Gender a Rob Becker: "Vive la difference. SUZANNE CHESSLER Special to The Jewish News ender gap? Not for Rob Becker and his wife, Erin, before their wedding 12 years ago. The two, college students in the '70s, were quite confident about the kind of marriage they would have and the kind of children they would raise. Reason, forthright communication and equal status would reign in their warm and nurturing home. Sexual stereotyping would be out in the cold. Wrong. The more time they spent with each other and the more time they spent with their growing children, the more they became convinced that there was no such thing as unisex. The male-female issues that faced ear- lier generations hit them head-on. Not one to stay down, Becker took their experiences, did some research and put his findings into a comic, one-man show — Rob Becker's Defending the Caveman, which became the longest- running solo production on Broadway. The theater piece, at the Fisher Theatre Feb. 2-21, explores the way men and women struggle to relate and has built a loyal following in the ther- apy community. It recently was per- formed for more than 2,000 therapists at the American Association of Mar- riage and Family Therapy Convention in Toronto. "The different traits come out more when you're married, and I think the situations are timeless," said Becker, a former stand-up comic in town to offer some media teasers for the show. "I don't give advice to the audience. I just try to get them to a place where they can understand the differences, and I think any relationship has to get better with that." The writer-comedian describes what he considers traditional gender- defining traits and gives them a cur- rent and personal slant. He categorizes men as not-very-talkative hunters, speaking about 2,000 words a day, and women as very talkative gatherers, speaking about 7,000 words a day. how to communicate and men complaining that women's needs are insa- tiable. "Rob, in a comical way, shows that the dif- ferences between men and women don't equate with being bad," said Davis, who also main- tains a Web site for cou- ples in distress, www.divorcebusting.corn. "In the '70s, women went off for assertiveness training, and men had sen- sitivity training. Now, peo- ple have realized that there are gender differences, and we laugh at ourselves and our partners by hearing Rob's comments. Couples come to Caveman not knowing what to expect and leave arm-in-arm." Davis relates gender differ- ences described in the show to her own family, including the observation that women con- nect through words and men connect through actions. On a recent vacation plane trip to Colorado with her husband, Jim, she sat beside their daughter, and he sat beside their son. When they got off the plane, the women said they had a great time because they could talk non-stop. The guys said that they had a great flight because they could read magazines non-stop. "We should celebrate the differ- ences," said Davis, who conducts sem- inars on divorce prevention. "In Rob's case, comedy is the sugar coating that makes these ideas easy to swallow." "Rob Becker's Defending the Caveman," a one-man show coming to the Fisher Theatre, proves there's no such thing as "unisex." Elements of anthropology, psychol- ogy, sociology and mythology enter into the conclusions made by this for- mer drama student at Redwood Empire Acting Studio in. California. Color blindness, for example, com- mon in men and virtually non-existent in women, according to Becker, can bring about a lot of male-female tension. He thinks back to the time when he and his then fiancee were selecting wedding invitations in varying shades of white. "I was astonished how she could tell the difference between those col- ors," recalled Becker, 42, who took three years, 1988 91, to write the script for Caveman. "When I told her to choose whatever she liked, she felt abandoned. If I told a guy to choose whatever he liked, he would have been glad to do that." The spotlighted issues have nothing to do with ethnic background, insists Becker, who is not Jewish. Michelle Weiner Davis, a Jewish marriage and family therapist in Illinois, is not quite so sure. In her practice, Davis has - noted that Jewish men seem more in touch with their emotions, attributing that to the strong influence of women in Jewish families. Regardless of that counseling expe- rience, Davis believes that every cou- ple can benefit from the show. "I saw Rcib Becker at a comedy club in San Francisco before he did Defending the Caveman and laughed so hard I was crying," recalled Davis, author of Divorce Busters (Simon & Schuster). "I've seen his current show at least four times and have sent clients to see it." Davis, who practices Solution-Ori- ented Brief Therapy, gears her profes- sional approach to helping troubled cou- ples establish quickly applied goals. She is against lengthy analysis, which she believes distracts spouses from the prob- lems they need to address immediately. Davis' counseling method is but- tressed by Becker, who presents the light side of the most common con- cerns Davis hears about — women complaining that men don't know ❑ Rob Becker's Defending the Caveman runs 8 p.m. Tuesdays- Fridays, 2 and 8 p.m. Saturdays and 3 and 7 p.m. Sundays, Feb. 2-21, at the Fisher Theatre. $34.50/$38.501$44.50. (313) 872-1000. 1 /29 1999 Detroit Jewish News 83