More Than Skin Deep: Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work Movie Reveals Comedienne's Hidden Depths

Documentary Film Portrays Joan Rivers as No Joke

Nancy Tracy
For many young adults, Joan Rivers is that plastic faced comedienne who's had one too many face lifts - an aging caricature who stands on the red carpet screaming "Who are you wearing?" to vapid celebrities when she's not hawking her eponymous line of chunky jewelry to wannabe fashion mavens on QVC.

So when my 22-year-old daughter, Laura, and I walked out of the theater after seeing the new documentary about Joan Rivers' life, cleverly titled "Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work," I was intrigued by her reaction. "I had no idea there was so much to her," Laura told me after learning the fascinating back-story of this now 77-year-old comedy icon.

Filmed during Joan Rivers' 76th year of life by documentary film makers Ricki Stern and Anne Sundberg (who previously produced films on such sober topics as genocide in Darfur and the false murder and rape conviction of a North Carolina man, "Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work" likely caused some initial head scratching as to why this serious duo of documentarians would select such a frivolous and superficial subject as Joan Rivers to follow around for 14 months.

Yet Stern and Sundberg managed to turn Joan Rivers into a meaningful and fascinating object of study, depicting Rivers as a multi-dimensional woman with far more depth and intelligence than the cartoonish character she deliberately portrays on the flat surface of the TV screen. (When Rivers states toward the end of the movie that her comedienne persona is just a role she plays as an actress, we believe her.)

Can We Talk?

What struck me and Laura the most was how insecure and vulnerable Joan Rivers revealed herself to be underneath her tough-as-nails exterior -- despite her stunning career success and decades-long reign as the Queen of Comedy. At one point in the movie, Rivers' manager joked that whenever he asked Rivers to check her schedule, she would quip she had to put on her sunglasses first because all the white space on her calendar (where club dates and TV appearances should be) was blinding. Even at 75, a blank date on the calendar was as mortifying for Rivers as staying home on a Saturday night would be for a teenager. Instead of viewing it as a good excuse to relax or recreate, Rivers saw the absence of bookings as a blatant rejection of her talent and, by extension, herself. To paraphrase Descartes, "She works, therefore she is."

Another segment that revealed a deeper side to Rivers was her Thanksgiving day pilgrimage with her grandson, Cooper, (Melissa's son) to deliver food to disabled people in New York City. She banters easily with a legally blind ex-photographer named Flo Fox, whose moxie charms the hard-to-impress Rivers. The meeting also saddens her: Rivers has personally experienced the fickle finger of fate and knows how ephemeral good fortune can be.

Joan Rivers Vs. Wisconsin Heckler

Of all the scenes in the movie, Rivers' gig at a Wisconsin casino was the most dramatic and revealing. After she tells a relatively bland joke about Helen Keller being the perfect kid because she couldn't talk, a heckler shouts, "That's not funny if you have a deaf son." Rivers barks right back, "Oh, yes it is!" informing the man her mother is also deaf and that she lived for ten years with a man who had only one leg. "Comedy is to make everybody laugh at everything and deal with things, you idiot!" Joan informed the upset father, though she cut him some slack later that night as she reflected on camera how filled with anger the man must be about his son's situation. By this point in the film, we know that "Can-We-Talk?" Rivers is not just talk. She sincerely believe her schpiel about using comedy as a way to cope, making jokes about Nazi atrocities toward Jews (Rivers is Jewish) as well as her husband's suicide -- two subjects that could easily strike her own raw nerves.

While each scene in "Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work" is a treat, the most interesting visuals in the movie are seeing the young Joan Rivers in flashback scenes with Jack Paar and Johnny Carson, seeing Joan Rivers with no make up on and seeing Joan Rivers' massive card catalogue -- drawers filled with index cards of jokes the comedienne has written throughout the years (e.g., "Why should a woman cook? So her husband can say 'My wife makes a delicious cake' to some hooker?"). Rivers' joke collection comprises thousands of jokes stored alphabetically by category, the way an OCD housewife might organize appetizer and dessert recipes in her recipe box.

Is Joan Rivers an Actress or Comedienne?

Leaving the theater, my daughter and I were left with a different impression of Joan Rivers than the one we had when we walked inside, an image that supplanted the plastic and shallow version of Rivers we've observed in the comedienne's latter years. It will be the resilient, hard-working and quick witted Joan Rivers depicted by two talented documentarians whom we will picture in the future when the name Joan Rivers is mentioned -- the woman who helps us laugh at life's inevitable travails and not the laughing stock poster girl for plastic surgery chiseled in the minds of those who have never seen more than the two-dimensional character Joan Rivers portrayed by the actress of the same name.

Published by Nancy Tracy - Featured Contributor in Arts & Entertainment

Nancy Tracy is a Yahoo! Featured Contributor for arts & entertainment. She enjoys writing about a variety of topics from psychology to politics to popular culture. Her article on "Transient Global Amnesia" w...  View profile

In the movie, "Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work," Rivers reveals that after she got her own late night TV show on Fox, Johnny Carson refused to talk to her, and she has been blacklisted from NBC late night programming ever since.

21 Comments

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  • Allene Newberg Bilodeau9/14/2010

    This is a sobering picture you draw of a woman I really hadn't bothered to try to learn more about. When did this film come out, Nancy? I'm not sure it came to the mainstream theaters here in Blgtn. But it's the kind that would show where foreign & documentary & art films play here. Your article sucked me in so fast, I forgot I was on AC! You've really got my interest up now. Thanks.

  • Patricia Sicilia8/10/2010

    I've always known Rivers was an intelligent woman, and I think SHE should have taken over from Johnny Carson. But, she was a woman, alas. I remember her from WAY back.

  • Ali Canary8/2/2010

    I used to think she was hilarious, but I got tired of her. Nevertheless, she is indeed a genius and a fighter and she has known heartbreak. I have a lot of respect for the lady.

  • Jeanne Baney8/2/2010

    I've enjoyed her comedy from the time she was a local star. This will be a must see.

  • Julia Bodeeb8/1/2010

    Great review. I haven't seen it yet but want to.

  • Darrin Atkins8/1/2010

    good job on this

  • L B Woodgate8/1/2010

    I'm not much of a Rivers fan but your article has piqued my interest.

  • Janet Hunt7/31/2010

    I have always liked her and I think I would like this movie! Excellent work!

  • Laura Plantholt7/29/2010

    great review. the film does definitely show Joan in a new light: a complex but admirable woman. Who would have thought?

  • LBWoodgate7/29/2010

    Well done. Not a big Rivers fan but your article open some windows on her. Thanks

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