This Netflix doc, based on Emily Spivak’s bestseller, weaves insightful narratives around different items of clothing

A yellow sweater given by a Buddhist monk to a member of his temple. The work shirt a man was wearing when he first met the woman he would end up living with in a nudist community in Florida. A one-of-a-kind coat that its owner and her cousin pursued all over Manhattan when it went awol from a restaurant. A T-shirt with an airbrush picture montage of a young murdered man for his mother to wear. A tie made from scraps of material a man’s immigrant seamstress grandmother had left over when the her long day’s work was done. The first item of masculine clothing bought by a non-binary teenager. The leather codpiece given by Tina Turner to her saxophonist that eventually made him famous. All of human life is here in the new Netflix documentary series Worn Stories.

It’s a simple, charming idea simply and charmingly executed, first in Emily Spivack’s 2014 bestselling book of the same name and now in this adaptation for television by Jenji Kohan (whose gift for coaxing stories out of tiny moments has most famously been showcased by Orange Is the New Black, her addictively hilarious – and heartbreaking – adaptation of Piper Kerman’s memoir).

Continue reading…

You May Also Like

Cambridge don the medals after double boat race triumph over Oxford

Men’s and women’s races decided by less than a length Event moved…

Paul Cattermole obituary

Member of the chart-topping pop band S Club 7 who enjoyed great…

Russia-Ukraine war live: Ukrainian drones target Moscow and Black Sea fleet; US confirms ‘full support’ for F-16 transfer

Russian officials claim drones targeting Moscow and its Black Sea Fleet destroyed;…