“ *35 COMEDY nyone who can make her recent hys­ terectomy hinny can probably find humor anywhere. Judging from her new CD, I ’m Not Cindy Brady, Suzanne West- finds humor all over the country. On April 7, she’ll bring her show of the e name to the Aladdin Theater in Portland a fund-raiser for Equity Foundation. Then, April 8, she heads down to Eugene, which e mentions on her recording as the place ere she was once accosted by a posse of les- Ja n s who had heard she’d gone straight. “I’m like, ‘O oooooh!’ ” she says with a sneer. So not true! T he only thing bi about her P that she’s “mid-bi-coastal,” living in Los ■ngeles most of the year and spending sum- liers and holidays with Annie, her girlfriend of I :ven years, in— of all places— Columbus, )hio. When I imply that this sounds like an off- I ie-queer-beaten-path place to land, Westen- Defer is quick to defend her second home. She Dints out that there are 2 million people in olumbus and 25 gay bars and restaurants— et it’s still very homey”— though she's unable identify how her time in Ohio has affected er act. One obvious way is that her very down-to- e-earth-of-middle-America partner grounds er and is fodder for her routines. O n her new cording, Westenhoefer talks about how dif- rent she is from Annie: “I’m a little hyper, nd my girlfriend has two speeds— on, off. at’s it.... She’s so slow you can’t follow her I ipstairs, ’cause you’ll just fall right back down.” And though she says Annie doesn’t like it vhen she talks about the butch-femme aspects )f their life, Westenhoefer is sure of her own identity: “I’m so femme, I’m fag— crossed right pver!” As evidence of her partner’s many butch traits, Westenhoefer trips on Annie’s love of Home Depot: “They ought to call it the Homo Depot— any Sunday afternoon it’s dykes on íce.” No surprise, the superfemme comedian fails fy see the appeal. “I’m like a 6-year-old in the bank at fdome Depot,” she jokes. Then she expands on A nnie’s ftandiness: “My girlfriend believes there’s no problem on the planet that can’t be solved with a little duct tape.” However, Westenhoefer has no trou­ ble understanding the appeal of Martha ¡Stewart. “I think she’s freakin’ hot— I have a bad case on Martha Stewart,” she reveals on her CD. “I think she’s a great big tramp-in-from- the-garden-with-her-boots-still-on, throw-you- across-the-bed, make-you-call-her-daddy dyke top." When asked how much truth there is in her |stories, Westenhoefer says plenty. “To my girlfriend, it’s all exaggerated,” shé [says. “To me, it’s all true.” Does Annie ever get ticked at having their life dished out in comedy clubs across the nation? Every once in a while, Westenhoefer says, something potentially embarrassing will happen and Annie will decree absolutely: “Do not use that onstage.” Imp that she is, Westenhoefer admits that ‘half the time I still have to use it, because it’s going to be brilliant.” A perfect example of that rebelliousness is the last cut on the CD , which revolves around their menagerie. “We have animals, of course, because we’re lesbians," she explains, though she makes it Idear that the two cats and two dogs are really ¡all Annie’s. A careful observer, Westenhoefer jokes that cats are the little bulimics of the animal Frighteningly funny Chatting with lesbian comic' Suzanne Westenhoefer about her new CD and her trip to Oregon by O riana G reen j I I “I was a lesbian first. I never came out , and that makes me somehow scarier in the entertainment business." —Suzanne Westenhoefer --W lftfe K v. " m m .,. vüí . ¿ i." ------—*«*e*i*«*“ ■ world.” Which leads to a funny bit about the classic conflict over where the animals sleep at night— in bed with them or not. In the inspired finale of the CD, the comic takes us under the blanket with her where she is busy pleasuring her honey when one of the cats turns up there too. When I suggest that Annie must be a world-class good sport, Westenhoefer says that’s not it. “She really feels OK about who she is in the world,” the suddenly serious funny girl explains. And about that surgery— comedic vocabu­ lary comes full circle in the body of Suzanne Westenhoefer. Though she may well induce hysterics— fits of uncontrolled laughter— in her audience, that she can do so while dis­ coursing on the subject of her recent hys­ terectomy is the mark of a skilled come­ dian. The irony is that both words come from hystera, Greek for womb, and that hysteria derives from the ancient notion that women were hysterical— that is, emotionally unhinged— more often than men. In her act, Westenhoefer has a gay old time telling about the woman who arrivecTin her hospital room to shave her for surgery. Westen­ hoefer quips that she’d kinda like a cocktail first, then asks the aide if this approach has worked with other women. What follows is indeed a hysterical riff on the follies of pubic shaving. On the road for 100 club dates a year, West­ enhoefer hasn’t had too many problems as an out comic, though she does refer to a recent trio of stops in Boise, Idaho; Wichita, Kans.; and Fayetteville, Ark., as “the militia tour.” On her CD she trumps Pat Robertson’s claim that all the recent natural disasters in Rorida are a result of Gay Days at Disney World. OK, fine, she says, “Don’t fuck with us— we’ll ruin Kansas! We have the power!” Her material is constantly evolving. “I do an entirely new show every 12 to 16 months," she says, explaining that her shows in Oregon will include pieces from her new CD and other fresh materia 1. Westenhoefer has a strong connection to Portland, since her agent, local lesbian Tam Martin, is based here. Following her heart and a woman, Martin moved her Beachfront Pro­ ductions up here from Long Beach, Calif., eight years ago. Always out since she began performing in 1990, Westenhoefer doesn’t think of herself as a comic who’s gay, but as a lesbian comic. “I chose to make that part of what I’m doing,” she says, adding that she does think it has slowed down her acting career. Part of that she attributes to narrow think­ ing in Hollywood: “We already have a blonde lesbian comic”— pause, aside: “Bitch thinks she invented it.” Westenhoefer is taking acting classes and working on writing and developing her own sitcom. Does she want to play Suzanne, gay girl comic? “No, I’ll be Suzanne, the femmy dyke bar­ tender, which is what I used to do at Hooli- hjin’s in Secaucus, New Jersey,” she explains, figuring that setup will offer more comic possi­ bilities. She does go out on lots of auditions, just like every other wannabe actress in Hollywood, but she finds so many lesbian roles are stereo­ typed. Her real fantasy? “I want Letterman’s job,” she says without hesitation. W hich is ironic, since she can’t even get on his show. Even though Westenhoefer has had her own H BO special and appeared on plenty of other shows, David Letterman and Jay Leno resist an out gay comic. “We don’t use theme comics,” Dave’s people tell her. “I was a lesbian first; I never came out, and that makes me somehow scarier in the enter­ tainment business,” Westenhoefer asserts. “We are way more fascinated with people who might be gay or who have come out.” Another irony is how she looks. She’s cer­ tainly not an in-your-face, buzz-cut butch in boots. She could, in fact, pass for hetero in any role. Finally, I get up my nerve to ask this brash babe a pointed question. One day recently, when Westenhoefer’s new glam photos arrived in the Just Out offices, many staffers were con­ vinced she’d gone under the knife in pursuit of a finer face. Blaming it all on the most adamant staff member, News Editor Inga Sorensen, I asked Westenhoefer if she’d had some work done. She was so astonished at the question that she called out to Annie to share the question with her. After a hearty laugh, Westenhoefer replied: “First of all, I’m way too young to have plastic surgery. Besides, I’m so not OK about pain.” W hen I mentioned that Sorensen is herself an attractive femme with long blonde tresses, Westenhoefer figured out the truth of the mat­ ter: “Tell your news editor she’s a jealous fuck! • I’m gonna kick her ass when 1 get out to Port­ land!” So, Inga, you might not want to sit in the front row— Suzanne Westenhoefer is definitely not Cindy Brady. ■ S uzanne W estenhoefer performs I’m Not Cindy Brady at 8 p.m . April 7 at the Aladdin Theater in Portland, then heads to Eugene on April 8 to perform at the Wild Duck. Tickets cost $18 in advance or $20 at the door; they’re avail­ able from It’s My Pleasure and TicketM aster in Portland, M other Kali's and Fastixx in Eugene. O riana G reen would love to see W estenhoe­ fer 20 feet tallón the silver screen and is inspired to write a screenplay fo r her. She is also the Enter­ tainment Editor o f Just Out and can be reached at onand@justout. com . v \