8/10
Taking Broadway's late legend out on the Wonderful Town.
20 March 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Call her madam, the queen of the vodka stinger, the bongo bongo lady from the Kongo, or even the woman who taught us how to "Zip" properly, Elaine Stritch is a force of nature to be reckoned with, even after her recent departure from our world. It's obvious to me that Heaven has been brightened by a highly complex woman who never ceased to be herself in spite of the odds which lead her life to include much alcohol. "Give me a bottle of vodka and a floor plan", she admits having told a bartender, and after decades of sobriety, decided that "one drink a day" would suit her just fine. In the documentary of her later years which leads to the decision to move back to Detroit after decades away (living in both Manhattan and London where she became a house-hold name in the 1970's), Stritchie is still living and loving life in her mid-late 80's, enjoying her fame from her world tour of "Elaine Stritch at Liberty" and her discovery by younger generations as Alec Baldwin's domineering mother on "30 Rock". She obviously loves people and pretty much makes a major impression on everybody she meets, not only as a stage legend with a 70+ year career, but as a marvelous eccentric as well.

Friends from the Broadway stage, T.V. and A.A. meetings re-live their encounters with her, and some vintage footage even shows her singing "You're Just in Love" from "Call Me Madam" with co-star Russell Nype. A medical scare with her reacting to a drop in blood sugar shows her every day fears of being a diabetic. No stone is unturned in showing the soul of this fantastic lady who bares her heart as easily as a baby cries. There are a lot of life lessons to be learned from her stories, especially her determination to face becoming older with grace and spirit. "I'm getting older, not old", she says, yet is aware that as time goes by and birthdays approach, her lifeline is decreasing. Still present is the love she feels for her late husband John Bay, and mentions of Bay's English Muffins keeps his legacy alive. Permission from Sondheim to change the lyrics of his songs in her one-woman show and testimonies from Harold Prince as to the history of their friendship give an overview that the history of Broadway will never be forgotten, especially with such stage stalwarts as Nathan Lane and Cherry Jones giving their own point of view as well.

For those who think that this is a self-serving piece of egotistical self congratulatory P.R., they are missing the point. This complicated day and age needs survival stories of such people like Elaine Stritch who have been through hell and back, through good times and bum times, yet still survived. She did it in times when civilization didn't rely on technology, and she dared to come to New York as a naive Catholic girl straight out of college. Her personal memories expand beyond her confessions about Brando, Ben Gazzara and the Rock in "At Liberty" and now even includes a future president. If you want to see what made Broadway tick and the types of personalities which it almost lacks today, check out "Elaine Stritch, Shoot Me". You won't want to shoot, only hug.
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