“Work in Progress” Is a Hilarious Triumph of Specificity

We talk about representation as a political subject; seeing certain types of people on-screen in positive and complex ways humanizes us in the eyes of others. We talk about representation as a personal subject; seeing ourselves on-screen in positive and complex ways can make us feel seen and give us permission to live fully. These are both important and these are both true.

But I would like to talk about representation as an artistic subject.

Abby McEnany’s new show Work in Progress – which she co-created, co-writes, and stars in – is unlike anything else on TV. Our protagonist is Abby, a suicidal mid-forties self-identified Queer Dyke who is masculine and fat and has OCD and herpes. Her love interest is Chris (Theo Germaine), an early twenties trans man who can’t afford top surgery or a license change, but is nevertheless filled with confidence, sexually and otherwise.

This is where I’m supposed to talk about how the writing is sharp and funny and gush about McEnany’s performance and Germaine’s performance and praise the interesting structure and blah blah blah. I’m not being flip because those things aren’t true – I’m simply questioning the impulse I have as a critic to explain that this show is good not because of its representational milestones but beyond them.

The fact is what makes Work in Progress not just a good show but great a one is its unique perspective. Telling stories never seen on screen before results in creative possibilities that are rich in detail and exciting to watch. Allowing someone as funny and weird as McEnany to make a show that opens itself up to all the facets of herself is such a gift to us all. People are so much more interesting than we usually get to see. Whether or not you share any experiences with Abby or Chris simply getting to watch the intricacies of their lives makes for compelling television.

By including so many different parts of her identity – and placing herself in contrast and connection with another type of person rarely on TV – McEnany makes it harder for any of those facets to be reduced. This isn’t the butch show or the OCD show or the trans guy show. It’s the Abby and Chris show.

And oh my what a joy to watch Abby and Chris fall in love! It’s thrilling to see a butch dyke and a trans man connect and their biggest points of conflict are their age difference and that one of them keeps getting injured because she insists on having sex with the lights off.

The specificity of who these people are leads to the show’s best comedy. Like when Chris first calls to ask Abby out and she mentions that she hasn’t been out with an attractive woman in a long time. He corrects her misgendering and tells her he’s a trans man. She then responds in anxious deadpan: “I haven’t been out with an attractive trans man in – ever.”

Or after their first date when Chris asks to come up to her apartment to “use the bathroom” and she makes him wait outside for five minutes so she can clean up because the possibility of him coming up hadn’t even crossed her mind. And then she doesn’t even put away the almonds she’s been using as a daily suicide countdown!

The show is aware of its larger representational importance. Julia Sweeney plays a version of herself who Abby confronts due to the trauma of Sweeney’s androgynous SNL character Pat. Abby explains how that character mocked gender non-conforming people and says they ruined her life. Sweeney has to reckon with that legacy.

But here we are 25 years after It’s Pat: The Movie and instead we have this weird and wonderful show that dedicates an entire episode to difficulties Abby and Chris face in bathrooms. Once again, the conversation deepens. It’s not simply that Abby is gender non-conforming. It’s that her OCD causes her to wash her hands repeatedly so she isn’t even able to go in and out quickly. After one case of harassment she bemoans to her friend, “I even did my HI HOW ARE YOU voice so she could know that I’m–“ “Julia Child?” her friend cracks responding to Abby’s high pitch performance.

What a treat to get a window into these lives and discover their unique comic and dramatic possibilities. There’s no need to pretend that praising this specificity is some sort of reduction. Work in Progress is great television – it’s great art – because of its identity.


Work in Progress premieres this Sunday at 11pm after The L Word: Generation Q.

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Drew Burnett Gregory

Drew is a Brooklyn-based writer, filmmaker, and theatremaker. She is a Senior Editor at Autostraddle with a focus in film and television, sex and dating, and politics. Her writing can also be found at Bright Wall/Dark Room, Cosmopolitan UK, Refinery29, Into, them, and Knock LA. She was a 2022 Outfest Screenwriting Lab Notable Writer and a 2023 Lambda Literary Screenwriting Fellow. She is currently working on a million film and TV projects mostly about queer trans women. Find her on Twitter and Instagram.

Drew Burnett has written 500 articles for us.

7 Comments

  1. I like the way you frame this show, art as revealing and relevant.

    This hits a lot of sweet spots for me !

  2. This looks really good! I hope they did as well with the OCD representation as it seems like they did with the various queernesses.

    • My OCD manifests much differently than the character’s, but I thought it was handled well!

  3. YOU GUYS THIS SHOW IS SO GOOD I HOPE EVERYBODY WATCHES IT!!!

    ALSO THIS REVIEW OF THIS GOOD SHOW IS SO GOOD!!!!

  4. just watched the first ep and yes! amazing! but also can someone please tell me where to get that entire outfit that Chris wears on the date because wow what a look i love it!!!

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