Current:Home > Scams'All Wigged Out' is about fighting cancer with humor and humanity -Core Financial Strategies
'All Wigged Out' is about fighting cancer with humor and humanity
View
Date:2025-04-28 05:27:14
When Grammy-Award-winning musician Marcy Marxer learned she had breast cancer, she didn't get sad or mad. She got funny. Marxer, who's one half of the award-winning duo, Cathy and Marcy started posting cartoons, memes and musings on social media as a way updating friends on her cancer treatments. But her work was suddenly finding a wider audience of people dealt a cancer diagnosis, and they were applauding her.
"I was talking about my breasts, which I don't actually do generally in public. It's personal but I find when I talk about my breasts, other people think it's funny," Marxer told Morning Edition host Leila Fadel.
It wasn't long before a network took shape out that social media following. "I got a lot of messages from people talking about their cancer situations. So, I ended up being kind of a chemo coach for a bunch of people and connecting with other people who help patients get through it."
Marxer, and Cathy Fink, her partner in music and in life, decided to turn the experience into, of all things, a movie musical comedy: All Wigged Out. The narrative follows Marxer's seven-year journey through cancer diagnosis, treatment and recovery.
Positive in a negative way
Marxer remembers the day, in 2015. She was holding a ukulele workshop when her doctor called.
"I'd had a biopsy and my doctor explained that the results were positive. And I said, 'Positive. You mean, positive in a negative way?' Positive should be good. So right away, some things about the whole medical process didn't make much sense to me," Marxer recalls. "They seemed a little backwards and a little bit funny and a little worth poking fun at."
Information from unexpected places
Marxer's doctor was a little vague about whether she might lose her hair during chemotherapy. Just in case, Marxer and Fink paid a visit to Amy of Denmark, a wig shop in Wheaton, Md. That's where they learned a few things the doctor didn't tell them.
"When we walked in, this woman, Sandy, said, 'What's your diagnosis? What's your cocktail? Who's your doctor?' This was all stuff she was familiar with, Fink recalls. "Once we gave Sandy all the information, she looked at Marcy, she said, 'When's your first chemo?' Marcy said, 'It was two days ago,' and Sandy just looked up and said, 'Honey, we got to make a plan. You're going to be bald in 10 days.'"
The wig shop experience turns up as a musical number in All Wigged Out. Likewise, "Unsolicited Advice," which recounts all the possibly well-intended — but completely unhelpful — comments that come from friends and others. And there's even an upbeat chemotherapy number, "I Feel A Little Tipsy," about a particular side effect of treatment.
Role Reversal
At its core, All Wigged Out is the portrait of an enviable marriage weathering the most unenviable of times. And now Marxer and Fink find their roles suddenly reversed. Fink got her diagnosis a few months ago: she has breast cancer.
"We are living in a little chapter that we're calling 'The Irony and the Ecstasy,'" Fink told Leila Fadel. I'm working with our team that's promoting All Wigged Out, partially from my chemo chair."
Fink says her prognosis is positive — positive, this time, in a good way — and, this time, at least, they're better-trained than they were eight years ago.
About those hard-earned skills, Marxer says, "One thing we know is patients try to live their life to the best of their abilities, and doctors are trying to save your life. And those are two very different things. We do understand that we're walking two lines. One is the process of making sure that Kathy is going to be fine and live a long and happy life. And the other is living our lives while we go through this."
Marxer predicts large doses of humor will be a major part of the treatment protocol.
The broadcast interview was produced by Barry Gordemer and edited by Jacob Conrad.
veryGood! (6925)
Related
- Juan Soto praise of Mets' future a tough sight for Yankees, but World Series goal remains
- Some Utilities Want a Surcharge to Let the Sunshine In
- A terminally ill doctor reflects on his discoveries around psychedelics and cancer
- Vanderpump Rules Reunion: Inside Tom Sandoval, Raquel Leviss' Secret Vacation With Tom Schwartz
- North Carolina trustees approve Bill Belichick’s deal ahead of introductory news conference
- Helping a man walk again with implants connecting his brain and spinal cord
- Want to understand your adolescent? Get to know their brain
- Emma Stone’s New Curtain Bangs Have Earned Her an Easy A
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- Vanderpump Rules' Tom Sandoval Claims His and Ariana Madix's Relationship Was a Front
Ranking
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- One man left Kansas for a lifesaving liver transplant — but the problems run deeper
- As the Culture Wars Flare Amid the Pandemic, a Call to Speak ‘Science to Power’
- Deaths of American couple prompt luxury hotel in Mexico to suspend operations
- The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
- Vanderpump Rules Unseen Clip Exposes When Tom Sandoval Really Pursued Raquel Leviss
- He visited the U.S. for his daughter's wedding — and left with a $42,000 medical bill
- Offset Shares How He and Cardi B Make Each Other Better
Recommendation
IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
Solar Breakthrough Could Be on the Way for Renters
With growing abortion restrictions, Democrats push for over-the-counter birth control
Dead Birds Washing Up by the Thousands Send a Warning About Climate Change
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
She writes for a hit Ethiopian soap opera. This year, the plot turns on child marriage
Vanderpump Rules Reunion Part One: Every Bombshell From the Explosive Scandoval Showdown
Lab-grown chicken meat gets green light from federal regulators