Amy Irving back on stage in Williams classic at John Drew - 27 East

Arts & Living

Arts & Living / 1374734

Amy Irving back on stage in Williams classic at John Drew

icon 12 Photos

author on Jul 7, 2009

Toward the end of “Carrie,” the Brian De Palma film based on the Stephen King novel, what seems to be the hand of the title character reaches out from her grave and grabs Amy Irving’s arm.

This remains one of the scariest scenes in American films. Yet Ms. Irving doesn’t trade on that famous scene or, for that matter, much of her movie work. In fact, her resume is ripe with a wide variety of stage roles.

The most recent listing is “The Glass Menagerie,” and East End audiences will have an opportunity to see the Tennessee Williams classic beginning on July 8, the first night of previews for the first full-scale production presented at the renovated John Drew Theater of Guild Hall in East Hampton.

Though only in her 20s when she made such career benchmark films as “Carrie,” “The Fury” (another film by Mr. De Palma), “The Competition” with Richard Dreyfuss, and “Yentl” directed by Barbra Streisand, Ms. Irving was already a stage veteran. She was born into a stage family in Palo Alto, California. Her father, Jules Irving, was a film and stage director who years later ran the theater program at Lincoln Center. Her mother is the actress Priscilla Pointer and her brother is the film director David Irving. (She also has a sister, Katie, who is a teacher.)

That same resume states that Ms. Irving was only 2 when she made her stage debut in a production her father directed. But she noted in a recent interview that her stage career goes back even farther.

“I was actually in my mother’s belly while she was on stage doing ‘Playboy of the Western World,’” she said, “so I literally have been acting my entire life.”

She was first noticed at age 12 when she had a scene with the actor Stacey Keach in the Broadway production of “The Country Wife.” She went on to study theater at the Professional Children’s School in Manhattan and the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art. She must have studied well, because back in the states Ms. Irving was quickly listed in the Rolodexes of many casting directors. On television she appeared on such shows as “Police Woman” and “Happy Days” and in the miniseries “Once an Eagle.”

She then went on a roll with movie roles. After the early ingénue parts and in addition to the Richard Dreyfuss and Barbra Streisand films, Ms. Irving starred in “Voices,” “Honeysuckle Rose,” and “Micki and Maude.” She had received an Oscar nomination for her role in “Yentl,” but perhaps her most noteworthy performance was in “Crossing Delancey,” for which she was nominated for a Golden Globe. She also appeared in the Disney movie “Tuck Everlasting” and co-starred opposite Michael Douglas in Academy Award-winner Steven Soderbergh’s film “Traffic.” Loading up the DVD player, Ms. Irving can also be found on screen in “Bossa Nova,” “Carried Away,” “Deconstructing Harry,” “I’m Not Rappaport,” “13 Conversations About One Thing,” “Hide and Seek,” and “Adam.”

Her theater work has been especially rewarding and certainly consistent. She starred in Chekhov’s “Three Sisters” at the Roundabout Theater and received critical acclaim on Broadway in Arthur Miller’s “Broken Glass” at the Booth Theater, for which she was nominated for both the 1994 Drama Desk Award and the Outer Critics Circle Award. She has also starred in the Broadway productions of “Amadeus” and “Heartbreak House,” for which she received another Drama Desk nomination, and she won an Obie Award as Best Actress for her performance in “Road to Mecca” as well as receiving a Drama Desk nomination. She had the leading role in the 1991 Los Angeles premiere of “The Heidi Chronicles.”

It was at the Santa Fe Festival Theatre in 1994 that Ms. Irving starred with her mother in “The Glass Menagerie,” so in a way she is coming full circle while her mother is trying to let go. “She’s been gracefully dealing with what is sort of a passing-the-torch moment,” Ms. Irving said. “We talk on the phone a lot and she asks about the scenes we’re working on that day. She’s flying in from Santa Monica to see the show, and it will be a great pleasure to have her here.”

Neither Ms. Pointer’s performance nor the interpretations by Laurette Taylor and Katharine Hepburn in earlier productions of “The Glass Menagerie” are front and center on Ms. Irving’s radar as she navigates her way through this role with the help of director Harris Yulin. “I always walk out there feeling like I’m the first one doing it, and my Amanda is going to be different from how she was played before,” she said. “I can’t be thinking of Hepburn. No actress can, or we wouldn’t be able to perform.

“However, having said that, what I am experiencing is with certain line readings I’m hearing my mother from the production 15 years ago. I’m trying to block her out, though I admit I’ve stolen a few things from her. She’ll pick up on them when she’s here.”

This particular production is also a kind of turning point in Ms. Irving’s career. “I am at a time of my life where I’m re-evaluating what I can play,” she explained. “I grew up in the theater dreaming of the ingénue roles and about playing Shakespeare’s Juliet and Laura in ‘The Glass Menagerie.’ I didn’t dream about playing Amanda, but now it’s roles like that I have to think about.”

In 2007, she enjoyed a long run in the Tony-winning play by Tom Stoppard, “The Coast of Utopia.” “I had seen it in London and was floored by it, so when I was approached about doing the New York production all I kept thinking was, ‘Yes, please,’” Ms. Irving said. “A huge bonus was that the first six weeks of rehearsal was really a master class in theater conducted by Tom Stoppard. He is a brilliant man.”

Another especially fond memory was acting with a stage and screen legend. During the production of George Bernard Shaw’s “Heartbreak House” at the Circle in the Square Theatre, she starred opposite Rex Harrison. “I was completely awed, but he turned out different from what I expected,” recalled Ms. Irving. “He was very flirtatious. He had Rosemary Harris and I giving him as much girly attention as he could stand. He was very happy during that production, and very playful. His aim was to make me crack up on stage. Making me giggle on stage made his day. He was a total rascal.”

Along the way there have been other television appearances. Ms. Irving starred in the CBS television movie “The Twilight Zone: Rod Sterling’s Lost Classics.” She also starred in the hit mini-series “Anastasia,” for which she received a Golden Globe nomination, and appeared on “Spin City,” “Law and Order: SVU,” and several episodes of “Alias.” It was while being on “Police Woman” that she first met Mr. Yulin, the veteran actor who is directing “The Glass Menagerie.” They also appeared together in a TV movie with Sarah Miles and a relatively unknown Harrison Ford.

“He enjoys directing so much,” she said about Mr. Yulin, who has directed at Guild Hall before. “He’s very generous with actors, and allows us to fall on our faces before cleaning the mess up.”

Ms. Irving has produced plays in New York and elsewhere but hasn’t found time in recent years to take on that chore again, and she doesn’t necessarily miss it. “I’m having way too much fun doing what I’m doing. I know I’ve missed some opportunities along the way because I was busy raising kids,” she said, referring to her son Max by her first husband, the director Steven Spielberg, and her son Gabriel with Bruno Barreto, her second husband, who is also a director.

“I’ve been very fortunate as an actress with the opportunities I have had, such as originating a role in a play written by Athol Fugard and doing ‘Broken Glass’ by Arthur Miller with Arthur right there doing daily rewrites. So with producing, I’ll just see if the right piece and circumstances come along.”

For now, “The Glass Menagerie” is all-consuming, and that is fine with her. “I’m having a wonderful time,” said Ms. Irving. “I’m in one of the greatest plays of all time with a terrific director and cast and performing it in July in East Hampton in a magical theater. It’s all good.”

“The Glass Menagerie” by Tennessee Williams will run through July 26 at the John Drew Theater of Guild Hall, 158 Main Street in East Hampton. For tickets, call the John Drew box office at 324-4050 or go to www.guildhall.org.

You May Also Like:

Round and About for June 19, 2025

Music & Nightlife Mysteries, Deceptions and Illusions Allan Zola Kronzek, a sleight-of-hand artist, will perform ... 18 Jun 2025 by Staff Writer

Interview: Ophira Eisenberg, Host of 'Ask Me Another' and 'Parenting Is a Joke,' Will Perform Saturday at Bay Street Theater

Stand-up comedian Ophira Eisenberg, the host of NPR’s trivia and puzzle show “Ask Me Another” ... 16 Jun 2025 by Brendan J. O’Reilly

To Be a Stranger: Whitney White Explores Identity, Migration in New Musical

Born and raised in Chicago, Whitney White took her very first trip abroad to Paris ... by Michelle Trauring

Jazz Loft at Southampton Show To Pay Tribute to Long Island Jazz Legends at Juneteenth Concert

The “Jazz Loft @ Southampton Concert Series” continues with the “Long Island Jazz Legends & ... by Dan Stark

Author Talk at LongHouse Reserve on Gala Dali

On Sunday, June 29, at 4:30 p.m., author Michèle Gerber Klein presents an author talk and book signing at LongHouse Reserve about her book “Surreal: The Extraordinary Life of Gala Dalí.” Gerber Klein’s second book, “Surreal,” the long-awaited, definitive biography of Gala Dalí unmasks this famous, yet little-known, queen of the 20th-century art world, who graced the canvases, inspired the poetry, and influenced the careers of her illustrious lovers and husbands with courage, agency and tenderness. Using previously undiscovered material, “Surreal” tells the riveting story of Gala Dalí, (1894-1982) who broke away from her cultured, but penurious, background in prerevolutionary ... by Staff Writer

'Upside Down Zebra 'at the Watermill Center

This summer, The Watermill Center will present “Upside Down Zebra,” an exhibition exploring the artistic ... by Staff Writer

'An Evening With Betty Buckley & Christian Jacob' Kicks Off Music Mondays at Bay Street Theater

Bay Street Theater opens its 2025 Music Mondays series with legendary Tony Award-winning stage and screen actress Betty Buckley, who will be joined by celebrated jazz pianist Christian Jacob, for a concert on Monday, June 30, at 8 p.m. Buckley’s Bay Street show will be her only appearance on the East End this summer. Hailed as the “Voice of Broadway,” Buckley is a master storyteller whose performances blur the line between song and scene. Joined by the extraordinary Christian Jacob — nine-time Grammy nominee and a pianist of rare emotional clarity — this intimate concert promises a night of depth, ... by Staff Writer

Rock Down to Electric Avenue Courtesy of The Suffolk

The Suffolk welcomes back “Electric Avenue: The ’80s MTV Experience” on Friday, June 27, at ... by Staff Writer

‘Beyond the Present: Collecting for the Future’

The Southampton Arts Center will honor Christine Mack, a collector of emerging artists, with the 2025 Champions of the Arts Award at this year’s SummerFest Gala on Saturday, August 23, from 6 to 10 p.m. Mack has built her dynamic collection by seeking out, meeting with, collecting and supporting young voices of our times. Her mission is to collect and holistically nurture these talents through the Mack Art Foundation Artist Residency. “Beyond the Present: Collecting for the Future,” an exhibition of works from Mack’s collection, will be on view at SAC from July 26 through September 27. Curated by Natasha ... 15 Jun 2025 by Staff Writer

It's a Jackie Mason Musical

The Southampton Cultural Center will present a benefit performance of “The Jackie Mason Musical” on Saturday and Sunday, July 26 and 27. The show is a musical-comedy based on the whirlwind romance between legendary comedian Jackie Mason and the mother of Sheba Mason, Jackie’s love-child who stars in the show alongside Ian Wehrle (the renowned Jackie Mason doppelgänger) and an offbeat cast of characters. Set in Miami Beach in 1977 with a “soaring musical score” including songs “Ode to the Early Bird Special,” “The Finger” and “I Never Met This Yenta,” the true story behind the musical highlights the romantic ... by Staff Writer