Wednesday, May 21, 2025

Whatever the Ride, Let TV be Your Guide

Beauty queen Barbara Parker wants more from life than a hometown crown.  She wants to be on TV, to make people laugh, to be the next Lucille Ball.  So she leaves the backwater of Blackpool for London to make it happen.

So begins Nick Hornby's Funny Girl.  You can see why I thought it'd be about Barbara and her thoughts and feelings.  But it's about something much bigger, namely pop culture and fame and how it all changed in the '60s. 

A true ensemble, Funny Girl follows Barbara's -- or, rather, the newly christened Sophie Straw's -- TV family though the ups and downs of showbiz and life.  Poignant, nostalgic, and sparkling with wit, it captures the excitement of being young and hungry -- and, in the end, the realization that the best part was those early days and their struggles.

Because from the start, they knew their show was special.  Hornby describes the magic through script writer Tony, reminding us why sitcoms have our hearts:

"It was the . . . promise of next week, another episode, another series (season); it couldn't help but offer hope, to its characters and to everyone who identified with them.  Tony didn't think he would ever want to write anything apart from half-hour comedies.  They contained the key to health, wealth, and happiness." (198)

Exactly.  Sitcoms make the world go 'round.

So let those reruns ring.

2 comments:

ellie said...

Such a wonderful author! Seeing your review makes me smile. Yes, the sitcom..which are getting harder to come by. Darn if they don't get lost especially when a network makes a bids with sports and cancels a bunch a show and sticks in sitcom far from the Must See TV zone (St. Denis Medical show actually) Of course, these days there is always streaming, but I don't want to go there. ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️All the best to your holiday weekend. Looks rainy and cold here in the forecast. Maybe I will do a marathon of the K-drama Boyhood. Wishing you lots of time for creativity! Oh, I guess I should find a spot for a Barbie set, perhaps.

Samantha said...

This sounds like a fascinating read!! I'm sure being set in the '60s makes it all the more entertaining amidst the changes during that era. Sitcoms indeed make the world go 'round! 🌎💕