Maria Bamford has been around the comedy scene, stand up and character performing, for some time. I can remember stand-up clips of a very young Bamford on basic cable in the late 90's, and a general awareness of who she was despite the fact I'm not one of those folks who follows comedy the way some people follow music. But, she had a unique voice (literally and metaphorically) from the time she came out of the gate.
In 2005 she appeared as part of the documentary,
The Comedians of Comedy, which followed comedians Patton Oswalt, Brian Posehn, Zach Galifianakis and Maria Bamford as they toured the country playing, basically, rock clubs. And I remember watching the film and being deeply concerned for Bamford during the entire movie. They sort of tried to play it off as "Maria keeps to herself. Maria's an introvert," but the movie basically gave up on trying to get her to participate, and so she became a kind of non-entity within the film.
In 2012, on the heels of Louis CK figuring out people would pay him directly for content and the rise of Kickstarter, Maria Bamford also had a special "
The Special Special Special", which I paid to Ms. Bamford to download. And if you've never seen
The Special Special Special, it's kind of amazing. She basically does an entirely new set for her parents from inside her living room. And I guess it was while watching that show, or around that time, that I learned she'd had some sort of mental breakdown. And, it seemed, doing this special was Phase 1 of her getting her feet back under her, professionally.
She appeared in the Netflix season of
Arrested Development (as someone playing Sue Storm in a knock-off
Fantastic Four), and held her own with that cast, which is no mean feat. And, as she has always done, she's toured relentlessly. I see she's in Austin for the Moontower Comedy festival every year (going on now. She was on local drive-time radio just this morning), and I think she's here more than that - but I haven't been to see stand-up since a semi-traumatic family outing when I was in college.*
But from the first few minutes of the first episode of
Lady Dynamite (
now streaming on Netflix), it feels like someone has finally properly placed the megaphone to Bamford's mouth and given her the proper stage where it's not just her freaking out the squares doing her stand-up or trying to fit into someone else's mold of how entertainment is supposed to work. The show is Bamford's world, and it's - for once (and people say this a lot, but I think it's a safe bet it's true here) - a unique perspective.
Not many shows out there are a sitcom recounting the protagonist's real-life struggles with mental illness. And making it understandable, sympathetic, and honest-to-god hilarious.