Houston Chronicle

‘Baby-Sitters Club’ grows for a new generation.

Netflix’s fresh take celebrates the best qualities of Gen Z

- By Hank Stuever

If you were attempting to tell a story in these dreary days about the rewards of believing in the best of people, you could do no better than the smart, affirmativ­e joy that’s found in Netflix’s fresh take on “The Baby-Sitters Club,” a 10-episode drama aimed squarely at the tweenage-girl set, but willing to share its goodwill with anyone who needs a lift.

I’m about as far from the show’s intended demographi­c as a person can get, but “The Baby Sitters Club” is yet another reminder of the lucky life of a critic, who gets to watch everything and discover the unexpected trove of kindness and spirit seen here. The women in my life — especially those friends who grew up in the 1980s and ‘90s reading the 200plus novels in the original book series conceived by Ann M. Martin — are way, way ahead of me on this: “The Baby-Sitters Club,” which has sold more than 180 million paperbacks and was previously adapted into a short-lived TV series and a 1995 movie, was never only about babysittin­g.

It’s an entire ethic, impressive­ly built on the tenet that we are each of us becoming a better and more responsibl­e person every day. How the books and now this series are able to do this without seeming saccharine, preachy or otherwise Disneyfied is part of why “The Baby-Sitters Club” is such a watchable treat. Not only do things generally work out for these girls, it works out because they work at it.

Within its opening minutes, one cannot help but groove on the show’s welcoming nature, as a seventh-grader named Kristy Thomas (Sophie Grace) sees how desperate her single mom (Alicia Silverston­e) is to find a last-minute sitter for her little brother. Kristy hatches a plan to start a full-service babysittin­g partnershi­p in idyllic Stoneybroo­k, Conn. She recruits her best friend Mary Anne Spier (Malia Baker), their budding-artist friend, Claudia Kishi (Momona Tamada), and the new girl at school, Stacey McGill (Shay Rudolph). Later they are joined by another new girl, Dawn Schafer (Xochitl Gomez).

The characters all hew to the archetypes Martin originally set forth, in that Kristy is bossy and sometimes impetuous. Mary Ann is shy but wise. Claudia’s creativity is at odds with her parents’ expectatio­ns. And Stacey just wants a fresh start after a disastrous viral video incident at her old school in Manhattan.

Showrunner Rachel Shukert (whose TV work includes “GLOW”) and executive producer Lucia Aniello (“Broad City”) clearly want nothing more than to do right by the books they loved as girls, while carefully steering “Baby-Sitters Club” toward a thoughtful­ly conceived Gen-Z upgrade.

That naturally means a stronger emphasis on the club’s diversity — as well as that of their Stoneybroo­k universe — not just in terms of color or ethnicity, but a broader sense of community and dignity. These babysitter­s, as well as the tykes they care for, are a new breed. When one client’s son prefers dresses over jeans, plays princess and refers to herself as a girl, this Baby-Sitters Club is not only equipped to relate to her, they are also more chill. That old “BSC” magic kicks in, as a viewer of any age finds characters to emulate.

And although they’re as wired and Instagram-dependent as their peers, these girls honor their predecesso­rs by choosing an analog approach to business, circulatin­g paper fliers in the neighborho­od and directing all calls from clients to a landline phone in Claudia’s bedroom (it came free with the family’s internet service, she explains).

It isn’t long before a rival group of high-schoolers try to steal the club’s idea, availing themselves of social networks and online advertisin­g campaigns. The show’s unambiguou­s response to this is also its only slightly-off note, conveying that these savvy teens are somehow more shallow — so tech-obsessed that they don’t pay enough attention to the children they’re supposed to be watching.

The neighbors eventually come to prefer Kristy’s club, but the show never quite reconciles its place in 2020. Is it just pure fantasy to imagine that 12- and 13-yearold girls are still available to babysit? That they so easily come and go between houses? And that today’s hypervigil­ant parents will hire them? Or has this notion lapsed into a fantasy that still includes paper routes and boys who mow lawns?

As their business takes off and expands, the girls are launched on the real objective here, which is to introduce them to life’s many lessons. Though they strive to be mature, they are as susceptibl­e as anyone to hormonal crushes, rejection and tween angst. Their parents are entering relationsh­ips (in Kristy’s mother’s case, headed toward marrying a wealthy neighbor, to her daughter’s chagrin) or grieving divorces and other losses. Peers at school can sometimes be mean; and often there are conflicts within the Baby-Sitters Club itself.

None of this would be effective — or as worth watching — without the show’s remarkably talented cast of young actresses, all of whom either never learned the kidz-show style of overacting (“schmacting,” we sometimes call it), or were never afflicted with it to begin with. They are wholly believable in the roles of these idealized youths, with especially good performanc­es from Tanada and Baker.

Shukert’s desire to both preserve and update the franchise’s original appeal pays off with a show that promotes that most sacred of conservati­ve American values —free enterprise..

 ?? Kailey Schwerman / Netflix ?? Shay Rudolph as Stacey, from left, Momona Tamada as Claudia, Malia Baker as Mary Anne and Sophie Grace as Kristy bring a reimagined “The Baby-Sitters Club” to life.
Kailey Schwerman / Netflix Shay Rudolph as Stacey, from left, Momona Tamada as Claudia, Malia Baker as Mary Anne and Sophie Grace as Kristy bring a reimagined “The Baby-Sitters Club” to life.

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