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The Good Body
24 July 2004

Eve Ensler: dramatising the
relationship between women
and their bodies
Written and performed by Eve Ensler
Directed by Peter Askin American Conservatory Theater, San Francisco,
California, United States, until 1 August 2004
In a darkened auditorium against a backdrop of loud gurgling and sucking
sounds, a 35 year old woman lies on her back, talking about her latest
cosmetic surgery procedure. It is the most recent in a long history of
operations, which have included everything from liposuction to soy breast
implants. Without a hint of irony, the woman says that she is in a sexual
relationship with her plastic surgeon, a man who seems to regard himself
as something of a Dr Frankenstein and his partner as his most fabulous
creation.
In recent years, cosmetic surgery has eked out a whole new niche of reality
TV programming, with ABC's Extreme Makeover , MTV's I Want A Famous Face
, and Channel 5's Cosmetic Surgery... Live attracting frenzied attention
in the United Kingdom and United States. Until recently, cosmetic surgery
was not a subject commonly tackled on the stage. But in The Good Body
, a new play by playwright/performer Eve Ensler, nips and tucks are transported
from the operating theatre to the live theatre as part of an attempt to
dramatise the perpetually problematic relationship between women and their
bodies.
Ensler is best known as the creator of The Vagina Monologues .Based on
a series of interviews with women about their sexual organs, this award
winning play explores women's sexuality in an alternately funny and disturbing
way. Selling out off-Broadway in New York and in London's West End, The
Vagina Monologues has since been translated into 35 languages and performed
all over the world, both as a solo show by Ensler and by groups of celebrity
actresses including Whoopi Goldberg, Susan Sarandon, Glenn Close, and
Winona Ryder. The success of the play has fuelled V-Day, a global charity
founded by Ensler to end violence against women and girls ( www.vday.org
).
In The Good Body , which is currently premiering at the American Conservatory
Theater in San Francisco before heading to Broadway, Ensler embarks upon
a journey to understand both her love-hate relationship with her own body
(specifically her flabby tum) and that of women all over the world. Transforming
herself expertly into a variety of different characters—from Helen
Gurley Brown, the revamper of Cosmopolitan , who at 80 plus years old
still performs 200 sit-ups a day, to Bernice, an obese teenager whom Ensler
encounters while visiting a fat camp and who calls the playwright a "skinny
bitch"—Ensler proves herself to be a consummate comic actress.
The play's most penetrating moments occur when Ensler veils her disgust
and sorrow at the lengths some women will go to to achieve physical perfection,
under a veneer of sharp characterisation and acerbic wit. In one scene,
for instance, Ensler embodies a middle aged woman who undergoes a vaginal
tightening procedure at a Beverly Hills clinic to rejuvenate her flaccid
marital sex life. The character is funny because she is so credulous,
yet the horrific pointlessness of the procedure and its disappointing
results are there in the undertow.
In The Vagina Monologues , Ensler achieved both a spectacular literal
and figurative climax by presenting a thumping orgasm onstage. In The
Good Body , a potentially rich closing scene set at a clandestine women's
ice-cream parlour in Afghanistan fails to reach similar transcendent heights.
In fact, it is slightly embarrassing: watching Ensler as she histrionically
guzzles ice cream, offering vanilla flavoured libations to the women encountered
on her journey before tearing off her tight black top and letting her
stomach hang out in a final statement of defiance and freedom, gives one
a pressing urge to hide behind one's burkha.
Copyright Britsh Medical Journal 2004
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