Every Marvelous Mrs. Maisel Character Based On A Real-Life Person (2024)

Summary

  • The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel blends real and fictional characters, allowing the creator to tell her own story while maintaining historical accuracy.
  • Characters like Midge Maisel and Susie Meyerson are influenced by real people but also include creative liberties to fill in the gaps and fit the narrative.
  • Real figures like Joan Rivers and Sue Mengers provided inspiration for characters like Midge and Susie, but key differences exist between the fictional characters and their real-life counterparts.

The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel saw a lot of characters arrive based on real people thanks to its grounding in true showbiz history. Since its beginning, the show includes actual historical figures such as Lenny Bruce and Moms Mabley, but a character like Susie Myerson is only partially based on Sue Mengers. This gave the series a flexible relationship between fact and fiction. The fictional main cast of characters in The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel allows creator Amy Palladino-Sherman the freedom to tell her own story, while the use of real influences gives the show the ring of truth.

While some Marvelous Mrs. Maisel characters are heavily inspired by one particular person, others are a mishmash of many, and others still are not fictional at all. None can be considered one-to-one parallels; even with the characters representing real people, some measure of creative license must be taken to fill in the gaps and to indulge the narrative. The facts that Palladino-Sherman chose to include for her characters’ historical counterparts, and those that she chose to leave out, can reveal plenty about what compels her and the story she wishes to tell.

Related

The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel is now in season 4 but the tumultuous events of Midge Maisel's life as a stand-up comic have only spanned less than 2 years.

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8 Midge Maisel

Based On Joan Rivers

Midge’s story overlaps heavily with the real life of Joan Rivers. Both are Jewish New Yorkers born in 1933 to upper-middle-class parents who disapproved of their comedy careers. Both Midge and Rivers went to prestigious schools -Bryn Mawr and Barnard respectively - and both performed at the real-life club, The Gaslight Café of Greenwich Village. In her comedy, Rivers, like Midge, would play up her femininity by appearing onstage in classy outfits, only to shock audiences with a foul-mouthed, fearless act that struck powerfully against the expectations of a female comedian of the time.

Palladino-Sherman states that the only real person who definitively influenced Midge Maisel is her father, Daniel Sherman, a stand-up in the 60s who came up alongside such comedians as Lenny Bruce. However, she also described Rivers as possessing “that wonderful mix, that battle of wanting to be accepted on a feminine level. You can’t have that many balls and be accepted on a feminine level.” However, Brosnahan identified a key difference between the two:

Joan’s comedy came from a place of feeling like she never belonged […] Midge is the opposite. She knows she is beautiful; she knows she is great at what she does”.

7 Susie Meyerson

Based On Sue Mengers

Another Marvelous Mrs. Maisel character with a clear parallel to a real person, Susie Meyerson is based on legendary Hollywood talent agent Sue Mengers. While Susie isn’t yet a Hollywood kingmaker, a flash forward in The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel episode 6, “The Testi-Roastial” shows that, like Mengers, she will be an icon for industry insiders by the 1980s. Aside from the clear name similarities and a striking physical likeness, the two share similar family histories. Both were born to Jewish immigrant parents who fled Europe before World War 2.

Susie and Mengers are also alike in spirit. Mengers was known for her brutal honesty; Mengers biographer Brian Kellow told Varietyinstead of yes-yesing or kissing up, she would say, ‘You’re too fat’ or ‘Your hair looks terrible,’ but it was all in service of getting them work.Marvelous Mrs. Maisel viewers will surely recognize such a straight-shooting streak in Susie. Palladino-Sherman also confirmed this was who Susie Myerson is based on - with one caveot (via Parade).

“We had Sue Mengers in mind... We wrote this character with Alex Borstein in mind, so she’s the biggest inspiration for Susie.”

6 Lenny Bruce

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In their depiction of Lenny Bruce, the Marvelous Mrs. Maisel team took pains to ensure it was a fair portrait of the real person, even inviting Bruce’s daughter to the set so that she could sit down with Lenny Bruce actor Luke Kirby. Many of Bruce’s routines are reproduced verbatim, including his “All Alone” bit on The Steve Allen Show, and his career-high performance at Carnegie Hall, during which a blizzard really did hit New York, as depicted in the season 4 finale. Lenny Bruce’s drug habit, which would sadly prove fatal, is also referenced in the show, albeit in passing.

While the relationship between Lenny Bruce and Midge is, of course, fictionalized, Bruce did have an impact on Midge’s real-life counterpart, Joan Rivers. Rivers recalls bombing at a club called The Bitter End one night early in her career, when Lenny Bruce sent her a note reading “They’re wrong, you’re right”. Rivers professes that the note meant so much to her, that she kept it in her bra for a time. While it’s unclear if anything romantic ever occurred between the two, Rivers (via Collider) called him “sexy as hell”.

5 Carol Burnett

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Much like Lenny Bruce, another Marvelous Mrs. Maisel character who is based on a real person - while using the star's real name - is Carol Burnett. She shows up in the series finale, with Leslie Rodriguez Kritzer taking on the role of the legendary comedian. Thanks to the time frame of The Marvelous Mrs. Marisel, Burnett is in her 20s in this appearance. Since this is in the series finale, there isn't much there for Burnett, but it is still a fun surprise for fans, ending the show on a high note with one of the best cameos.

On the show, Burnett is a guest on The Gordon Ford Show (based on Johnny Carson), where Midge is now working as a writer. Burnett is promoting her musical Once Upon a Mattress, which is her Broadway debut, so this is a special moment recreated for Marvelous Mrs. Maisel. The timing of the series finale is also great, as it comes one month to the day after Burnett celebrated her 90th birthday. It was also special for Rtitzer, who said she "had a picture of Carol Burnett in my dressing room that a fan from Beetlejuice had made" (via Broadway Direct).

4 Sophie Lennon

Based On Phyllis Diller/Totie Fields

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Sophie represents the establishment of female comedians in Midge’s time. The two real people after whom Sophie is most overtly modeled are highly successful female comedians Phyllis Diller and Totie Fields, about whom Palladino-Sherman said (via Parade) “women back then couldn’t just be a woman onstage; they had to dress as a ‘character,’ a lot of these female comics were well-educated and into the arts, not those crazy, strange caricatures.” Their comedy was deprecating towards themselves, with one-liners about cooking, cleaning, and marriage that elicited safe laughs from a patriarchal 1950s audience.

Phyllis Diller was well-known for padding makeup on her face to create a more homely character, much like Sophie’s standup persona, “Sophie from Queens.” The rivalry between Sophie and Midge mirrors the one between Rivers and Totie Fields, about which Rivers writes in her autobiography that “Totie Fields was spreading the word that I was dirty and vicious, not funny.” Fields felt threatened that Rivers, as another Jewish woman in comedy, was moving in on her niche, so she attempted to undermine her. Their feud persisted in bitter animosity until they reconciled in 1978, shortly before Fields’ death.

3 Shy Baldwin

Based On Johnny Mathis/Harry Belafonte

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It’s hard to name a single influence for Shy Baldwin (Leroy McClain). Co-writer Daniel Sherman said (via Parade) “We were inspired by a lot of African American crooners at the time, like Johnny Mathis.” However, Harry Bellafonte is another real person with whom Shy shares similarities. Both Bellafonte and Shy worked with real-life comic Moms Mabley, and both are Grammy winners.

Bellafonte and Mathis both produced highly successful Christmas albums, much like Shy’s Christmas album which Midge’s mother adores, and all three cited Nat King Cole as an influence. There are other singers of the time who would likewise invite comparison; it seems Shy’s textured character is a patchwork of many artists.

2 Moms Mabley

Based On Moms Mabley

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This real comic appeared in a single episode of The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel. Mabley’s real act was used when she opens for Midge and Shy at the Apollo theater; as mentioned, Moms Mabley had a working relationship with Harry Bellafonte, who may have influenced Shy. Mabley was a trailblazer in her own right; the first female comic to appear at the Apollo and one of the first openly gay standups, Mabley approached edgy subjects like racism, sexuality and a preference for younger men. Her bold work as a standup, beginning in the 1920s, doubtless paved the way for both Midge and her real-life counterpart, Joan Rivers.

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1 Gordon Ford

Based On Johnny Carson

There are a handful of details hinting at Gordon’s likeness to iconic late-night host Johnny Carson. Gordon’s laissez-faire attitude to the bonds of marriage lines up with the timeline of Carson’s first marriage, which was likewise rife with infidelities. The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel makes repeated mention of Gordon’s rivalry with Jack Paar, a real person with whom Carson was often considered competing, due to Carson’s replacement of Paar on The Tonight Show. The bar at which The Gordon Ford Show’s staff drink after work, Toots Shor’s, was a favorite watering hole of Carson’s.

Most significantly, it was Rivers’ appearance on Late Night With Johnny Carson, that is considered to be her first leap into comedy stardom, with Carson telling her on-air, “You’re going to be a star”. In the final episode of The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, Gordon humiliates Midge, so she takes the mic and does her routine anyway, which gets her fired, but also makes her a bigger star. Just as the real person upon whom Midge is based received her start with Carson, so too will Midge receive her start with Carson’s fictional counterpart, Gordon.

  • The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel

    Summary:
    Miriam “Midge” Maisel is a 1958 New York City woman who has everything she’s ever wanted—the perfect husband, two kids, and an elegant Upper West Side apartment perfect for hosting Yom Kippur dinner. But her perfect life suddenly takes an unexpected turn and Midge discovers a previously unknown talent for stand-up comedy—a talent that changes her life forever.

    Release Date:
    2017-03-17

    Cast:
    Rachel Brosnahan, Kevin Pollak, Caroline Aaron, Jane Lynch, Marin Hinkle, Michael Zegen, Tony Shalhoub, Alex Borstein

    Genres:
    Comedy, Drama

    Seasons:
    5

    Story By:
    daniel polladino, amy polladino

    Network:
    Amazon Prime Video

    Streaming Service(s):
    Prime Video

    Directors:
    Rachel Brosnahan

    Showrunner:
    Rachel Brosnahan
Every Marvelous Mrs. Maisel Character Based On A Real-Life Person (2024)
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