A Q&A with Ali Wentworth and her mother, Muffie Cabot
Ali: Were you nervous when I first gave you the book to read?
Muffie: YES! I was! Because everyone has a view of their childhood that is very different from the parents view of their childhood and I didnt know what to expect¦
Ali: Anything you would change?
Muffie: Not a thing (clears her throat), but I believe in the old Japanese tale of Rashomon, in which everyones view of an incident is different.
Ali: Not sure what youre talking about, but okay.
Muffie: Its an old, wise, Japanese¦
Ali: (interrupting) Anything surprised you?
Muffie: Well yes, quite a bit. Of course, everything is laced with humor. I dont remember things the way you do.
Ali: No? Like what?
Muffie: I didnt know about some of the babysitters behavior.
Ali: Like the one who sold heroin out of our house?
Muffie: Yes, like that one.
Ali: Or the one who stole your only sons virginity?
Muffie: Is this what were talking about today?
Ali: Youre right. Lets move on. Mom, your favorite part?
Muffie: Theres so much I love.
Ali: Mom, go ahead, you can be honest.
Muffie: I love all the chapters about when you were a little girl. Before you went off to boarding school.
Ali: You mean when you shipped me off to boarding school?
Muffie: Not against your will¦
Ali: The guy who assembled the straight jacket would beg to differ.
Muffie: Dont print that; people will think its true.
Ali: I want them to.
Muffie: You learned a lot in boarding school.
Ali: It was womens prison and I barely made it out alive.
Muffie: (Silence)
Ali: What other parts did you like?
Muffie: Well, I wasnt around as much when you were older¦
Ali: And tried drugs?
Muffie: (Silence)
Ali: Just once, Mom.
(Muffie is clearly uncomfortable)
Ali: Did the book seem accurate to you?
Muffie: Yes, but youre a writer and you make events come to life that are your reality.
Ali: Meaning¦ its all BS?
Muffie: Just YOUR reality!
Ali: You had some comments after you read it?
Muffie: Yes, I did. I thought you needed to tone down the pee and fart references.
Ali: But thats just human nature and happened during certain points in my life.
Muffie: Well¦
Ali: I get your point. Less is more.
Muffie: I also was protective of you and wanted you to make the ex-boyfriends less identifiable.
Ali: So they wouldnt kill me?
Muffie: Well, that would be unfortunate.
Ali: Want me to write another book?
Muffie: Do you have to?
Ali: If I did, any ideas?
Muffie: When the muse strikes you!
Ali: I dont understand that either. Do you think my siblings will like the book?
Muffie: They will laugh. Roll their eyes. Recognize you on every page.
Ali: Of your four kids, whos your favorite?
Muffie: Do you actually think Im going to answer that?
Ali: Do you want a percentage of sales, or not?
Growing up in a family of political journalists”and daughter of President Reagans White House social secretary”Ali Wentworth rebelled against her blue-blood upbringing, embracing Hollywood, motorcycles, even a few wildly inappropriate marriage proposals. Today she is an acclaimed comedic actress and writer, former Oprah regular, wife of political and media star George Stephanopoulos, and a mother who lets her two girls eat cotton candy before bed. Though shes settled down, her rebellious nature thrives in her comedy and her view of her crazy world.
In this addictively funny and warm memoir, she takes us through the looking glass and into the wonderland of her life, from a childhood among Washingtons elite to a stint in the psych ward they called a New England prep school; days doing L.A. sketch comedy (with then-aspiring artists Will Ferrell and Lisa Kudrow) to a series of spectacularly failed loves (that eventually led her to Mr. Right). Constant throughout is her mother, Muffie”a flawlessly elegant yet firm, no-nonsense force of nature and pure WASP convictions.
As charming and off-the-wall as Ali herself, Ali in Wonderland is an entertaining look at life that is both intimate and hilarious.