Comment on this article
Band of brothers
July/August 2008
by Mark
Blankenship '05MFA
Theater critic and reporter Mark
Blankenship '05MFA writes for the New York Times and Variety.
Most artists feel discouraged when
people assume they're dead. But for Polly Draper '77, '80MFA, it's just a sign
that her latest project is succeeding.
Draper is the creator, director, and
head writer of The Naked Brothers Band, Nickelodeon's semi-fictional documentary series
about her sons, Nat and Alex Wolff, and the rock group they formed with their
real-life best friends. Michael Wolff, their father and Draper's husband, plays
their dad on screen, but the TV boys' mother is dead.
Confused? So are many pre-teen fans,
who often struggle with the fiction-reality fusion. "Kids can't figure it out,"
she says. "They see me and say, 'You're the mom?' It's like they're seeing a
ghost."
| |
Polly Draper has essentially halted her work as a performer. |
From the beginning, Draper knew she
would write herself out of her family's fictional life. Back in 2004, when Alex
was six and Nat was nine, their interest in music inspired her to write and
direct The Naked Brothers Band: The Movie, a feature film that became the basis for the
series. "They already saw themselves as famous at that age," she says, "and I
thought it would be funny to make a little documentary as if they were." (The
name dates back to a time when the boys ran around their apartment after a bath
shouting "We're the Naked Brothers Band!")
But even though she has her own
successful acting career, including an Emmy-nominated stint as Ellyn Warren on thirtysomething, Draper opted to leave the
on-screen parenting to her husband. "I thought it would be more fun to have
these three little boys—two actual boys and a dad character who behaves like a
child—and have everything in their lives be defined by that spirit," she says.
In fact, Draper has essentially halted
her work as a performer. The demands of the series, whose second season ended
in June, have forced her to decline almost every role she's been offered. "I do
miss that, but this uses every single ounce of my creativity," she says. On the
plus side, Naked Brothers lets her see her family every day. "When I would go off to
do movies, it was incredibly hard for me to be away from my kids," she says.
"This became a great solution."
Draper's clan may be always
together, but is this normal life? Nat and Alex, now 13 and 10, are famous
enough to provoke squeals of recognition on the street. Their best-selling
albums spend weeks on the charts, and even though they're enrolled in a regular
school, they spend most weekends playing concerts at malls and Wal-Marts across
the country.
Draper says she and her husband, a
jazz pianist, have been criticized for dropping their sons into the celebrity
mill. "I feel that way half the time," she admits. "I think, 'What have I
done?' But I don't think we're the prototypical stage parents. For one thing,
none of the families involved in the show were ever desperate for their kids to
get famous. It wasn't this thing that we killed ourselves to get."
Fair enough, then: Draper isn't Mama
Rose. And her kids were hungry for the spotlight from an early age—no prodding
necessary. When he was still very young, Nat put a sign on his bedroom door
that said, "I want to be a child actor, Mom!"
Still, Draper and Wolff try to keep
their unusual family life in perspective. "We talk about what's going to happen
when this tidal wave dies down," she says. "That's one of the biggest parts of
staying sane while it's happening."  |