Monthly Archives: December 2018

Life, Career of Beloved Comedienne Gilda Radner

Lisa D’Apolito directed the Love, Gilda documentary. The movie boasts “In her own words…” I am quick to differ. Like most documentaries today, the directors skewed them to generate a message based on the director’s proactive. Sure. The movie shows her journals with words, but the director takes them out of context. 

Tender with personal interviews while highlighting Radner’s talent, but the movie needed to share more of her happiness and successes. We are all human and have problems. The director skews the fact that when she visits the doctor, she is not responsible. But clearly, she is being responsible for going to the doctor. It is how she handles those problems that make her a survivor.  

In her journals, the director pulls out passages from comedienne Gilda Radner reflections on her life and career. Weaving together her recently discovered audiotapes and rare home movies, Love, Gilda shares a side of Radner that is honest and whimsical. Portions of her diary read by well-known comedians. Each inspired by Radner’s talent and vivaciousness, Bill Hader, Amy Poehler, Maya Rudolph, and Cecily Strong read in awe sharing her story.

The documentary includes interviews with original “Saturday Night Live” cast and crew, such as Chevy Chase, Laraine Newman, Paul Shaffer and longtime friend, Martin Short. Throughout the movie photos of the younger cast and crew are spliced within the story. With photos of the young cast, all looking healthy and vibrant is worth watching the documentary. 

Her adventures before SNL have her marrying a sculpture, moving to Canada, and divorcing. She meets her boyfriend and longtime friend, Martin Short.  She receives a phone call from John Belushi and tells her “We need a girl.” Off Radner goes to Chicago, being the token girl for Second City comedy group. The photographs show young Dan Aykroyd and the late Harold Ramis. 

Gilda Radner puts a smile on the faces of people who remember watching her as one of the original cast members of SNL where she created and portrayed now-classic comic characters such as Roseanne Roseannadanna, Emily Litella, and Lisa Loopner. She rose to fame winning an Emmy, starring in movies and on Broadway. 

Though the director uses Radner’s words and her voice by working with the Radner Estate, D’Apolito picks her favorites from a collection of diaries and personal audio and videotapes.  Documenting her childhood, her comedy career, her life with Gene Wilder and her struggle with cancer, the D’Apolito allows Radner to voice her story through laughter and tears. The never-before-seen footage and journal entries form the narrative spine of the documentary. Again, D’Apolito spins a tale of Radner trying to get Wilder to marry her. Yet, I distinctly recall, Wilder in interviews saying of how much he loved Radner and missed her so much after her death from cancer. Anyone who watches this documentary will see the love Wilder shared with Radner.

My favorite words from Radner, which I am paraphrasing, is how she mentions she just did what she loved to do, kept taking jobs, and ended up famous. 

Support the Girls – Waitresses Bare All

Written & Directed by Andrew Bujalski, Support the Girls follows Lisa, played by Regina Hall. The story is about her life as a general manager at a highway-side sports bar that resembles called Hooters Double Whammies. Just look at the promotional photos and get the idea – tits and ass.

Yet, Lisa is the last person anyone expected to find this type of establishment. She comes to love the place and its customers. As an intuitive mother, she nurtures and sternly protects her ‘girls’ on the staff.

The straw finally broke her back one day, and her genuine buoyancy was pummeled from every direction.

Lisa learns that fantasy sometimes becomes a reality, and nothing is far from the truth.

In 20014, Bujalski won the “Someone to Watch” Independent Spirit Award for Funny Ha Ha, which is nothing like Support the Girls. He offers his thoughts on establishments like Hooters. “It seems like just about the simplest business concept you could imagine – ‘What if all the waitresses in this restaurant wore tight, cleavage-y halter tops?’– but I couldn’t get over how bizarre it ultimately was. No culture besides present-day America would ever produce mass-scale demand for such a place, a business that seems about 10% strip club and 90% TGI Friday’s/Applebee’s/Chili’s/Cracker Barrel. Strippers are supposed to make men feel like badass transgressors. But these women are just supposed to make you feel normal — the proverbial “red-blooded American male.”

I totally agree with what he says because…Really? How can a woman act normal when she is practically bare-assed?

Hall liked Bujalski’s script and wanted to be in the movie. “From the moment I read it, I just resonated with Lisa. I had seen Andrew’s work and thought he wrote such a beautifully complex yet simplistic script. He was able to find the humanity in this space that we take for granted or don’t necessarily even think about. I just loved the chord that he touched on with this group of people, these women, and girls. I thought Lisa was great: her need to help, her need to fix, her need to save, and her need to be needed. It just resonated on so many levels.”

The movie is receiving accolades from critics. Regina Hall is the first Black woman to win Best Actress in the New York Film Critics Circle’s 83-year history this year for her portrayal of  Lisa.

Hall also starred in another strong cultural movie called The Hate U Give. The film is based on a book of the same name, but the power of the situation is nothing compared to Support the Girls. Though,  Lisa does nurture the girls in a motherly way. This situation is not racist like The Hate U Give.

The cast is rounded out quite nicely with Haley Lu Richardson, Shayna McHayle, James LeGros, Dylan Gelula, AJ Michalka, Brooklyn Decker, Jana Kramer, John Elvis, and Lea DeLaria.