
TV is the New Reading
‘Drop Dead Diva’ is a
delight
Brooke Elliott is a revelation.
Lifetime’s “Drop Dead Diva” premiered this weekend and I was charmed to the
middle of me by this fun little show about Deb, a stick-thin model whose
inattention while driving landed her up at the Gates of Heaven – which looked
like nothing so much as a mall. Deb’s lack of any good or bad deeds in the
course of her life led to her return to Earth and reincarnation as a lawyer –
the perfectly presentable if plain and a bit plus-sized Jane Bingum, played by
Elliott.
Jane had landed up in the hospital, having taken a bullet for her boss, which
explained her temporary amnesia and seeming mood swings. Deb, now in Jane’s
body, is trying to cope with her new situation. Her boyfriend, Grant, had been
about to propose to Deb. He’d recently gotten a job at Jane’s firm so Deb can
see him all the time, but now through Jane’s eyes, inside Jane’s body – while
Jane’s younger, hotter colleagues make a play for him.
In that he was going to marry her, naturally she’s going to continue to feel
that quite deeply, but for obvious reasons she can’t just tell him. He almost
caught her when he noticed Jane had painted one pinkie fingernail blue – that
was Deb’s good-luck charm – but it’s clear that if Jane is going to hold the
place in his heart that Deb did, she’s going to need to re-approach the
situation – as Jane.
Meanwhile, she’s torn between giving him space he needs to grieve the loss of,
well, her – Deb, his fiancee – and her horror that other women are
climbing right over that social nicety to flirt with him – right in front of
her.
But that’s only one problem Deb’s dealing with as Jane. Jane’s body has
cravings Deb finds irresistible, so if she wants to shed Jane’s weight, she’s
going to need to find a way for Squeezy-Cheese to be less addictive than Xanax,
and to be less drawn to those yummy chocolate doughnuts that seem to be
everywhere in the office.
The right voice
The best part of this show is watching Elliott find exactly the right voice for
her Deb persona.
Deb is a model. She’s in her 20s. She’s a pleasant person but she’s spent her
whole life as a size 1 or size 2, tops, when she gained a “Freshman 15” in
community college (for which reason she promptly quit). The world opens more
doors for women like that than it does for Jane, who is in her 30s and is a little
frumpy along with being a bit overweight – in the world of television, perhaps.
Just for a sense of perspective, Elliott has a perfectly healthy figure.
Jane – and now, as it happens, Deb as well – has got some metabolic issues that
make her uncomfortable in her office. Also, she’s got the emotional issues with
the boyfriend/fiance – it’s harder to let him go and forget about him when he’s
right in the office everyday with her.
She does have her best girlfriend, Stacy, to confide in. Stacy is the woman Deb
was talking to on the cellphone when her car crashed into an orange truck and
started this merry journey. While her guardian angel, Fred, warned her not to
tell anyone, Stacy is her very best friend and besides, if she’s got all of
Jane’s knowledge but none of her actual memories, Deb needs a few ties to her
old life to get by.
Deb’s also got some compassion. She feels empowered to help people because
along with her bubbly personality, she’s got Jane’s vast knowledge of the law.
She’s continually surprised by the things she knows, as well as her ability to
use them to make the arguments she needs to.
And along with her big brain, there are other perks to being Jane. For
instance, Deb’s revelry in Jane’s Porsche was one of the most joyous moments in
television.
So despite the setbacks, Deb feels she can do some good and redeem herself. In
the pilot episode, she found a way to help a divorcee with low self-esteem
stand up for herself – both with a makeover and new look on the outside and
more confidence on the inside – and some strutting tips from Deb’s runway work
to sell it – revising a $100,000 settlement with the cheating ex to something
closer to $5 million.
Not bad for a second chance at making a difference.
“Drop Dead Diva,” airing Sundays at 8 p.m. on Lifetime, is off to an excellent
start.
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©2009 The Minot
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