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Amy Sedaris digs wigs and baking
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May 5, 2000 | When "Strangers" first aired two years
ago as a piss-take on those weepy "After
School Specials" of the '70s, the show
tipped the scales with a warped wit
rarely encountered on the small screen.
Now, signed on for a third season on
Comedy Central, "Strangers" remains a
trusted outpost for those who find their
funny well beyond the standard sitcom
fare. At center stage of the show is actress
Amy Sedaris, who plays the rumpled
chum-pot Jerri Blank. Blank is a former
teen runaway who, after a lifetime of
prostitution and drug abuse, has
returned to high school as a freshman at
age 46. With the possible exception of a
special trailer park edition of "Cops,"
"Strangers" is the only place one is
likely to encounter someone like Jerri
Blank. The character represents an amalgam of
the fringe dwellers and human ruin that
have held the imagination of Sedaris
over the years. "The more serious they
are and the more tragic they are, the
more I'm drawn to them," she admits.
"I'm usually the only person who'll ever
talk to them and they tell me
everything." First, there was Bobbie. "I lived over
this woman in Chicago and she was just
trouble," relates Sedaris. "I mean, she
had tattoos that she had tried to take
off herself. She also always thought she
was smelling formaldehyde. She'd call up
and say, 'Hey, this is Bobbie downstairs
... Do I smell formaldehyde?' "And she'd always drink too much and
fall down. I'd constantly see her with a
broken leg or a broken arm." While
Bobbie proved an undeniably rich source
for any performer to draw from, Sedaris
also found inspiration from a late-'60s
drug prevention film. "We found this
documentary of this woman in the '60s
who was a drug addict and a prostitute
and she'd go to high schools and talk to
students. The woman's name is Flurrie."
Sedaris adds, "She looks like Michael
Dukakis. She's horrific looking." The final touch came when Sedaris
approached the wardrobe people at Comedy
Central during pre-production of the
series and told them, "I just want to
dress like someone who owns snakes."
They responded with an assortment of
outfits that overpoweringly evoked
slutty '70s sleaze. Jerri Blank was
born. Sans the saddlebag thighs and prison
tattoos that help define her TV
character, Sedaris herself is pretty and
diminutive. She is also considerably
more laid-back, several RPMs slower than
her TV persona, which comes off as a
sort of manic, perverse Lucille Ball. Of
her recent appearance on Conan O'Brien
she groaned, "God, with all that
fidgeting and unfocused energy I had, I
looked like a damn monkey. So annoying." Some call it quality entertainment. Sedaris' Greenwich Village apartment is
tidy, nearly sizable by Manhattan
standards and distinguished by several
personal decorative touches. Choice cuts
of plastic meat are placed throughout
the living room. The TV is adorned with
a large plastic turkey. "I covered it
with foil for Thanksgiving and the
people who came over were extremely
disappointed when they found out it
wasn't real." There is also a stuffed
squirrel featured prominently on a
coffee table. "I really like squirrels.
My whole family does. We all like small
woodland creatures." Hard to say why it comes as a surprise
that Sedaris and her family hail from
North Carolina. But it is her home state
nonetheless. When asked what her life
might have been like if she had remained
there instead of defecting to the North,
Sedaris quickly responds, "If I had
stayed in North Carolina, I'd be wearing
ruffles or a uniform. You know,
waitressing and taking care of a stroke
victim ... I probably would have been
dating him, too, by now." Not surprisingly, Sedaris grew up in an
open, permissive household where
creative expression was never
discouraged. "We all did our little
plays in our house," she says. "For a
long time I had an imaginary classroom.
I'd come home from school, put on my
mom's high heels and go right to the
back bedroom where I had a wall that was
one big chalkboard and I would teach my
imaginary students. This went on for
years and years. Then I realized I was
too old to do this, so then I just kind
of did it to myself in my head. I still
do that -- like if I'm making an omelet
I pretend it's a cooking show and I'm
teaching someone." Sedaris' lifelong fascination with
costumes and wigs has also been lovingly
nurtured. "In the first grade I got my
first wig. It was a fall and I still
have it," she says, gesturing to her
closet. "Since then I get two wigs for
Christmas usually. When I was a kid I'd
go shopping with my dad every Friday
night and I wore a different wig every
time I went," she adds. True to her craft, Sedaris would remain
in character the entire time she and her
father were at the grocery store. "It
was mostly neighbors that I would
imitate. I think most kids probably did
that stuff, I just stuck with it,"
Sedaris says with a shrug. The subject of wigs has Sedaris bounding
off to another room. She returns with a
photo she had done with the help of a
makeup artist friend. It is a large
color print of Sedaris as Angie
Dickinson at the peak of her "Police
Woman" period. The likeness is
staggering. Sedaris is a convincing
blond, and with a gold turtleneck and
pistol poised, the transformation is
utter and complete.
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