I am totally in on this show. My only complaint is the long wait between
seasons. I probably like it more than it deserves, but for several reasons
I don’t care.

On Thu, Mar 7, 2019 at 9:48 PM Steve Timko <[email protected]> wrote:

> “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” has cleaned up at awards shows the past couple
> of years, winning several important Emmy and Golden Globe awards, but we
> haven’t discussed it in this group. I finished the first season and it’s
> worth watching.
> Rachel Brosnahan plays the title character, a 1950s Upper West Side New
> York City housewife who gets plunged into stand-up comedy as a form of
> therapy. Miriam “Midge” Maisel is the perfect housewife and trained her
> whole life, it seems, to do that, going to college just to find a husband.
> In the arc of the first season, Miriam develops a feminist bent. Brosnahan
> deserves the accolades she receives.
> Alex Borstein, who I thought was good on “Mad TV” and as a voice actor, is
> also exceptional as the manager who sees greatness in Miriam, even if she
> doesn’t see it herself.
> Tony Shaloub is fantastic in a relatively minor role as Miriam’s father.
> Shaloub said on Marc Maron’s WTF podcast he has a bigger role in the second
> season. He can steal the scene with just a few words. Kevin Pollak is
> mostly good as Miriam’s father-in-law – he goes over the top a few times –
> but it’s clear he can’t hold his own against Shaloub. Maybe it’s intended
> that way. Shaloub has a few great scenes where he says almost nothing but
> steals the movie. If you watch Matthew Wiener’s DVD commentary on the first
> season of “Mad Men,” you could see how he broke down scenes and explained
> how they worked. I would love some DVD commentary on Shaloub. Is the script
> that good? Is it the directing? Is it Shaloub? Or is it all three?
> The writing is often great but uneven. Like in the sixth episode, there’s
> a celebratory dinner scene with an over-enthusiastic Jewish convert that is
> so good and so funny it’s worth watching twice. A few minutes later,
> there’s a screaming match between the characters of Brosnahan and Borstein
> that seems like it’s right out of scriptwriting 101. Almost amateurish.
> The show is beautifully photographed, especially the earlier episodes
> where they glamorize Greenwich Village. Again, it would be great to have a
> DVD commentary to say which are real shots and which are CGI.
> One other gripe is how the character interacts with Lenny Bruce. I don’t
> know much about Bruce but I don’t think he was a benevolent do-gooder. I
> recall stories of him borrowing money from lots of people *before* he got
> deeply involved in drugs and not paying it back.
> Some have ranked it as one of the best series ever. I wouldn’t rank it up
> there with “Breaking Bad” or “The Sopranos,” but it’s funny and smart and
> worth your time.
>
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