When Louis C.K. strolls out onto the Target Center stage Tuesday, he'll probably deliver another master class in stand-up. Then again, he might just emerge in a tutu and premiere a new ballet inspired by the Cuban missile crisis.
Don't laugh — at least that's what some of our best standups seem to be telling their fans from time to time. In C.K.'s case that has meant turning in a touching performance as a blacklisted screenwriter in "Trumbo" and dropping "Horace and Pete," an Emmy-nominated web series that re-imagines "Cheers" as a Greek tragedy.
Peers who have also taken left turns this past year include Tina Fey, enlisting as a war correspondent in "Whiskey Tango Foxtrot"; Steve Martin, earning Tony nominations for his Broadway musical "Bright Star," and Sarah Silverman, trading in sarcasm for severe depression in "I Smile Back."
They're all following in the shadow of other comics who veered onto unexpected paths — with mixed results. Ten who came before:
Jackie Gleason
Known as: Short-fused bus driver in "The Honeymooners."
The gamble: Pool shark Minnesota Fats, putting Paul Newman on the rack in "The Hustler" (1961).
The result: His sole Oscar nod and red-carpet treatment at every billiards parlor in the country.
Richard Pryor
Known as: One of the most influential standups ever.