This bit was at the end, but it might as well have been at the beginning. Or, really, just bannered across the bottom of the screen all the way through: "I am a performer. That is my life. That is what I am. That's it."
Thus Joan Rivers explained her continuing compulsion to keep finding stages to perform on at the age of 75, whether it was a dingy club in the Bronx at 4.30 in the afternoon, the Comedy Central Roast where she was pelted with "hilarious" insults by fellow comics, a gig for the Betty Ford clinic in Palm Springs, or somewhere in frozen Wisconsin reachable only by the kind of aircraft they use to rescue people stuck down crevasses.

It was the fear and desperation behind Rivers's comedy that drove this film, as presumably it has driven her throughout her career. For all the movies about the cynicism, cruelty, substance abuse and insanity of the showbiz life, I can't remember seeing the cost of being a performer brought home with such gut-kicking force. It was as if every performance - or at least all the history and struggle and middle-of-the-night travelling that went into every performance - took a few new chunks out of Rivers, and, like health insurance, the longer she kept doing it the higher the premiums climbed. It shed new light on her fabled fixation with plastic surgery - if she didn't keep getting her face rebuilt, there'd be nothing left by now except a screaming skull.
'Age? It's the one mountain you can't overcome. It's a youth society and nobody wants you'
Joan showed us her beautiful New York apartment - "This is how Marie Antoinette would have lived if she'd had money" - but everything she has to show for her life's work has been paid for several times over at an exorbitant rate of interest. "Age?" she rasped. "It's the one mountain you can't overcome. It's a youth society and nobody wants you."
It was telling that the film had been made by women, co-directors Ricki Stern and Annie Sundberg, because the way Rivers told it, men had never been terribly keen on seeing her succeed. She recalled how they'd been disgusted when she did routines about abortion or the casting couch, and warned her she was straying into areas that should remain off limits. Her career received a huge boost from an endorsement by Tonight Show host Johnny Carson, for whom she became the permanent guest host, but when she accepted an offer from Fox to front her own show, a furious Carson had her blacklisted at NBC. The Fox project ended in catastrophe, when the network axed Rivers and her husband Edgar committed suicide. "This business, you're unloved your whole life," she lamented, straying momentarily into something like self-pity.

- Find Joan Rivers - A Piece of Work on Amazon
Watch trailer for A Piece of Work:
Comments
Add comment