“Gleefully wacky and irreverent.”

–The New York Times

“Line by line, Mr. Rudnick may be the funniest writer for the stage in the United States today.”

–The New York Times

“Deeply funny musings and adventures elevate Paul Rudnick to the highest level of American comedy writing.”

–Steve Martin

“One of the funniest quip-meisters on the planet.”

–The New York Times

“Paul Rudnick is a champion of truth (and love and great wicked humor) whom we ignore at our peril.”

–David Sedaris

“Quips fall with the regularity of the autumn leaves.”

–Associated Press

February 10, 2014

The Manhattan Olympics

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This year’s events will include:

Trying to decide which corner of an intersection has the least amount of filthy slush, before putting your foot into it and starting to sink down.

Four friends. Choosing a movie or a restaurant. Points will be awarded for whoever says, “Well, I hate that Mexican place, but I hate it less than the Italian place.”

Convincing the co-op board that the renovations you’re planning are extremely minor, when they will actually take over a year and destroy the building’s elevator. Points will be awarded for saying, “It’s really only a few tiny cosmetic changes, nothing structural.”

Trying to decide whether to get into the elevator with a large dog who doesn’t look friendly.

Peeling off wet socks and trying to decide whether to launder them or throw them out.

Firing your shrink, cleaning person or accountant without feeling like a bad person. Points will be awarded for using the phrases “I will always be grateful”, “in both of our best interests” and “end of an era.”

Eating two very stale Ritz crackers for dinner because it’s too cold to get dressed and go to the store.

Congratulating yourself on remembering to bring your eco-friendly hemp shopping bag to Whole Foods.

Trying to get a waiter’s attention. Points awarded when everyone at the table simultaneously makes the signing-the-imaginary-check-in-mid-air gesture.

Carrying an oversize purse, a canvas tote bag, a gym bag, a rolled-up yoga mat and two plastic bags filled with yogurt and cat food, all while attempting to hail a cab while it’s sleeting, and while trying to ignore the nanny, child and folded-up stroller waiting for a cab on the opposite corner, and then realizing that they’re your nanny and child, and continuing to ignore them anyway.

February 9, 2014

Libby

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The easiest way to get viciously attacked online is to say something even mildly critical about anything relating to Star Wars, Star Trek or The Lord of the Rings. The fans of these works are not only passionate but they also have plenty of free time to savage their enemies, especially anyone who misspells the name of a Klingon warship, or who forgets the correct recipe for Elvish porridge.
I finally caught up with The Desolation of Smaug, which is the latest installment in The Hobbit series, and I have so many questions:

How does an actor prepare to say a line like “Slay the she-Elf!” or “Have you lost your taste for dwarf blood?” And when he leaves his underwear on the floor, why have I started referring to my husband as “Elvish filth”?

Is the Dwarf King a person or a new mattress size?

Is it my imagination, or are the dwarves wearing Uggs? Since the really nasty Tolkien creatures are called Orcs, couldn’t they battle the Uggs?

In all of the Tolkien movies, the characters always set out on a journey. Then they travel across a plain, through a forest, across a lake and finally up a mountain. Why can’t at least one dwarf say, “You know, guys, this time out, can we at least think about Paris?”

Lee Pace plays the arrogant Elf King, with Joan Crawford eyebrows and a crafts-project crown. Is he supposed to look like a wrathful priestess in a Martha Graham dance piece?

Why isn’t there a character named Elvish Presley?

When Bilbo Baggins enters an enormous subterranean hall filled with acres of gold, there are avalanches of gold coins, golden platters, golden goblets and cheesey golden figurines. Just like in pirate movies, why does
everything look like it’s been sprayed with cheap radiator paint? Why did I keep expecting to see my cousin Amy descend the grand staircase along with her twelve bridesmaids, for some wedding photos, at Bilbo’s of Great Neck?

The Elves are all gorgeous, with miles of stick-straight, shining hair with no split ends. Orlando Bloom, as the elf warrior Legolas, is the Marcia Brady of Middle Earth. So why can’t there be a scene where we see the elves ironing each other’s tresses, and picking out cashmere sweaters and berets?

When Smaug the dragon finally flies into view, is he supposed to look like something which was embroidered on the back of a hot pink satin bomber jacket, at a roller disco in 1978?

Richard Armitage, who plays Thorin, the dwarf king, is always smoldering and angry. Is he irate because he knows that his wig makes him look like a sexy bobblehead? And are real-life little people understandably upset, because the Tolkien movies use special effects to make tall actors seem like dwarves? Will there someday be a more politically correct movie called Twelve Years A Hobbit?

When the dwarves built their massive palace, why did they need such high ceilings?

Why does every fantastical city in the Tolkien movies have many levels connected by impossibly winding stairways and footbridges without railings? Why do these cities always end up looking like M.C.Escher placemats?

Is Ian McKellan, as Gandalf, starting to look like a more even-tempered Elaine Stritch?

The first two Hobbit movies are both equally fun and endless, and I’ve completely forgotten what Bilbo and all of those dwarves are seeking. I do know that Bilbo is still carrying around a golden ring, but it doesn’t even have a diamond chip, so he’s certainly not looking for a decent fiancee, if you ask me.

February 8, 2014

We’ll Call You

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Actors lead very challenging lives, especially when they have to audition. An audition combines the worst aspects of a first date, a job interview and a government interrogation. The possibilities for rejection are total and unbearably personal: no, we don’t like the way you look, we think you have no talent, you just fucked up everything, and we don’t want you.

The first time I ever sat behind a table, watching actors audition, I was stunned. I wanted to not only offer every actor whatever role they wanted, but also a million dollars and a car. This was on my first play, which was called Poor Little Lambs, and it was about the Yale Whiffenpoofs, an acapella singing group (and this was years before Glee and Pitch Perfect.) So I got to sit there, watching all of these handsome, wonderfully talented young guys not only read lines from my script, but they sang to me. It was a young gay playwright’s wet dream come true.

I was so frozen that our very kind and understanding casting director, a Scotswoman named Mary Colquohon, took pity on me. After the first ten or so actors had auditioned, she whispered to me that I should probably be taking notes, on the forms which were waiting on the table in front of me.

Mary, who died far too young, was a pure delight, a sort of more upbeat but equally strict, redheaded Mary Poppins. When a thug once cornered Mary in the vestibule of her apartment building, Mary told him, in her very no-nonsense burr, “Oh, put down that knife.” He did, and he ran away. No one messed with Mary.

I should mention that, in my experience, there are two kinds of casting directors. A few are often failed actors or directors, who unleash their bitterness through the pettiest power plays, keeping actors waiting for hours and humiliating them. Most of the casting people I’ve worked with are the opposite: they adore actors, and love discovering new talent, or re-introducing a veteran performer who might not have been considered.
They’re the very best kind of cheerleaders, and they create the most welcoming and stress-free atmosphere possible.

Poor Little Lambs ended up being cast with a terrific batch of young actors, including Kevin Bacon, Blanche Baker, Bronson Pinchot, Albert Macklin and Miles Chapin.

Because Poor Little Lambs was my first play, I didn’t know much about how show business worked. The play was produced by a charming but eccentric man named Richmond Crinkley, and every day he would instigate a huge fight with someone involved with the play, and then he’d announce that the production was cancelled. I would become frantic, and write long, detailed letters begging Richmond to reconsider. Luckily, some tiny sliver of my brain warned me: for your own mental health, it’s good to write those kind of letters, but never send them.

A rule for working with crazy people, in the theater or anywhere else: while they’re erupting, just wait it out. Crazy people usually can’t sustain their madness, and pretty soon they’ll wear themselves out and then they’ll pretend that nothing happened. No, it’s worse than that: they won’t pretend, they will actually never remember how crazy they were. Because that’s what being crazy is all about.

On one of my later plays, I Hate Hamlet, one of the roles called for an extremely innocent ingenue. It was interesting to see how a variety of young New York actresses expressed innocence, wearing everything from frilly, white lace blouses to low-cut, skin-tight white leotards.

As auditions progress, and move into the callback stage, the actors face an even more confounding situation. By that point, the people who aren’t right for any of the roles have been weeded out, so everyone who’s been called back is great. I always want to somehow convince these actors that if they don’t get the part, it’s not because they did anything wrong. The director is creating a balanced group of performers; this person looks like they could be that person’s son, or husband, or boss, and so on.

Stars, as a rule, won’t audition, which is a privilege of stardom. Some stars will, however, “meet.” This means that the star will have a friendly drink, usually at a quiet restaurant, with the project’s director and writer. Everyone tries very hard to pretend that the meeting is not an audition, and sometimes the star is actually auditioning the creative team. Once in while, the director will casually pull a copy of the script out of his or her backpack, and ask if the star might like to read through a scene or two, “just for fun.” Some stars will agree to this, and others won’t. These meetings are exhausting.

Reading actors’ resumes can be helpful. There’s often a section listing the performer’s Special Skills, which can include things like acrobatics or martial arts training or the ability to speak several languages. I treasured one actress’s Special Skills, when she included “Answering the phone.”

February 6, 2014

Two Little Words

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In the great movie 42nd Street, when the star breaks her leg, the producer makes a memorable speech to the terrified understudy. This is the classic you’re-going-out-there-a-frightened-little-girl-but-you’re-coming-back-a-star! speech. One of things the producer says, to inspire the young lady, is something along the lines of, “Think of the two most glorious words in the English language: musical comedy!”

In this spirit:

The two most disgusting words in the English language: Wet sneakers.

The two most depressing words in the English language: Interactive theater.

The two most spiritual words: Cashew turtles.

The two most useful words: Thank you.

The second two most useful words: Fuck off.

The two happiest words: Rent free.

The two words which inspire the most relief: It’s benign.

The two most terrifying words: I do.

The two most absurdly encouraging words: Extra strength.

The two most prayed-for words: Not guilty.

The two friendliest words, even when used during intense S&M sex: Good doggie!

The two most irritating words: Bill O’Reilly.

The two most delightful words: Tina Fey.

The two sexiest words: Real butter.

The two most longed-for words, for a child: Snow day.

The two most longed-for words, for a parent: Sleep in.

The two most intriguing words: Adults only.

The two most elegant words: Noblesse oblige.

The two least elegant words: Permanent press.

The two most shamefully satisfying words: Rave review.

The two most necessary words: Toilet paper.

The two most worrisome words: Black ice.

The two least worrisome words: Vanilla Ice.

The two most dangerous words: Why not?

The two most romantic words: Billion dollars.

No, I was kidding, the two most romantic words are really: Trillion dollars.

No, come on, let’s get real, the two most romantic words: Right now.

February 5, 2014

I Need To Know

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1. Is taking a position on the Woody Allen/Dylan Farrow situation now a condition of American citizenship? At least online?

2. Even though I never met Philip Seymour Hoffman, should I still post a personal vignette of our relationship?

3. With regard to the fur parka which Joe Namath wore at the Superbowl, and which was fashioned from coyote and mink: is it more acceptable to wear the pelts of creepier animals? And was Joe’s hairpiece also coyote?

4. Why do female meteorologists seem so much more trustworthy than the guys? Is it because so many weatherdudes have frosted their hair to look like they’re playing mah jong with my Aunt Sylvia, by the pool in Boca, in 1982?

5. Do I enjoy watching both the Today Show and Good Morning America specifically because the camraderie between all of the many hosts has gotten so desperate? Why does it seem as if very soon, Samantha Guthrie or Robin Roberts are going to bring a gun to work?

6. While I was watching the brave Mayor DiBlasio zoom down that toboggan they set up on Superbowl Boulevard in Times Square, why did I keep hoping to see Chris Christie do the same thing?

7. When I read about a couple who’d both taken out restraining orders against each other, why did I find it romantic?

8. Remember that exhibit, which has toured the world, of actual human bodies with the skin removed? Why do I want to see those bodies combined with Legos?

9. Why does the word “toboggan” always look as if it’s spelled wrong?

February 4, 2014

Libby

I finally caught up with Philomena, now that Judi Dench has been nominated for an Oscar, and I just have to say it: the movie turned me into a sobbing, emotional wreck, and not just because watching Dame Judi enjoying a hotel buffet breakfast was an emotional journey in itself.

The movie is based on the true story of Philomena Lee, who, as a young unwed mother in 1950s Ireland, was forced to give up her baby for adoption, while toiling in an especially horrible convent laundry. Fifty years later, with the help of an English reporter, Philomena tries to track down the son she hasn’t seen in over fifty years. And if you’re not crying already, just think about the scene where Philomena meets the nasty old nun, who deliberately made sure that both Philomena and her boy were denied any sort of contact.

I know that some crackpot reviewers have whined that this movie is anti-Catholic, but come on: this year there’s already been a smash-hit live TV version of The Sound of Music, with the glorious Audra McDonald singing “Climb Ev’ry Mountain”, so nuns really can’t complain. Although sometimes I wonder if gentiles think of The Sound of Music as their Fiddler on the Roof, with warbling towheads in matching outfits instead of superstitious Jewish villagers dancing with Manischewitz bottles on their heads.

Philomena is very manipulative, and every time tears well up in Dame Judi’s eyes there are plenty of violins on the soundtrack, but I didn’t care. The details of Philomena’s life are surprising, and involve everything from Jane Russell to the Reagan White House. And by about halfway through the movie, I began hoping that Dame Judi would also discover that I was her long-lost daughter, and that even though I’d been raised by a loving family on Long Island, I belonged with her, on the red carpet.

Reunion stories always destroy me, whether it’s Philomena and her child, Warren Beatty and Diane Keaton crossing the Soviet tundra to find each other in Reds, or that moment when I finally realized that my electric blanket was in the box in the garage, and not the Hefty bag in the attic. Of course, Philomena’s story is beyond bittersweet, and I really wanted it to end with Jesus appearing and telling that mean old nun, “I don’t believe we’ve met.”

My favorite moment of a nun apologizing occurs in The Song of Bernadette, where Jennifer Jones plays a noble French peasant lass who has a vision of the Virgin, who’s played by Linda Darnell with really great lighting. Eventually, the healing spring of Lourdes bubbles up near where Bernadette had her vision, and becomes a holy shrine, while Bernadette, in her later years, enters a convent.

A mean nun at this convent hates Bernadette, and accuses her of making up the whole story about her vision. Bernie remains totally sweet and selfless and likes to stand outside for hours, praying in the pouring rain. Finally, even though she’s never complained, Bernadette collapses and we find out that for years, Bernadette’s leg has been eaten up with cancer. When the mean nun sees Bernadette’s diseased shin, she falls to her knees and begs Bernadette to forgive her, for her doubts. At this point Bernadette just smiles sweetly, and her thought bubble reads, “Yeah, who’s sorry now, Sister Mary Asshole?”

No matter how you feel about nuns, Philomena will make you weep, and never allow Irish unwed mothers to clean and fold your sheets. The real Philomena Lee is still alive, and she’s been handling all of the media attention, and the controversy about the movie, with a wonderful grace. She’s so lovely that I’m going to invite her to our place for Passover,which would be a real blessing, if you ask me.

February 3, 2014

Surreal Estate

Whenever I see a truly spectacular building, I immediately think of it as a possible home, and I
start to plan where I’d put the couch and my desk and the kitchen. I would close the building to
tourists, because it would become my condo. Here are a few of my favorites:

This is the Jefferson Market Courthouse, on Sixth Avenue in the West Village. It was once
attached to a womens prison, where the prisoners would hang out the windows and yell at
passersby.
The prison was torn down and the land turned into a park, and the courthouse itself is
now a public library. Gothic Revival is my favorite form of architecture, because it’s both
serious and whimsical.

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This is one of the lions which guard the 42nd Street Library, which would be an ideal home,
because of its grand design and because it’s so perfectly located,
near shopping and the theater district.

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Here’s the main reading room, which is memorably featured in the
movie of Breakfast at Tiffany’s.

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Breakfast at Tiffany’s is the best kind
of romantic fantasy because it stars
Audrey Hepburn as the world’s most
elegant quasi-call girl, and a young
George Peppard as the best-looking
short story writer ever.

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The photo above is of the House of Lords in
London. I call it cosy, and I wouldn’t
change a thing.

The last photo is from St. Peter’s in
Rome. I’d keep my bed centrally located,
so I could see everything. And I might
add a mini-fridge.

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February 2, 2014

Today I Am A Man

My bar mitzvah was a pivotal event in New Jersey history, for the following reasons:

1. All of the boys at my temple were always bar mitzvahed
wearing dark suits. My mother thought this was drab, and
I agreed. And so I was called to the Torah while wearing
a double-breasted, rust-colored blazer and coordinated,
darker brown slacks with a subtle golden fleck.
That’s right – I was bar mitzvahed in SPORTSWEAR.

2. While the wealthier bar mitzvah boys in nearby temples
received mountains of checks, here’s what
I got: a little bit of money, a four-volume History of the
Jewish People, a tennis sweater, a skiing
headband with a snowflake motif, and a Mark Cross
pen-and-pencil set, which I immediately broke.

On a happier note, I also received a wristwatch which
pictured the map of Israel, and all the numerals were
Hebrew letters. This watch turned green and stopped
functioning after I wore it swimming.

I also got a coffee-table sized book which contained,
printed on newsprint, mock-ups of newspapers printed during
biblical times. The headlines included BOY SLAYS GIANT! MOSES
DEFIES PHAROAH! and JEWS ENTER PROMISED LAND!!!

I wish that book had also contained more contemporary
headlines, pertaining to my bar mitzvah itself, such as
PAUL DOESN’T REALLY SPEAK HEBREW – HE LEARNED HIS
TORAH PORTION PHONETICALLY, FROM A RECORD!
WHY DOESN’T PAUL’S BAR MITZVAH
INCLUDE CUSTOMIZED SATIN YARMULKES, PRINTED IN GOLD WITH
THE DATE AND PAUL’S NAME??? and AFTER TODAY, WILL PAUL EVER
BE SEEN IN TEMPLE AGAIN? HIS ANSWER – NO!!!

Actually, I was proud of my family for keeping my
bar mitzvah very low-key, without a striped tent for
the reception. My parents weren’t especially religious,
so I was mostly bar mitzvahed due to social pressure,
and to teach Hitler a lesson.

3. My temple did boast the most important element in
any house of worship: a well-stocked gift shop.

4. I’m only sad that I missed out on the far more recent
trend of themed bar mitzvahs. My Mom once attended
a Lord of the Rings bar mitzvah, and I’ve seen footage
from Star Wars bar mitzvahs and Barbie bat mitzvahs.
And I’m sure there will be many, many Wolf of Wall Street
bar mitzvahs, complete with waitresses dressed as hookers
and chopped-liver sculptures of Jonah Hill.

And here now is the classic footage from the bar mitzvah
of Sam Horowitz in Dallas, featuring the music of
Cristina Aguilera and Jennifer Lopez. I adore this kid,
and I am so jealous:

February 1, 2014

Scuttlebutt

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Scandal is gossip made tedious by morality.
– Oscar Wilde

When living in New York, gossip can be absorbed through your pores. Sometimes, when I meet someone new, I already know whom they’ve slept with, which jobs they’ve been fired from and why, how much they overpaid for their one-bedroom, and why they once spent a week in jail, in Atlanta.

For example, at a party, I once met a charming, ruggedly handsome guy who was making ends meet by working as an escort (he later became very successful in a completely legitimate business.) As we were gossiping, he told me about one of his regulars, a middle-aged talent agent who liked to be peed on. Before their sessions, the escort would have to remember to drink a lot of beer, so he’d be prepared. The agent would lie in the bathtub, so things remained tidy.

I try to never judge anyone else’s sexual habits. Instead, I try to understand the particular fetish. In this case, I mostly sympathized with the agent’s cleaning lady, or whoever had to scrub his bathroom.

Anyway, a few weeks later, I was invited to a cocktail party at the agent’s lavish Upper East Side penthouse. As I was introduced to him, all I could think about was pee, and I hoped, since I was shaking it, that he’d washed his hand.

Speaking of fetishes, I once received a treasured fan letter. The fan first said a few brief, complimentary things about my work, but then he got down to business: he’d noticed that in a photo of me, I was wearing loafers. Did I like wearing loafers, he wanted to know. How many pairs did I own? What were they made of? How often did I wear loafers?

He continued, for many paragraphs, to expand on his devotion to loafers. He’d also sent me a batch of photographs, of his loafer collection. In one photo, there were many individual loafers, riding atop the flatbed cars of a set of model trains. In another photo, at least fifty loafers were heaped atop a tree stump – this picture included the ominous shadow of the photographer.

I admire the confidence of people with serious fetishes. The loafer guy had no qualms about not merely confessing, but celebrating his fetish in a letter to a total stranger. I felt that I’d let him down, by not owning more loafers.

And wouldn’t Making Ends Meet be the perfect title for a male escort’s memoir?

And also: aren’t you glad that I illustrated this post with picture of loafers, instead of pictures of something else?

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January 31, 2014

What To Wear

These items were available on Gilt Groupe, from the
designer Rick Owens. This was called
a trench coat:

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Here is the trench coat, I assume, for evening:

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This was called the Rover jacket:

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This was called a parka:

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This was called the undyed camo flight trench coat:

Rick Owens

This photo is from Scott Schuman’s terrific site,
The Sartorialist. It’s also a Rick Owens outfit,
hopefully from his Ah-Men collection:

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Are these clothes oddly wonderful? Or just odd?
Maybe a little bit of both. Would I wear these
clothes? Probably not, but I hope someone will.
Someone brave.

A question, related to that last photo: what do you call
a male nun? A mun? A nan?

January 30, 2014

If I Ran The Super Bowl

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1. I would stage a halftime extravaganza on the field during the game, so that the players could tackle Beyonce and Justin Timberlake, but maybe not Madonna, since she’s been using a cane.

2. I would only sell beer and sugary soft drinks in cups the size of wastepaper baskets, so the fans would look thinner.

3. I would leave a Post-it inside each player’s helmet, with the name of a guy on the opposing team. For a Secret Santa effect, each player would have to buy the other person an inexpensive but imaginative gift, like a pair of socks in the team’s colors, or a box of scented guest soaps shaped like tiny footballs.

4. I would require each player to design their own uniform, and the outcome of the game would be decided by Heidi Klum, Nina Garcia, Zac Posen and special guest Alyssa Milano.

5. Whenever the referee blew his whistle, I would have both teams break into choreographed dance routines, for a flash mob feeling.

6. To promote equality, I would have the opposing teams marry each other.

7. To avoid head injuries, every player’s helmet would be wrapped in an enormous knitted cosy, with a just-for-fun pompom.

8. Instead of using those endless Roman numerals, I’d take a tip from hurricanes and tropical depressions, and use names, as in Super Bowl Harriet or Super Bowl Mandy.

9. I’d combine the Super Bowl with the more appealing Puppy Bowl, by releasing hundreds of adorable puppies onto the field during the game. That way, the action would be constantly interrupted by players kneeling down to say, “Oooo!!! What a cute little doggie!!!”

10. I would allow all of the players’ Moms to run out on the field at any time, to wipe their son’s noses and to offer Advil.

Paul Rudnick Blognick