The Good Men Project

Pee-wee Is Back. And Not a Moment Too Soon.

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We need a “Can’t we all just get along” moment. Thankfully, Pee-Wee Herman is back to deliver it.

by Al Cattabiani

Perhaps you’ve noticed the country is in a cranky mood. With election season heating up, folks on both sides of the aisle are feeling contentious.

If there were ever a “Can’t we all just get along?” moment–this is it.

Thankfully, Pee-wee Herman is coming back to deliver it.

“Peacemaker” may not be the first word you’d use to describe Pee-wee. “Anarchic,” “childlike” and “strange” might top the list. But think about it for a minute. What is the abiding principle of Pee-wee’s Playhouse? We’d say Radical Inclusiveness. Everyone is welcome. Everyone is valuable. Everyone plays nicely.

The original Playhouse was all the more groundbreaking back in the ’80s. Its cast was diverse, for starters. In a recent New York Times profile, Paul Reubens explained “I saw it as very Norman Rockwell, but it was my Norman Rockwell version of the ’50s, which was more all-inclusive. The King of Cartoons was black!’’ Reubens says. ‘‘Not just anybody. The king! I felt really good about that.’’

Pee-wee also welcomed outsiders of all kinds. In one episode, for example, a monster named Roger shows up and scares everyone in the house. Pee-wee fixes him a snack and quickly makes friends. Of course, there was an adult subtext beneath many of the bits, allowing for flexible sexual identity–also ahead of its time.

Now Pee-wee is back with Pee-wee’s Big Holiday, his first new film in 28 years, premiering at the South By Southwest film festival in March and then on Netflix, which financed the production.

In the film, co-produced by comedy powerhouse Judd Apatow, Pee-wee refuses to leave his hometown after suffering some kind of earlier trauma. (The reference to Reubens’ own public troubles seems clear enough.) A desire to escape eventually overtakes him, however, and the adventure begins. Netflix calls it an “epic story of friendship and destiny.”

We can expect the usual mix of playfulness, subversion and–most appealingly–innate kindness. In other words, just what we need now.


Source: 30dB.com – Pee Wee Herman

This post originally appeared on CultureSonar

Photo: Netflix

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