From left: Tyne Daly, Rosie ODonnell, Samantha Bee and Katie Finneran
Women on the verge of a nightly breakthrough
Rotating cast tells universal tales of love, loss, clothes
By Scott Harrah
Nora and Delia Ephrons Off-Broadway stage adaptation of Ilene Beckermans 1995 memoir is a breezy, entertaining, 90-minute look at femininity and how clothing offers insights into womens psyches.
The show is presented with a rotating, all-star cast. Tyne Daly and Katie Finneran, Rosie ODonnell, Samantha Bee, and Natasha Lyonne kicked off the lineup in October.
The Ephron sisters have taken Beckermans book and turned it into a sort of Vagina Monologues about fashion. Presented as readers theater, the actors sit onstage at music stands, with scripts in front of them. Their characters tell funny, often touching stories about how clothes have had an impact on their lives. The tales range from tragic (shopping for a post-mastectomy bra) to silly (a buxom lady trying to find a bra that actually fits) to hilariously crass (a menstruating character tries to avoid staining her new dress and the dining-room chair at a swank dinner party).
In the opening cast, Tyne Daly tells anecdotes about clothes and coming of age alongside poster-size illustrations of various dresses, and using a Magic Marker and poster board shows the audience exactly how to draw a dress. As the character Gingy, an older Upper East Side lady, she muses about wanting to tell her kids stories about clothes because I wasnt always a mother. I was a girl. Daly, as den mother of the quintet, adds warmhearted wisdom to her role, setting the tone for the rest of the characters.
Rosie ODonnell is uproariously funny as she discusses womens fascination with purses, and poignant when she talks about the bathrobe worn by her deceased mother. Husky-voiced Natasha Lyonne gets many laughs as she talks about being a bad girl who bought a gang sweater. There is lots of female bonding onstage as Lyonne, Bee, and Finneran often crack up at each other.
Its refreshing to see actors having so much fun onstage, without the need for lavish sets or costumes, and thats why the show works so well. Director Karen Carpenter makes everyone gel cohesively, yet lets each character shine on her own. Love, Loss, and What I Wore is akin to a first-rate chick flick for the stage, and one that men will thoroughly enjoy, too.
Tyne Daly, Mary Louise Wilson, Mary Birdsong, Lisa Joyce and Jane Lynch perform through November 15. From November 18 to December 13, the cast includes Kristin Chenoweth, Rhea Perlman, Rita Wilson, Lucy DeVito and Capathia Jenkins.
Written by Nora and Delia Ephron. Directed by Karen Carpenter. Through March 2010, at the Westside Theatre (407 West 43rd Street). For tickets, call 212)-239-6200 or visit LoveLossOnstage.com.