www.fgks.org   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

Advertisement

Amy Sedaris Is Excited for the Emmys. She Just Has to Find a Rabbit Sitter.

Image
“At Home With Amy Sedaris” received an Emmy nomination for best variety sketch show.CreditKC Bailey/TruTV

Amy Sedaris, the prolific actor and comedian, has been one of the funniest people on television for decades, yet Emmy recognition has usually eluded her.

That changed this year when her gonzo homemaking spoof for TruTV, “At Home With Amy Sedaris,” was nominated in the best variety sketch category. Episodes begin as goofs on “The Martha Stewart Show” and the like but end up somewhere decidedly more outrageous. A holiday special is derailed when a demonically possessed nutcracker kills Neil Patrick Harris. An installment about entertaining on the cheap consults a drifter with a foot fetish, also played by Ms. Sedaris.

Along the way Ms. Sedaris, as host, creates “Girl Scout-level” crafts (“potato ships,” bottle cap castanets), dispenses kitchen tips (“Ouzo kills feelings”) and occasionally breaks into song in the typically chipper demeanor of a professional TV homemaker.

“You play it straight because the straighter you go, then the jokes are even funnier,” she said. “If I’m earnest in giving you real information and singing at the best of my ability, even though I can’t sing, that’s just funny.”

Inspired by “At Home With Peggy Mann,” a local show from Ms. Sedaris’s North Carolina youth, “At Home” is an apotheosis of sorts for her. It combines the skewed whimsy of projects like “Strangers With Candy,” the cult comedy she created and starred in with her longtime collaborators Stephen Colbert and Paul Dinello — Mr. Dinello also co-created “At Home” — with the absurdist D.I.Y. vibe of her books “I Like You: Hospitality Under the Influence” and “Simple Times: Crafts for Poor People.”

“I could slide those two books across the table and say, ‘This is what the show is,’” she said. “Because so many times you describe something to networks, and they don’t get it.”

Image
Ms. Sedaris, above at her actual home, said her show is “inspired by so many old shows, but nothing new really.”CreditRobert Wright for The New York Times

The sister of the humorist David Sedaris, Ms. Sedaris emerged out of the Chicago improv scene in the 1990s, starring in the short-lived Comedy Central sketch show “Exit 57” with Mr. Colbert, Mr. Dinello and others. Since then, she has enlivened series both cultish (“The Heart, She Holler”) and more mainstream (“Sex and the City,” “Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt”), and been both a reliably great late-night guest and a prolific voice actor. (Next month she returns as Princess Carolyn in the new season of “BoJack Horseman.”)

In a phone interview this week, Ms. Sedaris discussed her Emmy nomination, rabbit care and the transcendent joys of packing tape. These are edited excerpts from the conversation.

How would you describe “At Home” to somebody who’s never seen it?

It’s a homemaking show that starts off like “Martha Stewart,” where you would address the camera, but then it goes into a narrative story. It is a little bit of everything. I mean I could rattle off 31 things we were inspired by. Everything from Lawrence Welk to Red Skelton to “Two Fat Ladies,” Mister Rogers, Ernie Kovacs. It’s been inspired by so many old shows, but nothing new really.

What was it about those earnest old shows that is so appealing?

They were real people that seemed so character-like to me. I just always thought it would be fun to make that up. When you see shows like that, it’s easy to think what would be funny about them.

Is it tough to play a version of yourself?

Yes, I was scared about playing myself. And then once I started playing the other characters, I thought, oh, I get it: I’m the straight guy. And those characters can make fun of me. So now it’s easy because I just think of myself as the straight one.

Those other characters you play on the show, along with past ones like Jerri Blank on “Strangers With Candy” and others, are heavily made up to the point of being grotesque at times. Do you prefer those kinds of roles?

It’s just more fun. If I’m going to be in the makeup chair, let’s get ugly for it. Ugly is so much fun to play, and then your body takes over, and you can be anything. It’s scary if you look in the mirror and you look like yourself, or a version of yourself with all that makeup on, which is just as scary to me because I don’t wear makeup like that. I just like to hide behind something. Once you have a mole on your face, anything goes.

Packing tape also seems to play a large role in the show.

I love packing tape.

What was your proudest packing-tape-related achievement?

Image
Ms. Sedaris and Stephen Colbert in the 2005 film “Strangers With Candy,” based on their cult comedy.CreditThinkFIlm

The biggest one was, I lined a hallway closet in my home with tiny candies from China that had these beautiful flowers on it. They were tiny pastel colors, like the size of two postage stamps together. And I emptied all the candy out and did an entire hallway, floor to ceiling, in those candy wrappers, then I went over the whole thing with packing tape. It was fantastic. I cover everything with packing tape — it’s just prettier. I travel with packing tape. It’s always on me. Why haven’t they asked me to do a commercial?

So if there was ever a signature line of “At Home” products, à la the Martha Stewart Collection, I’m guessing packing tape would be ——

Absolutely! And Scotch tape. Anything sticky. And any kind of eraser with googly eyes on it. Anything with googly eyes on it — I’m a big fan of googly eyes.

I find it hard to believe this is your first Emmy nomination. How did you react when you found out?

I laughed. I’m not part of that fraternity, really. So it’s great. I was happier for everyone else on the show. I was just so surprised by it, and I’m excited about it; it’s really nice. But I’ve never gone to the Emmys. My first thought was, “Oh God, I have to wear makeup and dress up.” So that’s kind of weird. I don’t really do things like that, so I’ll be a fish out of water.

You do lots of talk shows. Does that make you nervous, too?

I get eager more than nervous. But with the Emmy thing, I don’t know. I guess I would have to think of some kind of speech to prepare myself. But it’s also my style not to. And I think of all the people who we’re up against — there’s no way. But then I would hate to be that person who wins and gets up there like “Oh my God, I don’t know what to say.” I’m just not going to think about it. I think more about, Who’s going to watch my rabbit while I fly to L.A., in the middle of shooting, to do this awards thing?

Don’t you have a rabbit person?

Well I’m so glad you’re bringing it up, because now I have someone to talk to about it. I do, but if I go to L.A. on a Saturday, when am I going to get my rabbit, Tina, to the sitters? Because I work Friday. Do you know what I mean? Oh, it’s a whole thing.

You were one of David Letterman’s favorite guests, speaking of talk shows. How has it been different since your longtime friend Stephen Colbert replaced him?

I liked Letterman because we only knew each other when I was out there. Colbert’s like a brother to me — I love him to pieces and I really like doing his show. But it is funny because it’s harder almost — he knows my bag of tricks. We all have our own little trunk, so if I pull something out of the trunk, he’s rolling his eyes like: “Really? You’ve been dragging that around for 30 years. Are you still saying that?”

A version of this article appears in print on , on Page C1 of the New York edition with the headline: Amy Sedaris, Playing It Straight. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

Advertisement