It’s Always Something by Gilda Radner
Reviewed by Gerti
For those who don’t know, Gilda Radner was a famous comedian from the early days of the television show “Saturday Night Live,” which has been a staple on TV for decades now. As such, the reader might expect this book to be a comedy riot, along the lines of written offerings from other comedians like Ron White or Chelsea Handler. But it is not, yet that doesn’t make it a bad book.
“It’s
Always Something” is more the story of how Gilda Radner went
through ups and downs during her eventually losing battle against
ovarian cancer. It is one of those books where even though you know
how it ends (she is dead, after all), the glory is in the struggle
itself, and here Radner lays out her fight against the disease in
sometimes agonizing personal detail. She talks about her moods, the
doctors and nurses who helped her, her husband, fellow comedian Gene
Wilder and HIS struggles with her and her disease, and well as what
many of these medical procedures and treatments felt like to her. She
shows each stage of the process unflinchingly, laying herself open to
criticism even while she talks about her mad search for alternative
treatments and her evil and depressive moods.
Yes,
she does talk about her unconventional upbringing and her early
career, and finally the triumphs that made her a household name and a
recognizable face while she was on TV. But that is a small portion of
the book. More often, she talks candidly about people from The
Wellness Community, the cancer support group she meets with, and her
hero worship of the man who founded it, and her relationship with
Gene Wilder. She is frank about her lengthy struggle to get Wilder to
marry her in the first place, and then about their struggles to keep
it together when they have alternate ideas about her cancer treatment
modalities. Gilda is beyond honest, always leaving herself painfully
vulnerable to the prying eyes of the casual reader. But how can
anyone read this story and not be sympathetic to the person who went
through so much pain and yet brought so much laughter to the world?
It is heartbreaking to see her go through this.
“It’s
Always Something” is not a funny book, although there are funny
scenes in it. I think it should be read rather by those going through
cancer treatments, or the family members and friends of those people,
than a typical SNL fan looking for a laugh, as it is more informative
than funny. My father died of cancer a few years back, and this book
explains in detail what he and other cancer patients experience.
Reading it was helpful and healing to me because he never talked
about what he was going through at the time. In the end, I’m sorry
Gilda Radner died, because even though she succumbed to this terrible
disease, she goes on helping people not by sharing laughs, but by
sharing the story of her struggle with cancer so candidly.