"If
evolution was worth its salt, it should've evolved
something better than ‘survival of the fittest,’”
muses Trudy, Lily Tomlin’s wisecracking bag lady in The
Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe, “I
think a better idea would be ‘survival of the wittiest.’
At least, that way, creatures that didn't survive could've died
laughing.”
If
“survival of the wittiest” had prevailed instead,
indeed Lily Tomlin and her collaborator of over thirty years,
Jane Wagner, would count among the earth-dwelling evolved. The
stage shows, comedy albums, and T.V. specials the two have co-crafted
together are witty in the best sense of the word—that
brand of funny that can’t help but also make you think.
Together
Tomlin and Wagner—who wrote the scripts for most of Tomlin’s
routines, including 1985’s Tony-winning one woman show,
The Search for Signs…(which Tomlin successfully
revived in 2000)—are rather famously partners in life
and love as well as in comedy. The Gay and Lesbian Center in
Los Angeles even established a new performing arts center in
the couple’s name: The Lily Tomlin Jane Wagner Cultural
Arts Center, and proceeds from ticket sales there go to providing
health services for HIV positive patients.
Although
it’s been remarked that Tomlin didn’t “come
out officially” until relatively recently, her committed
relationship with Wagner has long been openly acknowledged (just
not intentionally-publicized). “[I]n most articles, most
people refer to Jane as my partner or my life-partner or whatever,”
Tomlin explained to Ann Northrop on cable-access program Gay
TV in 2000. “We've been around so long and been through
so much and I always kind of took a lot of stuff for granted.”
In
a Lesbian News interview she explained “I was
never deceptive in any way. I never went anyplace without Jane.”
Tomlin
even teased around the subject of her lesbian sexuality back
in 1977, in her show Appearing Nitely (written by Wagner).
Playing a journalist grilling herself about her film role in
Robert Altman’s Nashville (for which Tomlin received an
Oscar nod), she asks “How did it feel to play a heterosexual
woman?” to which Tomlin-as-herself retorts that she “had
been exposed to heterosexuals and observed them throughout her
life,” obviously positioning herself as something-other-than-straight.
More
recently, when a reporter from The Seattle Gay Times
asked Tomlin in 2000, “What turns you on?” Tomlin
said bluntly (and cutely) “Jane Wagner.”