Making Trouble, the acclaimed documentary about legendary funny Jewish women that has received standing ovations and rave reviews across the country, is coming to the Los Angeles Jewish Film Festival on Tuesday, May 13th at 7:30pm. Joan Rivers will be honored with the Marlene Adler Marks MorningStar Award before the screening of film.
"A standing ovation for performers who have earned one," says the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Making Trouble profiles six Jewish women who struggled and sacrificed for their fame, and who turned the old "death is easy, comedy is hard" joke completely on its head. Molly Picon, Fanny Brice, Sophie Tucker, Joan Rivers, Gilda Radner, and Wendy Wasserstein proved that comedy is easy, being a Jewish woman in comedy is hard. Metro Connection (WAMU) Radio remarks, "Every Jewish comedienne working today owes a debt to these women."
Presented by the Jewish Women's Archive, Making Trouble includes archival footage and photographs from performances by the featured comedians, giving audiences a glimpse into each of their lives and careers over the last century. Accompanying commentary illuminates what it meant at the time to be Jewish, to be female, and to dream of making it on the stage and screen.
Sophie Tucker left behind her one-year-old son to make it as a coon vaudeville singer dripping with her own style of brash sexuality; Fanny Brice, a zany clown-like performer who sang with a farcical Yiddish accent that had audiences roaring, got a nose job in 1923 to ward off anti-Semitic attitudes and boost her possibilities for being cast; Molly Picon, a gender-bender who played the roles of fiddle-playing carefree teenagers well into her forties, performed nine shows weekly to meet the demands of the new immigrant population that adored her; Wendy Wasserstein, whose plays featured strong women struggling for autonomy in a man's world, wrestled with her own issues of being a woman and being Jewish in front of Broadway audiences; Joan Rivers worked the comedy clubs of New York City for years, often as the only woman comedian in the club, and with a frank brashness that few women had the courage to express; Gilda Radner was Jewish and glamorous, and found the funny in the pain, openly revealing herself to viewers under the harsh lights of Saturday Night Live in her classic roles as "Roseanne Roseannadanna" and the nerdy "Lisa Loopner."
"These talented women defied cultural expectations and opened doors that ALL women are walking through today. The Jewish Women's Archive made this film to preserve and highlight that legacy," said Gail Reimer, Executive Producer of Making Trouble and Executive Director of the Jewish Women's Archive. "They turned the tables on stereotypes about Jewish women comedians and what was appropriate for a comedy routine. They continually surprised their audiences, all while keeping them laughing."
Making Trouble also brings four of today's leading Jewish women comedians-- Judy Gold, Jackie Hoffman, Cory Kahaney, and Jessica Kirson-- together at New York's famed Katz's Delicatessen to gab about the pioneers who came before them, their work, and their own comedy. "It's a very big thing among Jews when someone's Jewish," Jackie Hoffman notes in Making Trouble. "So whatever comic or whoever in the performing world was Jewish, it was a huge deal."
Making Trouble is the first film produced by JWA Productions, in association with the Jewish Women's Archive (www.jwa.org), whose mission is to uncover, chronicle, and transmit the rich history of American Jewish women. The JWA is nationally recognized as a unique and vital contributor to a more expansive and inclusive vision of Jewish life, past, present, and future. Through its innovative formats and collaborative partnerships, JWA, has for the past two decades, successfully changed the way history is researched, recorded, and taught.
Making Trouble is directed by Rachel Talbot and executive produced by Gail Reimer, with Emmy award winning editor Phil Shane and acclaimed indie composer Joel Goodman. Making Trouble also features interviews with Wendy Wasserstein, Joan Rivers, Martin Short, author Gary Giddins, Los Angeles Times movie critic Kenneth Turan, and many others passionate about the work and achievements of these pioneering women of comedy.
Making Trouble at the Los Angeles Jewish Film Festival
Skirball Cultural Center, 2701 N. Sepulveda Blvd
Tuesday, May 13th at 7:30pm
To purchase tickets call (323) 938-2531 or visit: www.lajfilmfest.org
For advance screener, additional information, interviews, or images, please contact Swan LLC Media: Jennifer Roy at (415) 706-7644 or roykey@mac.com www.makingtrouble.com
www.jwa.org
The MorningStar Commission was founded by Hadassah to advocate for a healthier diversity of portrayals of Jewish Women in the media and entertainment industry. www.morningstarevents.com