Quintessential Clown Bill Irwin ON BECKETT at The Kirk Douglas Theatre

Bill Irwin brings the essence of playwright Samuel Beckett’s Irish humor, pathos and personality to the stage in ON BECKETT at the Kirk Douglas Theatre in Culver City. Photo credit: Craig Schwartz

Bill Irwin in the Irish Repertory Theatre production of “On Beckett.” Conceived and performed by Irwin, “On Beckett” runs through October 27 at Center Theatre Group’s Kirk Douglas Theatre. For more information, please visit CenterTheatreGroup.org. Press Contact: CTGMedia@CTGLA.org / (213) 972-7376. Photo by Craig Schwartz.

 

Bill Irwin is a Tony-winning actor, director, writer and long-time clown who was an original member of the Pickle Family Circus, formed in San Francisco in 1974. So it did not surprise me at all that the talented Mr. Irwin utilized his wonderful comedic skills, including his oversized clown shoes which he claims are “older than any of our matinee patrons” to bring the essence of playwright Samuel Beckett’s Irish humor, pathos and personality to the stage in ON BECKETT at the Kirk Douglas Theatre in Culver City through October 27, 2019. This production, conceived and performed by Irwin, premiered at Irish Repertory Theatre in New York City in October of 2018.

 

Bill Irwin is haunted by the work of Samuel Beckett, widely recognized as one of the greatest dramatists of the 20th century who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1969 “for his writing, which – in new forms for the novel and drama – in the destitution of modern man acquires its elevation.” Beckett’s works capture the pathos and ironies of modern life yet still maintain his faith in man’s capacity for compassion and survival, no matter the circumstances in their lives. Irwin has learned Beckett’s language over years as a performer in several of his plays, most notably “Waiting for Godot” which he now finds himself considering and reconsidering on whether or not the characters who wait for something that will never happen is well suited to the clown antics he so brilliantly brings to the stage.

Irwin’s approach to the comic, the tragic, to every side of Beckett’s work from his plays to his prose, offers the audience an opportunity to experience Beckett’s language through the lens of a uniquely skilled performer who feels and expresses its Irish essence to the core. Irwin’s ability to inhabit all four of the “Godot” characters at a comedic level I had never considered before opened my eyes to a new framework from which to consider the many ways in which human beings can live out their lives when the only real thing we can truly expect is for it to end. What’s the point? Then again, why not enjoy it as best we can?

 

I must admit I was not familiar with Beckett’s 1950 (“the year I was born,” Irwin announced) “Texts For Nothing” collection of 13 short prose pieces before watching Irwin transform three of the sometimes evasive-at-first-hearing content into interesting expressions of the meaning of life. Or was that the insignificance of life? But that is the whole point of Beckett’s well-known existentialism – what is the meaning of life and why does it matter? Perhaps one of the best quotes which personifies Beckett’s writing style to me comes from Shakespeare’s Macbeth: “Out, out brief candle! Life’s but a walking shadow, a poor player that struts and frets his hour upon the stage and then is heard no more: it is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.”

 

While I find Beckett’s plays often too intensely intellectual for my comprehension, this was not the case with Irwin’s seemingly effortless way of donning a bowler hat (or 2 or 3), juggling them until the perfect one is atop his head, and then going on to flop around the stage in his baggy pants and oversized shoes as a quintessential clown while explaining his interpretation of passages reflecting “the noise of life” in Beckett’s “Text for Noting,” “Watt,” “Waiting for Godot,” “Endgame,” and “The Unnamable.” It was an extraordinary evening of watching a master of the stage interpreting the life and brilliance of a theatre legend.

Tickets for “On Beckett” are available online at www.CenterTheatreGroup.org, by calling (213) 628-2772,  or at the Center Theatre Group Box Office at the Ahmanson Theatre or at the Kirk Douglas Theatre Box Office two hours prior to performance, ranging from $30-$75.The Kirk Douglas Theatre is located at 9820 Washington Blvd. in Culver City, CA 90232. Free three hour covered parking at City Hall with validation (available in the Kirk Douglas Theatre lobby).