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- <text id=89TT0858>
- <title>
- Mar. 27, 1989: Profile:Wendy Wasserstein
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Profiles
- Mar. 27, 1989 Is Anything Safe?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PROFILE, Page 90
- Chronicler Of Frayed Feminism
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Wendy Wasserstein, in her play The Heidi Chronicles, asks hard
- questions about her generation, but her mother would prefer a
- grandchild
- </p>
- <p>By Walter Shapiro
- </p>
- <p> The anger came first, but it is not an easy emotion for
- playwright Wendy Wasserstein. Her natural instinct is to charm,
- to disarm, to retreat from harm. The nervous giggles, the
- wispy, high-pitched voice, the ingratiating brown eyes and
- perhaps even the plump figure all seem protective camouflage.
- For Wasserstein, self-mocking humor has always been the first
- line of defense against both the judgment of others and her
- enveloping Jewish family, which cannot understand why a nice
- girl like Wendy is not married with children at 38. Even her
- closest friends sometimes find her hard to take entirely
- seriously. "With that stupid little voice and ratty fur coat,"
- laughs fellow playwright William Finn, "you initially think this
- lady's a loon, a modern-day Dorothy Parker." But such surface
- judgments mask the intensity within Wasserstein, the vision that
- spawned her new hit Broadway play, The Heidi Chronicles. "I
- wrote this play because I had this image of a woman standing up
- at a women's meeting saying, `I've never been so unhappy in my
- life,'" Wasserstein explains. "Talking to friends, I knew there
- was this feeling around, in me and in others, and I thought it
- should be expressed theatrically. But it wasn't. The more angry
- it made me that these feelings weren't being expressed, the more
- anger I put into that play."
- </p>
- <p> But Wasserstein is far too deft a satirist, and far too
- gentle a person, to compose a screed. Instead, with subtlety and
- humor in The Heidi Chronicles, she has written a memorable elegy
- for her own lost generation. Heidi tells the story of a slightly
- introverted art historian, a fellow traveler in the women's
- movement, who clings to her values long after her more committed
- friends switch allegiance from communes to consuming. At the
- pivotal moment in the play's second act, Heidi (played by Joan
- Allen) stands behind a lectern on a bare stage, giving a
- luncheon speech to the alumnae of the prep school she once
- attended. Slowly the successful veneer of Heidi's life is
- stripped away as she tries to ad-lib a free-form answer to the
- assigned topic, "Women, Where Are We Going?" Heidi's soliloquy
- ends with these words: "I don't blame any of us. We're all
- concerned, intelligent, good women." Pause. "It's just that I
- feel stranded. And I thought that the whole point was that we
- wouldn't feel stranded. I thought the point was that we were
- all in this together."
- </p>
- <p> There has always been a feminist subtext to Wasserstein's
- plays, even in her earlier work when she relied on
- Jewish-mother jokes and collegiate sexual confusions for laughs.
- Her first success, Uncommon Women and Others, depicted a reunion
- of Mount Holyoke College alumnae six years after they have left
- the campus to make their way in the working world. The 1977
- off-Broadway cast included Glenn Close, Jill Eikenberry and
- Swoosie Kurtz. Her 1983 hit comedy, Isn't It Romantic, which ran
- for two years off-Broadway, is a thinly veiled tale of
- Wasserstein's relations with her own larger-than-life mother.
- But even here, Janie Blumberg, the playwright's alter ego,
- rejects a suffocating marriage with a very eligible doctor and
- utters Heidi-esque lines like "I made choices based on an idea
- that doesn't exist anymore." Still, the spirit of the play is
- more aptly conveyed by Janie's comically maladroit efforts to
- cook a roast chicken for her boyfriend.
- </p>
- <p> Only in a written playscript does Wasserstein allow herself
- to be assertive. In conversation, she flees from all
- self-important declarations of artistic intention. It takes
- coaxing for Wasserstein just to admit that Heidi represents her
- bid "to demand attention and announce, `I have something to say,
- and I want you to listen.'" She is much more comfortable
- recalling Heidi's early off-Broadway previews when she was
- scared that "all the people from Isn't It Romantic would show
- up waiting for the chicken jokes." Here her voice breaks into
- a hypertheatrical tone as she parodies the reaction of this
- mythical audience: "What happened to her? Where's the chicken?"
- </p>
- <p> Even today, there is something unreal for Wasserstein in
- seeing her name illuminated on a marquee in the heart of New
- York City's theater district. "I'm an off-Broadway baby," she
- explains. "When my friends and I write, we imagine small
- audiences." In fact, The Heidi Chronicles was originally written
- to be performed at the tiny, 156-seat Playwrights Horizon, the
- nurturing off-Broadway base camp for a generation of younger
- playwrights like Wasserstein. Only after the play opened at
- Playwrights last December to rave reviews and a sold-out
- three-month run were arrangements made to transport it to
- Broadway.
- </p>
- <p> It was not entirely a natural migration. Even Wasserstein
- wonders if a play that includes a scene built around a 1970
- feminist consciousness-raising group ("Either you shave your
- legs or you don't" is the refrain) and is filled with arcane
- political references can ever be commercially successful. "I'm
- not stupid," Wasserstein laughs. "I don't know if theater
- parties will say, `Let's go to this. It's got a great Herbert
- Marcuse joke.'"
- </p>
- <p> Initially, at least, Marcuse has found a niche on Broadway,
- with Heidi playing to houses roughly 90% full. Many of the
- reviews have been a press agent's dream. The New York Daily
- News's critic hailed Heidi's recent arrival on Broadway with
- this pronouncement: "I doubt we'll see a better play this
- season." The other New York papers, as is the custom, chose to
- let their off-Broadway reviews stand. An "enlightening portrait
- of her generation," declared the Times, while Newsday poured on
- the laudatory adjectives: "smart, compassionate, witty,
- courageous." There were some sharp dissents. TIME's theater
- critic, William A. Henry III, complained that "Wasserstein has
- written mostly whiny and self-congratulatory cliches."
- </p>
- <p> The playwright does not deny that bad reviews wound. But
- these days, there is also a keen pride as Wasserstein views her
- handiwork on Broadway. "I'm normally a self-deprecating person,"
- she says, putting it mildly. "But when I saw those women on
- stage in the feminist rap group, I said, `Good for them, and
- good for us.' This is a play of ideas. Whether you agree or not
- doesn't matter."
- </p>
- <p> Wasserstein compares the gathering momentum of her
- theatrical career to the children's story The Little Engine That
- Could. Heidi was written in 1987 after a frustrating period that
- included a musical that never made it out of workshop readings
- and a filmscript for Steven Spielberg that was shelved. Then,
- as now, she was living in a Greenwich Village apartment, with
- no formal attachments aside from a cat named Ginger.
- Relentlessly social, Wasserstein has built a life revolving
- around an intricate network of friendships, many with other
- playwrights. But writing Heidi represented, in part, an
- acknowledgment that Wasserstein, like her heroine, is a woman
- alone. As Andre Bishop, the artistic director of Playwrights
- Horizon, puts it, "Wendy is now coming into her own as a writer
- and a person, and those two are very much linked."
- </p>
- <p> Even so, Wasserstein's natural medium remains humor. As she
- explained in a painfully honest essay called "Funny Girl" in
- New York Woman magazine, "I don't think about being funny very
- much because it's how I get by. For me it's always been a way
- to be likable but removed." The result is that outsiders can
- misinterpret her manner and mistakenly belittle her talent.
- Playwright Terrence McNally complains that "what people often
- miss about Wendy is the thoughtful, passionate, mature womanly
- side of her. She is far more interesting as a mature artist than
- as this giggling, girlish, daughter-person that people want to
- take care of."
- </p>
- <p> A few days after Heidi opened on Broadway, Wendy's parents
- Lola and Morris Wasserstein were asked about their youngest
- daughter, the successful playwright. Much of the conversation
- sounded like a leftover scene from Isn't It Romantic. "We're
- very proud," said Lola, who even in her 70s takes four dance
- classes a day. "But there's a vacuum," added Morris, a
- prosperous Manhattan businessman. "Where's the children? Where's
- the husband?" Here Lola broke in, "Normally, I'm the one to say
- that. But today I'm on good behavior." A few moments later, the
- Wassersteins were asked how many grandchildren they have.
- "Nine," said Lola, "and we're waiting for the tenth." To
- underline the point, Morris chimed in, "We're waiting for Wendy.
- Patiently."
- </p>
- <p> Both of these doting parents are Jewish emigres from
- central Europe who came to New York City as children in the late
- 1920s. For years, Lola has been the richest source of her
- daughter's comic material. "Do you know what my mother said to
- me on the opening night of Uncommon Women?" Wasserstein asks
- rhetorically. "`Wendy, where did you get those shoes?'" When
- Isn't It Romantic was playing off-Broadway, Wasserstein's
- parents would stroll over to the theater and canvass the crowd.
- "My mother would call and say, `Oh, what well-dressed people,'"
- Wasserstein recalls. "She was proud of me because someone with
- a long skirt went to see my play."
- </p>
- <p> The three other Wasserstein children are such paragons of
- conventional success they could almost be lifted out of a
- Judith Krantz novel. The eldest sister, Sandra Meyer, one of the
- first generation of pioneering executive women, is a senior
- corporate officer for Citicorp. The other sister, Georgette
- Levis, married a psychiatrist and lives in Vermont, where she
- owns a country inn. Growing up in affluent surroundings on the
- Upper East Side of Manhattan, Wendy was closest to her brother
- Bruce, three years her senior. A path-forging
- mergers-and-acquisitions lawyer, he is a co-founder of the
- investment-banking house Wasserstein Perella & Co., which the
- Wall Street Journal dubbed "the world's hottest dealmakers."
- </p>
- <p> From Wendy's perspective, Bruce and her sisters give a new
- meaning to the concept of sibling rivalry. "On a certain
- level," she says, "I'm not a very competitive person, so I find
- my own way." Laughing merrily, she adds, "Would you like to
- throw your hat in the ring with Bruce and Sandy? Wouldn't you
- go to drama school too?"
- </p>
- <p> In fact, the decision to enroll in the Yale University
- School of Drama in 1973 was a turning point in her life. After
- graduating from Mount Holyoke, Wendy was somewhat at loose ends
- and living at home in New York. She narrowed her career options
- to this odd academic choice: business school at Columbia
- University or drama school. Needless to say, her parents were
- vocal proponents of business school. "But finally," she
- recounts, "I decided to take a chance and go to drama school,
- since you should do what you want to do in life."
- </p>
- <p> Even now Wendy remains fascinated by the way she and her
- brother have come to represent almost twin poles of the age-old
- dialectic between art and money. Wendy delights in telling the
- story of how during the off-Broadway previews of Heidi, she was
- locked in an intense artistic discussion with Joan Allen when
- she was handed a message: "Your brother Bruce called. Can't come
- to the play tonight. Is buying Nabisco." In an essay for New
- York Woman titled "Big Brother at Forty," Wendy writes
- wistfully, "We travel in very different worlds, and in some ways
- we've become enigmas to each other." For his part, Bruce says,
- "Compared to most sibling relations, we're relatively close."
- Virtually the only wall decorations in his office are three
- posters for Isn't It Romantic.
- </p>
- <p> Early in Heidi, the heroine says in exasperation over male
- self-confidence, "I was wondering what mothers teach their sons
- that they never bother to tell their daughters." The playwright
- is inordinately fond of that line, since it springs directly
- from her own family experience. "God knows," she exclaims, "I'm
- not going out to merge Nabisco. I stay in my house and write
- plays." But judging from Wendy Wasserstein's triumph in writing
- what may be the best play about her generation, there is much
- to be said for what mothers teach their daughters.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-