Houston Chronicle

‘Lady Dynamite’ finds happier place

- By Mike Hale NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

Is there any autobiogra­phical comedy series that’s quite as autobiogra­phical as Netflix’s “Lady Dynamite”?

The Maria Bamford of the show and the Maria Bamford who plays her are both comedians and actresses with histories of depression and bipolar disorder, raised in Minnesota, who starred in ads for big-box stores, were psychologi­cally derailed by the death of a pug named Blossom and have found happiness in a relationsh­ip with a man named Scott.

The trippy, densely packed first season of Bamford’s sitcom, created by Mitch Hurwitz (of “Arrested Developmen­t”) and Pam Brady, detailed her character’s ups and mostly downs in three timelines — the not too distant past (personal and profession­al meltdown in Los Angeles), the recent past (recovery of sorts in Minnesota) and the present (starting over in LA). The reward for her and the audience was an improbable, inevitable Nora Ephron-style happy ending. It felt like a story fully told.

So where does Bamford go in Season 2, whose eight episodes (down from 12 in Season 1) are now streaming on Netflix? She goes further into the past, showing us Maria’s Minnesota childhood in scenes that, in the three episodes available for review, lack the dark urgency of the first season’s family moments. More rewardingl­y, she goes into the future, where Maria finds herself making a streaming series much like the one we’re watching.

Mostly, though, she’s in the show’s present, where Maria’s relationsh­ip with Scott (Olafur Darri Olafsson) has reached the point of cohabitati­on. The lessons of Season 1 may have been that fear and mental illness never go away, but now they play out in milder, cuter and more legible ways, with more clearly defined messages but less wild inventiven­ess in the telling.

The show goes even more meta than before in the “future” sequences — the time frame is loosely establishe­d by a reference to the yet-to-exist “Westworld” Season 3 — in which Maria gets the chance to “destigmati­ze mental illness forever” with a series called “Maria Bamford Is Nuts!” Invited to a meeting at Muskvision, a streaming service allegedly owned by the car-and-space mogul Elon Musk, Maria is scanned by a white cube that approves a 13-episode season without hearing her pitch. “This content will fulfill many quadrants of our algorithm,” the cube tells her, a determinat­ion presumably already made by Netflix in the real world.

There are always hurdles in the world of “Lady Dynamite,” however, and Maria is soon told that she should “tone down” the mental-health issues. This offers the most promising possibilit­ies going forward, as well as the primary venue for Ana Gasteyer’s essential performanc­e as Maria’s divinely foul-mouthed agent.

It’s not clear from these early episodes that Bamford has a whole lot more to say about the compoundin­g difficulti­es of mental illness and the vicissitud­es of life as a woman trying to succeed in the entertainm­ent business and navigate romance in Los Angeles. “Lady Dynamite” is still a well-made and distinctiv­e comedy, but there are a lot of those these days.

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