The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

In ‘Girlfriend­s,’ women get the pain, laughs, no Botox

-

PASADENA » The women of “Girlfriend­s” are having a very rough go of it, and that’s just in the first episode.

Miranda Richardson’s Sue is dumped by her lover and the magazine she helped him build. Phyllis Logan’s Linda is abruptly widowed and may be broke. Zoe Wanamaker’s Gail is losing a husband to divorce and gaining her ex-con son.

“It’s high farce what happens on one day to all these people, who are sort of thrown together in the storm,” Richardson said during a recent visit to Southern California.

But there’s pain to be had in Acorn TV’s six-episode “Girlfriend­s,” which neatly combines drama, humor and mystery and, significan­tly, is delivered up by three veteran actresses. Netflix’s Jane Fonda-Lily Tomlin series “Grace and Frankie” aside, there are scant Hollywood TV or movie vehicles that give full voice to mature women and their experience­s.

So it’s up to the U.K.’s “Girlfriend­s” to help fill the void. The series, from prolific English writer-director Kay Mellor, debuts here this week courtesy of the British-centric Acorn streaming service. The show is something of an anomaly in its native land: When its trio of stars aged 50-plus was announced, it made the evening news.

There are younger characters, male and female, in “Girlfriend­s,” including Matthew Lewis (Neville Longbottom in the “Harry Potter” movie franchise) as Gail’s son. But Lewis knows his character’s place in the scheme of things.

He recalled series mastermind Mellor discussing TV’s habit of relegating female characters to serving as the mothers, wives or secretarie­s of the men who carry the story.

“She said, ‘We wanted to make a show where, no, they were the focus and it was the men that were supporting roles,’” Lewis said during a recent Q&A with TV critics.

As a well-meaning if wayward son and single dad, he gets a chance to shine in the role — literally, since his character, Tom, sports a glossy fake tan to make it appear he’s back from an island vacation, not the slammer.

But center ring is owned by the three respected actresses who play longtime friends reunited by their woes. Richardson’s credits range from “The Crying Game” to “Black Adder II” to the “Harry Potter” role of Rita Skeeter. Logan played the admirable housekeepe­r Mrs. Hughes in “Downton Abbey” (yes, she’d love to see the talked-about movie happen but has no update to offer). Wanamaker appeared in “Ag- atha Christie’s Poirot” and “Mr. Selfridge.”

Another sign it’s a British show: The women look attractive and real.

“It would be ludicrous if a woman meant to be working class was looking like she’d Botox-ed off her face,” Logan said in an interview, referring to the injectable potion that reduces facial movement and thus lines. “It’s not believable, is it?”

The actresses make the most of their roles, from the occasional bits of slapstick to moments of vulnerabil­ity. All revolves around the small indignitie­s of aging — those darn wrinkles, gray hair — and the bigger life crises that don’t discrimina­te by decade.

 ?? ACORN TV VIA AP ?? This image released by Acorn TV shows Zoe Wanamaker, from left, Miranda Richardson and Phyllis Logan in a scene from the series, “Girlfriend­s.”
ACORN TV VIA AP This image released by Acorn TV shows Zoe Wanamaker, from left, Miranda Richardson and Phyllis Logan in a scene from the series, “Girlfriend­s.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States