NEW YORK — Michael Urie recently shared his stage with a noisy visitor and was not amused. He was rehearsing his one-man show and the buzzing fly around his face was grossing him out.
"No," he told the annoying insect, in full diva-mode. "I work alone."
The former "Ugly Betty" star certainly doesn't need any help in Jonathan Tolins' utterly charming play "Buyer & Cellar," which reopened this week at the Barrow Street Theatre following a successful stint at the Rattlestick Playwrights Theater.
The Juilliard-trained Urie plays a struggling actor who lands a job as a clerk in an underground mall of quaint shops. The weird part is the mall is part of Barbra Streisand's estate and only she goes down there.
Over 100 minutes, Urie plays out more than 30 scenes in which his character has a fraught tango with the fictional Babs, eventually teasing out questions about celebrity, materialism and fame. It's moving and sweet and funny.
"I basically don't start speaking," Urie says.
Since "Ugly Betty" ended, he basically hasn't stopped working — from the off-Broadway turn in "The Temperamentals" to the powerful revival of "Angels in America" to a vibrant "The Cherry Orchard" to the big Broadway musical "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying."
"One thing they all have in common is that they're all funny," says Urie, 32, who is also a movie director and filmed the upcoming "Such Good People" with Randy Harrison over the five weeks when "Buyer & Cellar" took a break.