Izzard likes the style of ‘Tara’

4/25/2011
BY LYNN ELBER
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Eddie Izzard portrays Dr. Hattaras in ‘The United States of Tara.’
Eddie Izzard portrays Dr. Hattaras in ‘The United States of Tara.’

LOS ANGELES — Eddie Izzard says he’ll never abandon stand-up, but he’s looking for more than laughs as an actor.

Izzard decided to guest star in a multiepisode arc on Showtime’s United States of Tara this season, because of the show’s complexity.

“I normally try not to do comedies, but it’s a dramatic comedy, a drama with a comedic edge. I thought, ‘Let’s go do it,’” he said.

United States of Tara, which airs 10:30 Sunday night, stars Toni Collette as a suburban wife, mom, and troubled host to multiple personalities. Izzard plays a professor who meets Tara when she signs up for his abnormal psychology class.

The professor’s doubts about the authenticity of her diagnosis begin to waver when he sees Tara’s startling alter egos emerge.

He’s a complex character to explore, Izzard said.

“This guy is a broken genius. He’s brilliant but has (erred) in his past, and that’s why he’s teaching in Kansas. I thought I could tap into that, someone who thinks that he’s brilliant but the world says is not brilliant.”

Collette calls working with Izzard a joy.

“I love his humor, his swagger, and all that he has brought to season three,” she said.

Izzard, 49, said he has wanted to act since age 7 and, at 30, “it started working.”

His varied credits include the Tom Cruise film Valkyrie, Ocean’s Twelve, and sequel Ocean’s Thirteen, and the TV series The Riches. His stage work in London and New York includes a Tony Award-nominated performance in 2003 for A Day in the Death of Joe Egg.

Izzard has put his own stamp on standup, delivering amalgams of wide-ranging observations and impressions while sometimes garbed in dresses. That has led people to assume he’s gay, but Izzard has described himself as a “straight transvestite.”

To stretch his boundaries, he has actively avoided sketch shows and most sitcoms and focused on drama or dark comedy such as United States of Tara, which was created by Oscar-winning writer Diablo Cody (Juno) and co-stars John Corbett and Rosemarie DeWitt.

“It’s a harder way, a slower way, but this is the way I’ve decided to do it,” Izzard said.