The Waitresses
- Music Department
- Actress
- Composer
The Waitresses were a marvelously quirky, irreverent and innovative
early 80's New Wave experimental rock band from Akron, Ohio. The group
first got together in the early 80's and made their professional stage
debut playing at Little Club 57 in New York City on New Year's Eve in
1980. The principal band members were: Patty Donahue (vocals), Chris
Butler (guitar), Mars Williams (saxophone), Dan Klayman (keyboards),
Billy Ficca (drums), and Tracy Wormworth (bass). The Waitresses were
distinguished by their deliciously sardonic punk sensibility, Williams'
groovy saxophone playing, and, most of all, Donahue's highly
distinctive dry'n'deadpan monotone voice. The band scored an instant
cult hit in 1982 with the hilariously saucy "I Know What Boys Like;"
the song was a Top 10 hit in Australia, but only reached #62 on the US
Billboard pop charts. "I Know What Boys Like" was not only featured on
the soundtrack to the uproariously raunchy teen sex comedy classic "The
Last American Virgin," but also used on episodes of the TV shows "The
Simpsons," "Family Guy," and "Nip/Tuck." The Waitresses went on to do
the infectiously bouncy and catchy theme song for the TV sitcom "Square
Pegs." The group had previously produced another winner in 1981 with
the delightfully bubbly and witty yuletide novelty tune "Christmas
Wrapping." They released two albums: "Wasn't Tomorrow Wonderful?" in
1982 and "Bruiseology" in 1983. The Waitresses broke up in 1983. "I
Know What Boys Like" has been covered by both Vitamin C and the British
girl band Shampoo while "Christmas Wrapping" has been covered by such
artists as the Donnas, the Spice Girls, Save Ferris, and Kate Nash.
Patty Donahue died at the tragically young age of 40 from lung cancer
on December 9, 1996.