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Inside the minds of comedians |
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Written by ANDREW NOYES
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Tuesday, 15 March 2005 |
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Chris Walsh is a 26-year-old gay man with a cross-eyed pug and a freshly unpacked apartment in the heart of Chicago. He was admittedly getting too good at being a landscape designer for palatial estates in the nation's capital and realized if he didn't take a chance and pursue his dream, he would be cheating himself out of his destiny.
His first month in the Windy City resulted in his enrollment
in an improv training class, meetings with a vocal coach and
interviews with photographers to take his all-important head
shot. His mother first goaded him to audition for the local
production of "The Wizard of Oz" when he was 10
and here's where he ended up - in a new city, unemployed,
pursuing a new career.
As Walsh will soon learn, being a performer – especially
a comedian – isn't a job for the weak-stomached or the
faint at heart. It's a grueling, thankless gig marked by low
pay, late hours in dimly lit bars, bad food, booze and unruly
hecklers. In the cutthroat world of comedy, wannabes either
sink or swim – and most sink like a stone.
Nevertheless, if a performance career bewitches and beguiles
you as it has captivated the affable and ambitious Walsh,
let Lumino's panel of experts enlighten and entertain you.
They've been around the block a few times and have lived to
tell the tale. A few are high-profile, fulltime funnymen (and
women) and several are fighting their way to the top of the
humor heap—but all are talented, witty, wise and willing
to share their experiences.
Judy Gold hosts her own show on HBO and is
a regular fixture on "Hollywood Squares" as well
as Comedy Central's (now-cancelled) "Tough Crowd with
Colin Quinn." She's the originator of a one-person show
about Jewish mothers, "G-d Doesn't Pay Rent Here,"
and she co-starred in the off-Broadway production of "The
Vagina Monologues." The Newark, NJ native has a degree
in music from Rutgers College but hasn't needed it since she
made her name as one of America's top female comics.
Doug Stanhope is co-host of "The Man
Show" on Comedy Central, his stand up has been featured
on several television shows including "Comedy Central
Presents," "Premium Blend," NBC's "Late
Friday" and "The Howard Stern Show." He was
born in Worcester, Massachusetts. He has a ninth grade education
and believes that no training exists for a comedy career -
you're either funny or you're not.
Marc Ryan has been a stand-up comic for 12
years and has appeared on CBS' "Star Search," Comedy
Central's "Best of the Improv" and Cox Cable's "Half
Hour Comedy Hour."
Doug Hecox is a writer, a teacher and a
public relations manager in Washington, D.C. He moonlights
as a comedian and does a darned good job of it. The North
Carolina native's preparation for a comedy career was informal—he
listened to comedy albums religiously growing up.
Yannis Pappas is a New Yorker whose
comedic training includes the Humber Comedy Institute in Toronto.
Favorite Schtick
Gold: My Anne Frank joke
Ryan: Misdirection
Hecox: My favorite of all time is probably
Steve Martin's attempt to sing native American chants as a
Vegas lounge singer. It's on his album "Let's Get Small"
and makes me laugh every time I hear it.
Least Favorite Schtick
Gold: Anything blatantly homophobic, racist, anti-semitic,
or misogynistic.
Hecox: Sen. John Kerry telling America he'll
be a good President.
Comedian you most admire
Gold: Phyllis Diller
Stanhope: George Carlin
Ryan: Richard Pryor
Hecox: Emo Philips
Pappas: Chris Rock, David Cross, Chris Guest,
Woody Allen
How does one know if he/she is funny—funny
enough to be a comedian?
Stanhope: If you think you're funny enough, you are.
If the audience disagrees however, it'll make it harder.
Hecox: If you can make your friends laugh,
you might be able to be a comedian. If you can make your friends
laugh at a funeral, you definitely can be a comedian and,
if you can make your friends laugh at their own funerals,
you should run for office. As the old comedy saying goes,
"if you can make just one person laugh, you're in the
wrong business."
Pappas: You are in touch with the tragedy
of life and it haunts you, comedy is your way of freeing
yourself from that hurt...more practically speaking; you are
good at imitation, insightful, and have a need for people
to like you and you want them to get along with each other
better.
How does one know if he/she should definitely not
pursue a comedy career?
Stanhope: I suppose if you were terrible to the eye,
then you shouldn't do stand-up. Not merely ugly, mind you,
but sickening to look at. Say you lost of lower jaw to mouth
cancer or are ravaged by AIDS and methamphetamine, then please
stay out of public view. It depresses people and makes them
want to recoil and vomit.
Ryan: If you hate the sound of laughter,
pretty good sign to stay away. Seriously if you ever seriously
give it a try and you hate the vulnerability of being on stage,
you are not going to do very well most likely.
Hecox: If you can't tell jokes, if you have
no timing and you can't get audiences to laugh, get yourself
a game show -- like Tom Bergeron did.
When did the idea of being a comedian first occur
to you? Were you sober?
Gold: Yes, I was sober. Someone dared me to do it.
Stanhope: This is like trying to pin down
your first thought of winning the lottery or getting a hand
job.
Ryan: I came from a broken home where attention
was a hot commodity. One day I stumbled upon a laugh through
a silly face or just generally acting like an idiot and I
noticed everyone looked my way…That was when I realized
the power that laughter had.
Hecox: A friend in first grade told me I
would one day be a professional comedian. He's in third grade
now, and he hasn't steered me wrong yet!
Pappas: Ever since I was young, everyone
always considered me the funniest guy around. And I was drunk
and had just had a threesome with a girl and a friend of mine. I
was walking home drunk when I decided that I was coming to
try comedy on stage.
What are the five essential items in a comedian's
'survival kit?'
Gold: Notebook, pen, toothbrush, license and thick
skin.
Stanhope: AAA Plus, credit card, notebook,
road atlas and Haribo Gummy Fruit Salad
Ryan: A bar of soap in your bag for the shitty
condos that a lot of clubs put you up in; Ramen Noodles; a
Honda; a note pad in your pocket at all times and a favorite
writing pen too; the ability to shift gears at any given moment.
A true comic can take it all on.
Hecox: Material, timing, patience, persistence,
and a whoopee cushion. I would add fake plastic vomit to that
but my girlfriend kept stealing mine. As it turns out, she
had a fake eating disorder.
Thoughts on doing impressions
Gold: Not that big into impressions - unless they're
my friends.
Ryan: They are fun only when done dead on...
My grandma can do a half-assed Elvis.
Hecox: I love making impressions, especially
in wet cement. I do good impersonation of Mary Cheney, but
I need a volunteer from the audience. Preferably a blonde
cheerleader.
Thoughts on using props
Gold:
NO PROPS!
Ryan: If you have an original angle, nothing
is off limits. If you are going to be a watered down version
of Carrot Top you are wasting everyone's time, but mostly
yours.
Hecox: I was never good at that either, so
I prefer to stick with conventional stand-up.
If you like props, what are your favorites? What
do they add to the show?
Hecox: I always wanted to glue a steering wheel to
a walking stick for blind people who wanted to drive, but
I haven't done it yet.
How do you decide what is off limits in your performance?
Gold: Nothing is off limits if it's truly funny.
Stanhope: I shy away from material that has
better-than-even odds of inciting physical violence against
my person. Otherwise, fuck 'em.
Hecox: I won't make fun of people I know
personally, but everything else is fair game. It has to be.
Audiences want a daredevil, not a minister. So long as it's
funny, audiences won't be offended.
What are the most clichéd topics utilized
by comedians
Gold: Difference between men and women, dating, cock
size/name.
Stanhope: The difference between men and
women…and angry child rape.
Ryan: Drinking material, plane material,
jokes about sending your kid to "timeout."
Hecox: Dating, Arnold Schwarzenegger impressions,
George W. Bush, cheap cars, being broke, and Special Olympics.
Pappas: Their own ethnic background and/or appearance.
What is your most unique comedic attribute?
Gold: My brain
Stanhope: The ability to perform while wildly
intoxicated.
Ryan: I have a third testicle, so if I really
get in a jam I could probably show that and it would be pretty
funny.
How important are self-deprecation and negativity
in your act?
Stanhope: Most comedy comes from a negative place.
"Don't you hate it when…" or "You know
what really pisses me off about…" Self-deprecation
will work to your advantage if it's honest but if you are,
say, a moderately decent-looking woman complaining about not
being able to get laid it will come off as insincere.
Hecox: I wish I was a good enough person
to be worthy of self-deprecation. There are far too many people
in the world more deserving of deprecation than me.
Pappas: Not very important. Don't do too
much of it. I am not fat, dumb, or ugly so I am at a disadvantage.
I am neurotic and fearful and manic, not enough to feel sorry
for and not enough to be arrogant about.
How do you find new material?
Gold: Live life, read.
Stanhope: I get it from a vending machine
at the bus station. It's 75 cents but it takes dollar bills.
Ryan: New material is all around you everyday.
But you have to pay attention. My advice for a new comic would
be to shut up and listen. You have to take it in to be able
to put it out.
Hecox: Reading a lot helps, but watching
the news helps me too. Whatever they say that isn't funny,
I say the opposite of that.
What are the best resources for a wannabe comedian?
Stanhope: Go out and do something. Funny stuff doesn't
happen on the couch. Fuck somebody weird. Kill a guy. Do something.
That's where the material is.
Pappas: Your personal life, listen and observe,
your fears and your pains. Pretentious people, phony people,
hypocritical people, including yourself.
What's the best advice you can give to a wannabe
comedian?
Gold: Get as much stage time as you can, don't steal
material, tell the truth.
Stanhope: Write. Perform. Fail. Rewrite.
Repeat.
Ryan: Get on every stage you can. Tape your
sets every time you go up. Review the tapes and understand
what you are doing while you are onstage. Figure out your
personal strengths and what sets you apart.
Hecox: Give up. That's some of the best advice
because, if you really want to be a comedian, you won't listen
to it. If you shouldn't be a comedian, you'll give it up and
make room for someone who is more committed to it than you
are.
Pappas: Never get too high and never get
too low. Keep going if you love it and need it.
How do you try out material before you're comfortable
using it in a show?
Hecox: I try it on all my friends, most of whom can
probably do my act better than me now. I love making people
laugh, and if I have to constantly focus group new jokes,
I will.
Stanhope: You don't try out material off-stage
unless it's some kind of faggotty writers group. Nobody wants
to hear your dumb fucking jokes during Monday Night Football.
Just shut the fuck up and save it for the stage. I have money
on this game.
Have you ever bombed on stage? If no, why not? If
so, please explain when, where and what the circumstances
were.
Gold: Do I really have to re-live that?
Stanhope: I have bombed everywhere for every
possible reason. I will probably bomb tonight. It keeps the
sport in it.
Hecox: Every comic bombs – the trick
is to learn from it, and also to not take it personally. The
trick is to perform a lot and if you bomb more than you don't,
stop. You're not a comedian. You're a bomber.
As a comedian, have you found it easy or difficult
to find a mate/spouse/date?
Stanhope: If you get laid now, you'll get laid more
doing comedy. Long-term relationships can work as well but
she will probably get drunk while you're on the road and fuck
your brother Scott.
Ryan: Having a spouse or a regular love life
is a sacrifice you make if you love comedy. Because when your
career is going well you spend 90 percent of your time on
the road doing what you love. Comedy is your wife! In my experience
it has been hard and lonely at times but I wouldn't trade
it for anything.
Hecox: I've never had a problem. Comedians
are, by nature, outgoing and charismatic, which tends to attract
people. Interestingly, I am not attracted to people who don't
find me funny. There are a LOT of people I'm not attracted
to.
Pappas: Hard...if you are serious about comedy,
you are never happy, never want to be happy or content because
it hurts your comedy, comedians are always seeking out pain
and suffering for the enjoyment of others, we are sort of
like martyrs.
What's the worst job you've ever maintained so that
you could pursue comedy?
Gold: Typesetter
Stanhope: Leeching off tittie-dancers.
Hecox: Helping to develop the National Sex
Offender Registry.
Pappas: Working in night clubs as a cashier.
What is your greatest aspiration as a comedian?
Stanhope: Quitting. I've done everything I can do
in this business. Now I just want to deliver bottled water
in a gated community.
Ryan: To make a mark on the comedy world
that stands the test of time, instead of being the flavor
of the month.
Hecox: To be regarded as a genius centuries
ahead of his time, and to have my jokes written in quatrains
that will be said by people in the future to have foretold
current events.
How do you know if you've sold out—comically
speaking?
Hecox: I'll let you know when I do. It should be
any day now.
Stanhope: Oh, you mean The Man Show? Ya,
that's when.
Pappas: Going for cheap laughs is cheating. And
not challenging the audience or yourself to be better people is
a sign of selling out.
Has anyone ever stolen your material? Have you ever
stolen someone's material?
Hecox: I've heard a couple of my jokes used by others,
but Emo said it best. You have to write faster than they can
steal. If your whole career is based on having only one good
joke, you deserve to have it stolen.
Pappas: Yes. If you are going to steal, steal
from the best (I stole this from Woody Allen)
AN EPILOGUE OF SORTS
A few short months have passed since our initial meeting and
Walsh reports some successes. He completed first level courses
at Improv Olympic and is halfway through the second tier.
The go-getter was also chosen for a musical improv class at
Second City and he dropped $600 on headshots.
Walsh has stopped taking voice lessons too. "We put on
a showcase of four 'advanced students' at a local bar/lounge.
It was a cabaret setting. It was harmless, but I never thought
I would be paying $275 to be singing on a bill with a 6-year-old
girl and a teacher who forgot the lyrics to 'Diamonds Are
a Girl's Best Friend.'"
Recently, he auditioned for three shows and sent out his headshot
and resume to 30-some perspectives as well as to dozens of
agents and talent scouts in the city. He hasn't heard anything
from any of the scouts but decided to take matters into his
own hands.
He began to look for auditions on his own and landed a role
in the ensemble and the understudy of The Who's "Tommy."
While thumbing through auditions online, he also came across
a casting call for the Vegas version of the Broadway hit "Avenue
Q." He booked a flight, flew to the audition and hasn't
heard back. Fingers crossed. Powered by AkoComment 2.0! |
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