Monday, June 14, 2010

Joan

Over the weekend, I caught up with a documentary that I had missed at Sundance and which has been getting great buzz ever since - Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work. An added bonus: Rivers appeared live for a brief but engaging Q&A after the show.

Known best in recent years for her multiple plastic surgeries, Joan Rivers is an icon in comedy circles - a pioneer that blazed a trail for brash female comics like Kathy Griffin and Sarah Silverman. Once named the permanent guest host for "The Tonight Show", then permanently shunned by Johnny Carson for defecting to Fox, Joan has been through many ups and downs in a career that has spanned over 50 years.

The film opens on her makeup-less face and declares at the outset that it covers "A year in the life of a semi-legend". Filmmakers Ricki Stern and Annie Sundberg were originally set to follow Rivers in her 76th year as she develops a new play based on her life, and tries to keep her career going. The play dead-ends but the glimpse inside her world absolutely fascinates. Her biggest fear is an empty calendar, so she self-admittingly proclaims to never turn down anything and keeps working non-stop at nearly 80 years old. The cinema verite film includes hilarious segments of Joan's comedy act and is intertwined with cool footage from her early career.

I left the theatre with a new-found admiration for Rivers, whom I had mainly associated with awkward red carpet interviews, QVC, and her penchant for the going under the knife. The film captures the brutality of show business - especially for performers as they age - but Joan has outlasted many who dismissed her talent and tenacity.

Check out the film and watch Joan keep on working it.

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