The first rule of Ebenezer Club is: Take lots of naps.
Morphing from friendless creep to Mr. Christmas Cheer during the course of two nonstop hours on stage requires a lot of stamina, say the men who have played miserly Ebenezer Scrooge in the Guthrie Theater's annual "A Christmas Carol."
Richard Ooms gave up smoking. J.C. Cutler hit the gym. And Nathaniel Fuller, who plays the skinflint in the production that opens this week, forgoes his evening cocktail.
In all, 19 actors have played the role since the Guthrie debuted its annual cash cow in 1975. Raye Birk, who played Scrooge there from 2005 to 2008, has talked about starting a club.
Their proposed secret handshake: Extend the hand but, just before gripping, pull it back and say, "Bah, humbug!"
While the play has changed a bit over the years — Fuller jokes that he doesn't have to learn his lines; he has to unlearn the ones from previous productions — at heart it's a huge emotional journey that Birk compares to one of Shakespeare's most legendary parts: "It's as big as Lear, in terms of the demands the role places on an actor."
One actor who would know is Fuller, a five-time-Scrooge who played Lear at the Guthrie last winter.
"There aren't quite as many lines as Lear, but Scrooge goes through the whole gamut of emotions," says Fuller. "He goes through a great deal of pain, when the past is brought up and he has to confront his own death. Then, when he's converted at the end, he's insanely happy."