The musical was inspired by the famous George Seurat painting A Sunday afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte. Featured in ensemble of the musical, which is centered on a fictitious Seurat, Cumpsty's work did not go unnoticed by New York Times writer Ben Brantley. Brantley remarked, "I've never seen a supporting cast for this show that presents such finely individuated characterizations."

Michael Cumpsty and Jessica Molaskey in Sunday in the Park with George. Photo by Joan Marcus.

In our 2013-2014 Season, Michael Cumpsty has made two Broadway appearances. Last fall inThe Winslow Boy, Cumpsty provided a "graceful drollness" to the role of Desmond Curry, a family friend to the troubled Winslow family. Cumpsty's portrayal of Curry, a winning cricket player who finds himself on the losing side of love with the Winslow's daughter Catherine, was described as endearing by Time Out New York.

Charlotte Parry and Michael Cumpsty in The Winslow Boy. Photo by Joan Marcus.

Currently, Michael Cumpsty can be seen in Machinal at the American Airlines Theatre. Written bySophie Treadwell in response to the infamous murder trial of Ruth Snyder, Machinal tells the story of a young woman (played by Rebecca Hall) who is driven to murder her husband after taking up a lover. Cumpsty plays the role of the "odious and smug" Husband, who to the young woman represents a repulsive obligation to a mechanized, callous society.

Michael Cumpsty and Rebecca Hall in Machinal. Photo by Joan Marcus.

Cumpsty receives praise for the role; Linda Winer says, "Michael Cumpsty has an almost touching lack of self-awareness as Husband, whose unbearable bromides contrast violently with the passion of Young Woman's Lover," and USA Today raves that his portrayal of the Husband is, "a caricature of a condescending (and harrowingly dull) patriarch, gamely played by the always-excellent Michael Cumpsty."

Michael Cumpsty as Husband. Photo by Joan Marcus.


Machinal plays at the American Airlines Theatre until March 2, 2014. For more information and tickets, please visit our website.

Click here to visit the Roundabout blog.


Videos