Playwright Moss Hart lit up the theater — and the life of his wife, actress Kitty Carlisle Hart. She recalls their life together and shares her happiness at the revived interest in his plays. JENNIFER POYEN Special to The Jewish. News T Playwright Moss Hart and his wife, actress Carlisle Hart, shared a life in the theater: he setting: A suite at Boston's Ritz-Carlton Hotel, 1948. Piles of food, overflowing ashtrays and half- empty tumblers of booze litter the room. The mood is tense and chaotic, with theater types buzzing in and out. At the eye of the storm is a playwright, busily rewriting a Broadway-bound script that has just had a disastrous opening night. It's a scene from Moss Hart's Light Up the Sky, the 1948 comedy about the ups and downs of mounting a new play out of town, which opens tonight at the Hilberry Theatre in Detroit and next month at the Baldwin Theater in Royal Oak. But for Hart, his bride, Kitty Carlisle, and the cast and crew of the first production of Light Up the Sky, it also was a case of life imitating art. Opening night in Boston didn't go swimmingly, and Hart, who also was directing the play, had to work fast to salvage the show. "Poor Mossy — it was sort of a baptism by fire," Kitty Carlisle Hart remembered in a recent interview from the East Side Manhattan apartment where she has lived since her hus- band died in 1961 at age 57. "We had to keep the suite stacked with food — we had a huge suite at the Ritz. And those ashtrays — I'll never forget all those ashtrays. Everybody smoked in those days. "The Sturm and Drang that Moss described in the play was all true, my dear, all true, though I think he was too busy rewriting to think about the irony of it all." Determined to make a success, Moss Hart set about fixing the script, changing the tone of the second act and broadening the humor until the play took shape as the wryly comic valen- tine to the theater world that became a success on Broadway. "Moss always said, 'You have to listen to the audience. They won't tell you how to fix the play, but they'll tell you whether it works or not," Hart explained. "The first act had been so funny, and then Moss was off on something very seri- ous in the second act, and the audience was very let down. He had to rewrite the whole second act. "He also used to say, If the play's a hit, the elevator comes, you go down across the street to the restaurant, and the soup is hot. But if the notices are bad, you press the button, and there's no elevator. You go to dinner, and the waiter has his thumb in the soup."' Hart's throaty laugh trailed off into the midday blare of Manhattan traffic. Jennifer Poyen writes for Copley News Service. 2/12 1999 78 Detroit Jewish News