Susan does not appear in "The Bedwetter." It's a fictionalized version of Sarah's 2010 memoir of the same name, and just as it squeezes years of her struggles into fifth grade, it streamlines the larger Silverman family so Sarah has just one sister, Laura. But as we stood in the alley after the show, and Sarah introduced Susan to the actors as they emerged from the backstage door, they each knew exactly who she was. "The rabbi!" one exclaimed. "From Jerusalem!" said another. Susan and her husband, Yosef Abramowitz, became like family during our years in Jerusalem, hosting us for countless Shabbat meals. So we especially appreciated the homage to her in "The Bedwetter," when the mom tells Sarah and Laura she loves them "the whole Earth and the whole sky" — that's a Susan-ism, what she always says to her kids. We first met Sarah when she came to Jerusalem for the bat mitzvah of Susan and Yossi's youngest, Ashira, and I've always maintained that despite Sarah's comedic celebrity, Susan is the funniest Silverman. She is a Reform rabbi, activist and author, whose own memoir, "Casting Lots," tells the messy and moving story of her and Yossi's three biological daughters and two sons adopted from Ethiopia. She is also the founder of a nonprofit, Second Nurture, that is helping scores of families adopt children from foster care in community groups, mostly rooted in synagogues. So what's it like watching your family's traumas — adultery, alcoholism, accidental death of an infant brother and more — displayed on stage? "Our family has never been ashamed of problems, we're all very matter of fact about it," Susan reminded me. And that kind of openness can be — has been — life-changing. After the show, Sarah told us that the bit about a former Miss New Hampshire saying on the Johnny Carson show that she herself wet the bed until she was a teenager was true — and a major turning point in her recovery. "That saved Sarah," Susan added when we debriefed the next day. "What a gift that was. And so now Sarah is sort of paying it forward, not just with bedwetting but with depression and anxiety and divorce and all the imperfections." One of the most powerful parts of the show comes in the second act, when Sarah is at her lowest. Her dad asks how it feels, and Sarah says: "It's like I'm homesick but I'm already home." "That was real, but it was my stepdad who asked her that," Susan told me. "And our dad, when he says in the show there's nothing I can say that will fix it but I can tell you I'll be with you — my dad has said things like that. His father was abusive, and I remember him saying to me, 'I'm far from perfect, but I'm a better father than my father was, and you'll be a better parent than me,' and I thought, 'Oh, I guess we all just improve on what we know.'" The Silverman parents in "The Bedwetter" are, indeed, far from perfect, and the show's refusal to make either of them pure villain or hero is what makes it so real, and so great. The dad is "Crazy Donny," who runs a cheesy discount-clothing store where, as he sings, "12% of customers enjoy my penis," but is also an engaged parent who takes Sarah to the doctor and actually listens to her. The mom, Beth Ann, misses Laura's soccer games because her debilitating heartbreak and guilt over the loss of her son keeps her mostly in bed, but she also offers both her daughters the clearest insights and empathy. Sarah and Susan's real dad, Donald, who is 84, came up to New York early in the show's run and saw it five times; Darren Goldstein, the actor who plays him, told us that spending time with Donald that weekend was how he nailed the signature New England accent. "He loves it," Susan said of her dad and the musical. "This is a man who's been at two weddings of his children, he's got five grandchildren, and he said that this, the weekend that he saw the show five times, was the best weekend of his life." Their real mom, who died in 2015, eventually got up from bed and went back to college — she had dropped out of Tufts to marry Donald — where she fell in love with a philosophy professor, remarried, and started a small theater company that, Susan said, "for 25 years did a straight play and a musical every year and they were fabulous." "Our mom had so many hard things in her life, and was still able to be so, kind of, even, and wise, and not vindictive at all," she continued. "Our mom could just say this thing that would center us. Her world was so small, but her capacity for putting things in perspective was so broad." |