The Guardian (USA)

Late Night review – battle of words in the TV writers' room

- Peter Bradshaw

‘I wish Iwas a woman of colour so Icould get a job with zero qualificat­ion!” The authentic voice of establishm­ent self-pity is given here in all its footstampi­ng shrillness. Mindy Kaling is the writer and star of this warm and witty film, playing Molly, a South-AsianAmeri­can would-be comedy writer who against all odds gets a job in an allwhite environmen­t, and it’s one of her resentful new male colleagues making the sarky crack about how lucky women of colour are. Molly is writing for a cantankero­us TV talk show host, Katherine Newberry – imperiousl­y and enjoyably played by Emma Thompson. (She’s a Brit, which perhaps exoticises and tames her whiteness.) The director is Nisha Ganatra, making her feature debut after working on TV shows such as Dear White People and Brooklyn Nine Nine.

Newberry is a once garlanded latenight diva who desperatel­y needs a woman writer to help prevent her slide into irrelevanc­e and ratings oblivion. But the otherwise all-male writers’ room is outraged by this “diversity hire” – although no one uses the passé term “political correctnes­s”. Molly’s employment means that these writers are authentica­lly outraged by a contempora­ry political issue in a way they have never been before in their lives, despite decades of writing what they imagined to be political satire.

With a newcomer’s guileless directness, Molly starts telling her lax and complacent new colleagues what they sort of knew all along: the show is stale, needs to be sharper, more political daring, more fun. Perhaps most annoyed is the head writer Tom Campbell, played by Reid Scott (the dead-eyed political spin doctor Dan from HBO’s Veep) whose ivy-league kid brother lost out on a job on this show because Molly got picked. Tom comes around to her apartment in Brooklyn, and acidly comments on all the stuff from her highschool years up on her bedroom walls: “Are you super excited for your first period?”

The business of TV comedy writing is an establishe­d way of portraying something combining ostensible glamour with the accessibil­ity of a workaday world with workplace concerns. Here is where the tinsel gets manufactur­ed: these aren’t the stars, they’re the ones writing for the stars. Carl Reiner’s TV classic The Dick Van Dyke Show from the 60s was about the head writer of an imaginary TV show, and the movie My Favorite Year (1982) was inspired by the Sid Caesar programme Your Show of Shows. Writersroo­m scenes were vital to the 90s TV classic The Larry Sanders Show, which at one stage featured Sarah Silverman as a super-smart writer who is deeply threatenin­g to the comedy bros – and most prominentl­y there is Tina Fey’s masterly 30 Rock, in which Fey plays the head writer of a show based on Saturday Night Live; she has a writer who endures the racist nickname “Toofer”, because he is a two-for-one: he’s a Harvard grad and also black.

In almost every case here, however, the very existence of the writers’ room supercharg­es the material with irony, an extra layer of cynicism – comedy about comedy creates an insider-trading atmosphere that often gives the gags a sharp, bitter tang. Kaling is aiming for something more soft-centred and lenient than this in Late Night, and the narrative arc of a feature film is different from TV, though I admit I missed the devastatin­gly fierce stings and joke density that you get from a 30 Rock episode. (A cynic might say that, like the best of US TV comedy, Late Night might have been improved by a team of writers, rather than one person.)

But Kaling makes up for it with the warmth of her own performanc­e and the generation­al soromance with Emma Thompson who is on pleasingly disdainful form. The drama is about Molly’s fraught, complex mentor-frenemy relationsh­ip with Katherine herself, and Katherine’s own problemati­c relationsh­ip with her ailing academic husband, Walter, sympatheti­cally played by John Lithgow. With a platonic connection with Walter – while also having to finesse the pre

datory attentions of fellow writer Charlie (Hugh Dancy) – Kaling shows how her character finds herself at the nexus of a sexual-political situation that is to challenge her liberal loyalties in the new age of #metoo.

At heart, Late Night is a romcom and like so many romcoms, the funny stuff recedes after the first act, as the plot and its relatabili­ty imperative gets into gear. Yet Kaling is very good at conveying the paradoxica­l misty-eyed idealism of those working for this longrunnin­g TV institutio­n. The love affair is, inevitably, with TV itself.

 ??  ?? A love affair with television … Mindy Kaling and Emma Thompson in Late Night. Photograph: Landmark Media/Alamy Stock Photo
A love affair with television … Mindy Kaling and Emma Thompson in Late Night. Photograph: Landmark Media/Alamy Stock Photo

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