Regina Leader-Post

Lavin’s loving life on 9JKL

Former Alice star returns to TV with another comedy

- FRAZIER MOORE

9JKL Debuts Monday, Global/CBS Linda Lavin says she began reading the script for a new show called 9JKL and halfway through she knew she was going to have a good time.

At this stage of her career, the veteran entertaine­r says having fun is the big deciding factor. When she reads a script she loves, she has to say yes.

“That’s what I’m really all about now: Am I gonna have a good time? Otherwise, I ain’t doing it!” Lavin said.

Lavin is betting viewers have a good time along with her when 9JKL debuts Monday.

She can barely contain herself describing its premise: How a middle-aged man — an actor suddenly down on his luck and recently divorced — moves back to New York after years in Los Angeles.

He takes an apartment sandwiched between his loving, meddling parents on one side and his brother, sister-in-law and their new baby on the other.

Mark Feuerstein plays the son. “He’s a grown man and he has come home,” says Lavin. “This is real life today. Just when you thought it was safe to turn the kids’ room into a guest room or a workshop, they can’t find a job or a partner or an apartment. They’re ba-ack.”

The parents on 9JKL: Elliott Gould and Lavin.

“I play his mother, who is absolutely besotted with him, so happy with him next door. And his father constantly wants to spend time with him. Therein lies the problem. I think it’s called boundaries — nobody’s got any.

“Everybody’s offensive. Everyone says what they think — no filter. But it’s an identifiab­le family. These are characters who reach through the screen to the audience, which then says, ‘Oh, I know who THAT is! That’s ME, that’s MY family!’

“It’s not mean-spirited,” Lavin continues, “and it’s not at the expense of one person or another. It’s not diminishin­g to women, as a lot of comedies can be, or to women of a certain age, which is something I just won’t participat­e in — as a woman of a certain age.”

Lavin’s certain age will be 80 on Oct. 15, though neither her looks nor her crackling energy would betray her as an octogenari­an.

She began her career in the late 1950s as a member of the Compass Players (a forerunner of the Second City improv company), and within a few years had started gathering Broadway credits. She’s also made movies and had many TV series, the most memorable being Alice, the 1976-1985 sitcom that starred Lavin as a waitress in a Phoenix diner struggling to make ends meet.

“I was very lucky during those years to have the opportunit­y to play a single mother and a working woman in the blue-and-pinkcollar field,” she says.

Among real-life challenges the show addressed humorously was an episode on equal pay for women.

Diner boss Mel interviewe­d a prospectiv­e waiter who Alice found out had been offered more than she and her fellow waitresses were paid.

So Alice led a strike.

“Mel didn’t give us a raise, but he didn’t hire the man,” says Lavin. “Now, here we are in 2017, and women have not come very far.”

Among Lavin’s many TV projects after Alice was the sitcom Conrad Bloom, which aired for a few weeks in 1998.

It also starred Feuerstein. Lavin played his mother.

She says she’s thrilled, nearly two decades later, to be working with him again.

“He’s in that scene with you, THERE with you,” Lavin says of this mother-and-child reunion. “He’s inventive and extremely generous.”

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