When Renée Taylor steps onto a stage, she doesn’t just perform — she confesses, dazzles, and absolutely owns the spotlight.
Her live show, My Life on a Diet, at the Plaza Theatre isn’t just another celebrity memoir retold under stage lights. It’s a brutally funny, deeply personal rollercoaster through decades of Hollywood, heartbreak, body image battles, legendary friendships, and survival in an industry obsessed with appearance.
Best known to many as Sylvia Fine from The Nanny, Taylor pulls back the curtain on the insecurities and ambitions that shaped her career. With razor-sharp timing and zero filter, she dishes on famous exes, iconic collaborators, and the emotional cost of chasing fame while constantly being told to shrink — literally and figuratively.
Audiences expecting light comedy get something far richer: a fearless woman reclaiming her narrative with humor as her weapon and vulnerability as her power.

The biggest surprise? At an age when many stars slow down, Taylor is commanding the stage with more fire than ever — proving that reinvention doesn’t have an expiration date.
It’s not just a show. It’s a triumphant reminder that survival in Hollywood is its own standing ovation.