We collect cookies to analyze our website traffic and performance; we never collect any personal data. Cookie Policy
Accept
NEW YORK DAWN™NEW YORK DAWN™NEW YORK DAWN™
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • Trending
  • New York
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Real Estate
  • Crypto & NFTs
  • Tech
  • Lifestyle
    • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Travel
    • Fashion
    • Art
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
Reading: On ‘No Worries If Not,’ Riki Lindhome rewrites her hero’s journey to motherhood
Share
Font ResizerAa
NEW YORK DAWN™NEW YORK DAWN™
Search
  • Home
  • Trending
  • New York
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Real Estate
  • Crypto & NFTs
  • Tech
  • Lifestyle
    • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Travel
    • Fashion
    • Art
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
Follow US
NEW YORK DAWN™ > Blog > Entertainment > On ‘No Worries If Not,’ Riki Lindhome rewrites her hero’s journey to motherhood
On ‘No Worries If Not,’ Riki Lindhome rewrites her hero’s journey to motherhood
Entertainment

On ‘No Worries If Not,’ Riki Lindhome rewrites her hero’s journey to motherhood

Last updated: April 7, 2025 9:03 pm
Editorial Board Published April 7, 2025
Share
SHARE

Riki Lindhome by no means meant to go solo. Since 2007, the comic, actress and musician has carried out as one half of Garfunkel and Oates, a raunchy comedy duo additionally starring Kate Micucci. However because the COVID period set in, Micucci turned a brand new mother and began writing youngsters’s music, and Lindhome started to reevaluate her personal path. At first, she felt frightened. However Lindhome is, by her personal admission, naturally predisposed to search out the constructive in all the pieces.

“Before, it had to be something that was true to both of us,” Lindhome informed The Occasions. “So I started thinking, ‘What only applies to me?’”

The reply turned out to be proper in entrance of her. Now 46, Lindhome, who began performing professionally within the early 2000s with bit roles in “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” and “Gilmore Girls” and has since appeared on “The Big Bang Theory,” “New Girl” and “Wednesday,” had been on a yearslong, usually demoralizing fertility journey.

It began when she was 34 and determined to freeze her eggs, an expertise Lindhome chronicled in music (the Emmy-nominated “Frozen Lullaby”) and on Garfunkel and Oates’ eponymous IFC present, which ran for one season in 2014. “I think we were the first show to do realistic egg-freezing storylines with the shots and stuff,” she says. “There are so many medical shows, but [we] couldn’t find the shots for IVF at the prop house. Our prop people had to make them from the pictures I took of my IVF drugs.”

Lindhome ended up writing the remainder of her fertility story right into a one-woman musical, “Dead Inside,” which premiered ultimately 12 months’s Edinburgh Fringe Competition and has at present been working on a semi-monthly foundation on the Elysian Theater in L.A. As she workshopped the present round comedy golf equipment and small phases, Lindhome additionally realized she had a solo comedy report on her palms; now, her debut album, “No Worries If Not,” got here out on April 4.

Throughout its 11 tracks, which function contributions from Fred Armisen (Lindhome’s husband since 2022), Nicole Row, Eric Jackowitz and manufacturing trio Polyglam, Lindhome traces her maze-like “hero’s journey” to motherhood whereas poking enjoyable at different quadragenarian quandaries. As an illustration, on the Barry White-styled “Middle Age Love,” Lindhome jokes about intercourse after 40 (“F— me like an animal, if that animal’s a turtle / You can c— inside me, it’s OK — I’m infertile”). Elsewhere, on “Don’t Google Mommy,” Lindhome imagines her future youngster Web-stalking her someday (“Because mommy writes comedy songs that are a teensy bit obscene”).

Lindhome additionally features a few songs that didn’t make it into “Dead Inside” — “90 Percent Sure,” a back-and-forth duet with fellow comic Ken Marino, seems to be again on the comic’s breakup with an unnamed ex-boyfriend. After attempting to conceive naturally, experiencing a miscarriage and spending hundreds on a number of failed makes an attempt at IVF, Lindhome and her ex parted methods when he informed her that he wasn’t up for having extra youngsters. (Lindhome’s ex had two youngsters from a earlier relationship.) “[My ex] said that he was only 90 percent sure he wanted to have a baby and he deserved to be 100 percent,” Lindhome says. “So I wrote a song about all the things that I’m only 90 percent sure I’m going to do to him. But don’t worry, because it’s not 100, so it could never happen!” In the meantime, on “Infertile Princess,” Lindhome adopts the lens of a Disney heroine: “Pocahontas got pregnant just by talking to a tree … If I was like Ariel, I’d be fine, because she makes 20,000 eggs at a time.”

Whereas Lindhome solo retains her trademark singsong, sweet-and-sour supply, the themes inside her work have deepened to mirror a extra sophisticated stage of life. As an illustration, Garfunkel and Oates wrote expletive-laced, satirical pop ditties about dangerous and embarrassing intercourse, non secular “loopholes” (IYKYK) and self-satisfied pregnant girls, amongst different issues. However Lindhome takes the system one step additional by getting ultra-candid (however no much less acerbic) concerning the social isolation round attempting – and failing – to conceive.

“There’s so much blaming,” she says. “When I was going through all of my stuff, a lot of people’s first reaction was to give me advice. Like, here’s what you’re doing wrong. Despite their best intentions, they were making me feel like it was my fault. That should not be it. Your first reaction should be, ‘I’m sorry that’s happening. How are you?’

“I was feeling so overwhelmed [by the advice] that I stopped telling people what was happening,” Lindhome continues. “Then I felt super isolated. I’m like, where is the middle ground? From that point, I was like, ‘I refuse to be ashamed about this.’”

As she ready to debut “Dead Inside,” Lindhome remained unsure that it or its accompanying album would join with audiences who had not undergone fertility struggles. That’s why she referred to as the album “No Worries If Not.” “My old music was more crowd-pleasery, not in a bad way. It was just for more people,” she says. “And this one is about menopause and fertility trauma — such specified things that [I feel], like, ‘If you don’t like it, I get it!’”

A lot to her shock, nevertheless, a spread of audiences responded to “Dead Inside” and its music with overwhelmingly constructive suggestions. “When I started [performing] in Edinburgh, I was a little taken aback at first, because it would be a lot of women sharing their experience, and I was very touched,” Lindhome says. “And it was raining all the time. So I always found myself standing in the rain, hugging and crying with people.”

What’s extra, Lindhome has been fascinated to find out how audiences she by no means anticipated to narrate have linked to the fabric. “[A] number of straight men without kids who felt included in this were like, ‘I understand the feeling of not having information and not knowing my way out.’ And I’m like, ‘Oh, right, that is universal.’ I’m talking about it in a fertility sense, but everyone feels like there is some key that they don’t have, that they can’t get through the door they need to.”

Lindhome’s private story has a contented ending, too. In March 2022, Lindhome welcomed a son, Keaton, by way of surrogacy and a donated sperm and egg. And whereas she totally anticipated to be a single mother, she reconnected with an outdated good friend, Fred Armisen, whereas filming Netflix’s “Wednesday” in Romania. The summer time after Keaton was born, they acquired married.

“My life changed so much so quickly,” Lindhome says. “It was funny because when I fell in love on set and had a baby and all this stuff happened at the same time, I was like, ‘This was so fast.’ And my “Wednesday” costar Jamie McShane was like, ‘Well, if you look at the physics principles, you lost everything in a day and you gained everything in two weeks. It’s equal-opposite reactions. That is truly the appropriate cadence for you, scientifically.”

Trying forward, Lindhome remains to be tweaking “Dead Inside,” which she desires at the very least one other 12 months to develop. (“Dead Inside” will run in New York on April 3; Austin on April 12; and again in L.A. on April 23.) “Things change every performance,” Lindhome says. “I want more time to make it happen. My goal would be to do an off-Broadway or off-off-Broadway run. Then after that, maybe think about trying to film it.”

For now, Lindhome hopes “No Worries If Not” will assist folks to giggle concerning the issues which might be outdoors of their management. “I hope people feel seen,” she says. “When I listen to comedy music, I just want to have a good time. And then if they come to see the show, I want them to feel less alone, especially women who’ve gone through that stuff. I want them to feel like it’s not your fault. I think that’s true with most things in life. So much is luck … But you just keep going.”

You Might Also Like

Evaluation: Poignant Desi Arnaz bio spotlights drive and showbiz improvements of Lucy’s comedian foil

CBS allowed to distribute Sony’s ‘Wheel of Fortune,’ ‘Jeopardy!’ throughout lawsuit enchantment

Hoda Kotb is the brand new Kelly Clarkson? Nope, however she spills different secrets and techniques in ‘Immediately’ return

With “Even In Arcadia,” has Sleep Token cracked the code for steel within the streaming period?

When Richard Form is not sidekicking on ‘All people’s Reside,’ he is at these L.A. spots

TAGGED:herosJourneyLindhomemotherhoodrewritesRikiworries
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print

Follow US

Find US on Social Medias
FacebookLike
TwitterFollow
YoutubeSubscribe
TelegramFollow
Popular News
GDC survey reveals a rocky 12 months of layoffs and AI skepticism for sport builders
Technology

GDC survey reveals a rocky 12 months of layoffs and AI skepticism for sport builders

Editorial Board January 21, 2025
Tuna Noodle Casserole (No Canned Soup)
Luigi Mangione breaks silence in first public assertion since UnitedHealthcare CEO taking pictures
Yankees’ Devin Williams addresses consolation degree in New York as followers beg for nearer change
How ovarian most cancers cells adapt whereas shifting throughout tissues

You Might Also Like

Column: Are plans for the Joshua Tree Artwork Museum a desert mirage?
Entertainment

Column: Are plans for the Joshua Tree Artwork Museum a desert mirage?

May 28, 2025
Damiano David on his first solo album, his well-known girlfriend and that Springsteen second
Entertainment

Damiano David on his first solo album, his well-known girlfriend and that Springsteen second

May 28, 2025
Saying goodbye to ‘What We Do within the Shadows’: an oral historical past
Entertainment

Saying goodbye to ‘What We Do within the Shadows’: an oral historical past

May 28, 2025
The week’s bestselling books, June 1
Entertainment

The week’s bestselling books, June 1

May 28, 2025

Categories

  • Health
  • Sports
  • Politics
  • Entertainment
  • Technology
  • World
  • Art

About US

New York Dawn is a proud and integral publication of the Enspirers News Group, embodying the values of journalistic integrity and excellence.
Company
  • About Us
  • Newsroom Policies & Standards
  • Diversity & Inclusion
  • Careers
  • Media & Community Relations
  • Accessibility Statement
Contact Us
  • Contact Us
  • Contact Customer Care
  • Advertise
  • Licensing & Syndication
  • Request a Correction
  • Contact the Newsroom
  • Send a News Tip
  • Report a Vulnerability
Term of Use
  • Digital Products Terms of Sale
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Settings
  • Submissions & Discussion Policy
  • RSS Terms of Service
  • Ad Choices
© 2024 New York Dawn. All Rights Reserved.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?