Bairbre Dowling Explained

Bairbre Dowling
Birth Name:Barbara Patricia Dowling
Birth Date:27 March 1953
Birth Place:Dublin, Ireland
Death Place:New York City, U.S.
Occupation:Actress
Children:1
Father:Vincent Dowling
Mother:Brenda Doyle
Relatives:Richard Boyd Barrett (half-brother)
Notable Works:Playboy of the Western World, The Dead, War of the Buttons

Bairbre Dowling (born Barbara Patricia Dowling; 27 March 1953 – 20 January 2016) was an Irish actress. She appeared in films, frequently on the American stage and on US TV as well as in Irish productions.

Early life

Dowling was born in Dublin, the daughter of actor Vincent Dowling and actress Brenda Doyle (who died in a motorcycle collision in 1981). She had three sisters, Louise, Valerie and Rachael, and a half-brother, Cian. Irish politician Richard Boyd Barrett was Dowling's biological half-brother, though this fact was not made public until after Vincent Dowling's death in 2013.[1]

Career

Stage

In 1970 Dowling was part of the company at the Abbey Theatre, where she appeared in The Becauseway (1970) and Rites (1973).[2] In 1977 she worked with her father at the Great Lakes Shakespeare Festival in Cleveland, Ohio. She shared the stage with her husband Colm Meaney in And a Nightingale Sang in 1985.[3] She was seen on Broadway in Da by Hugh Leonard.[4] In 2011 she appeared in a play by playwright Teresa Deevy, Temporal Powers, a Mint Theatre production presented as part of the Teresa Deevy project.[5] [6]

She established an ongoing presence at the Miniature Theatre of Chester in Massachusetts, often working with her father as director or co-star. In 1992 she starred in Last Tag,[7] and in 1993 in An Audience with Fanny Kemble, a one-woman show by Anne Ludlum, based on the life of actress and writer Fanny Kemble.[8] In 2004, she appeared in Isobel Mahon's So Long, Sleeping Beauty, and in 2007, in The Gravity of Honey, in Dear Liar[9] and in Is Life Worth It? in 2009.[10]

Film, television and radio

Dowling's first film appearance was in Francis Ford Coppola's Dementia 13 (1963). She acted with her husband in the PBS television film Playboy of the Western World in 1983, in John Huston's 1987 film The Dead, and in the 1994 drama War of the Buttons. She also appeared in John Boorman's Zardoz (1973), and Changing Habits (1997).[11] American television credits included roles in Murder She Wrote, Crossing Jordan, Days of our Lives, and ER. On RTÉ, she was known for a long-running role in The Riordans.

Dowling was a member of The California Artists Radio Theatre (CART) ensemble and performed in over 30 of their live radio plays.[12]

Personal life

From 1977 or 1982 until 1994, Dowling was married to actor Colm Meaney,[13] with whom she had a daughter, Brenda, in 1984.[14]

In 2016, at age 62, Dowling died in New York of Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease.

Filmography

Film

Television

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Dowling was my father, his death saddens me. independent. en. 29 March 2020.
  2. Web site: The Abbey Theatre Archive.
  3. News: Families are important at local theater. 4 August 1985. Santa Maria Times. 29 March 2020. 47. Newspapers.com.
  4. Web site: Irish actress Bairbre Dowling (62) dies after short illness. independent. en. 29 March 2020.
  5. Web site: The Teresa Deevy Archive.
  6. Web site: Mint Theatre Company.
  7. News: Borak. Jeffrey. Suspense Drama Premieres. 15 August 1992. The Berkshire Eagle. 29 March 2020. 17. Newspapers.com.
  8. News: Borak. Jeffrey. Actress' Spirit Returns to the Berkshires. 31 July 1993. The Berkshire Eagle. 29 March 2020. 5. Newspapers.com.
  9. News: Borak. Jeffrey. Two from the Founder. 10 October 2007. The Berkshire Eagle. 29 March 2020. 23. Newspapers.com.
  10. Web site: Paul O'Brien and Bairbre Dowling Photo (2009-09-10). www.broadwayworld.com. 29 March 2020.
  11. Book: Paietta, Ann C.. Saints, Clergy and Other Religious Figures on Film and Television, 1895–2003. 24 January 2015. McFarland. 978-1-4766-1016-0. 131–132. en.
  12. Web site: Bairbre Dowling. California Artists Radio Theatre. en. 29 March 2020.
  13. Web site: 'I had no time for them crying into their pints'. 22 September 2007. The Irish Times . HighBeam Research. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20131111044545/http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-24896582.html. 11 November 2013.
  14. Web site: Actor Colm Meaney pays heartfelt tribute to late mother at funeral in Dublin. McGowan. Sharon. 23 July 2018. dublinlive. 29 March 2020.