If you haven’t seen “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel,” you’ve been missing a screwball comedic delight. Season four, set in the tumultuous 1960s, a decade of cultural awakening, once again revolves around the trials and tribulations of a Manhattan-based stand-up comic pioneer, played by Rachel Brosnahan.
Season three concluded with Miriam “Midge” Maisel being abruptly fired by crooner Shy Baldwin (Leroy McClain) from their eagerly-anticipated European-tour, placing her at odds with her cantankerous manager/best-friend, Susie (Alex Borstein), who gambled away Midge’s earnings.
In the opening episode of this new season, there’s a wittily written/brilliantly choreographed Weissman-family argument, shouting aboard separate cars, perched high on Coney Island’s Wonder Wheel. Kudos to the series’ creative husband-and-wife team: Amy Sherman-Palladino and Daniel Palladino.
Declaring, “I’m not ready to be a failure yet,” along with “I wanna be me every time I go out on that stage,” indomitable Mrs. Maisel becomes MC at The Wolford strip club, where she’s determined to improve the strippers’ working conditions and upgrade the club’s tacky atmosphere/clientele.
Midge’s devotion to her job appalls her staid Jewish father Abe (Tony Shalhoub) and humiliates her match-making mother Rose (Marin Hinkle). But, as an Upper West Side single mother, supporting her family, Midge has gotta work.
Meanwhile, Midge’s ex-husband, Joel Maisel (Michael Zegan), encounters problems running his fledgling nightclub, located in a Chinatown building that’s really a ‘front’ for an illegal gambling parlor. Plus there’s the complication of his girlfriend Mei’s (Stephanie Hsu) unexpected pregnancy.
Institutionalized after her disastrous Broadway show, rival comic Sophie Lennon (Jane Lynch) is now also Susie’s client and controversial Lenny Bruce (Luke Kirby) comes back into Midge’s life, just as his career is coming to a close. In real life, Bruce was convicted of obscenity in 1964, causing him to be blacklisted from every major comedy club in the country.
On the Granger Gauge of 1 to 10, the eight-episode fourth season of “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” is an energetic, amusing 8. Sources say the series, which has already won 20 Emmys, will conclude after season five. So I’m curious to see where Midge’s journey will end.
Susan Granger has been an on-air television and radio commentator and entertainment critic for more than 25 years. Raised in Hollywood, Granger appeared as a child actress in movies with Abbott & Costello, Red Skelton, Lucille Ball, and Lassie. She currently resides in Westport.