Would you want this emblazoned on your chest?
The shy and retiring Ms Lette posing in front of one of her favourite paintings
Gervais lists Jerry
Seinfeld and Larry David amongst his influences/idols so perhaps I should like
their work too but, try as I might, I can't endure Seinfeld and most clips
I've seen of Larry David leave me cold. I
am at odds with most of the world in this. I wondered if it could be cultural,
Ricky and Karl (Pilkington) and Warwick (Davies) all have a diffident,
understated quality to their delivery whereas Jerry, Kramer, Elaine et al
deliver their material with a subtlety that makes King Kong atop the Empire
State Building seem like an early Leonard Cohen concert.
But if I have a cultural preference for underplaying how is it that I also love the 'Ooo, er… missus' humour of Frankie Howerd, Are You Being Served? and the Carry On films? Of course they are a major part of my cultural heritage too.
Can what makes us laugh change over time? Could I go from finding All In The Family and On The Buses excruciating to appreciating their exquisite irony and masterful commedia del'arte techniques? It has worked the other way around. I hated Men Behaving Badly in my early feminist days because I thought it celebrated chauvinism. I later discovered it was very funny indeed and have become a lifelong Martin Clunes fan. My feminist scruples also made me initially recoil from Ab Fab, then I came to relish the OTT characterisations of Patsy & Edina, the insanity of Bubble and the resigned martyrdom of Saffy. Watching the 'specials' made 20 years on though I find the situations stale, the jokes forced and the characters too grotesque to enjoy any more.
'Titter ye not' urged Frankie but I always did.
Does appreciating the context of or intention behind humour make it more likely that we will 'get it'? E.B. White, author of Charlotte's Web and Stuart Little and generally erudite writer pointedly said:
Acquiring new life experiences might lead us to appreciate different types of humour. Perhaps if I lived in New York I would learn to like Seinfeld. Perhaps if I had a lobotomy I would find the 3 Stooges amusing. (Note: try watching the 3 Stooges without the whacky sound effects track – their true ghastliness becomes apparent).Humor can be dissected as a frog can, but the thing dies in the process and the innards are discouraging to any but the pure scientific mind.
Here, in keeping with my theory, but at the risk of disemboweling frogs, is a random* sample of the two types of comedy: funny and not funny…
FUNNY
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Why
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NOT FUNNY
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Why
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Blackadder
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It started off pretty satisfying and quickly became one of the
best scripted and performed comedies ever! Funnier than a Funster from
Funville with an overactive funnybone.
|
The Footy Show (and Hey, Hey, It's Saturday reunion show)
|
Guess this is an example of Zillman & Bryant's
victim-centred humour - the main victims being the viewer's intellect and
human dignity in general.
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The Plank
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Stellar cast headed by my adored Eric Sykes who wrote and
directed it. Superlative silent humour – a classic!
|
Mind Your Language
|
Appalling hackneyed racist rubbish proving Barry Evans unable to
sustain a sit-com without Richard Gordon's rich comic settings.
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Monty Python
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Creative, absurd revolutionary comedy combining 6 brilliant
minds.
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All Charlie Chaplin films (well the ones I've seen)
|
Charlie Chaplin is quaint and whimsical but to me he is simply
NOT funny and at his worst he is nauseatingly mawkish.
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Judith Lucy
|
Always thought she was pretty funny but now that I've seen her
live, read her memoirs and watched her Spiritual Journey she is a goddess to me.
|
Wes Anderson's films
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I know he is considered cool but The Royal Tenenbaums,
The Life Aquatic and The Darjeeling Limited all
left me feeling irritated, detached and as if I had just witnessed unsettling
acts of onanism.
|
Bob Hope
|
Master of timing, lily livered-liness, lust accompanied by
performance anxiety and fair-weather friendliness (even that is more than
|
Bless This House
|
I baulk at the very idea of the Sid James's persona being let
loose outside of his natural habitat the Carry Ons. He cannot
play a suburban husband/dad. He is and must remain a sleazy comic archetype.
|
Dirty Rotten Scoundrels
|
Michael Caine and Steve Martin go together like rock melon and
blue vein cheese. Both combinations I find surprisingly delicious!
|
The Love Guru
|
Embarrassing, self-indulgent tripe. Mike Myers is capable of so
much better but like Trey Parker & Matt Stone, he just cannot let his
inner sniggering adolescent go.
|
Denise Scott
|
Always enjoyed her on The Big Gig but discovered her true
self-deprecating genius on Spicks & Specks. A national
treasure!
|
Hey, Dad
|
Made me distinctly uneasy even before recent revelations.
Contrived, heavy handed and completely unnecessary.
|
Marx Brothers
|
Despite Zeppo and despite the musical interludes, what a body of
work!!! Comic geniuses.
|
Umbilical Bros
|
Skilled? Yes. Funny? I don't think so. These guys are mime
artists. Enough said.
|
This Is Alan Partridge
|
Steve Coogan channelling toothy Leslie Crowther and making us
(well me) wince and guffaw in equal parts. Less said about Tropic Thunder
however the better.
|
Jerry Lewis
|
Why have the French deified this man? He is a grotesque buffoon
with the comic finesse of Godzilla. Playing himself (a stingy, arrogant
bastard) in King of Comedy is his best work – what does that
say?
|
Pete 'n' Dud
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Right through from Beyond the Fringe to
Behind the Fridge – a perfect partnership, hilariously funny.
Micaleff's and Curry's reprise of some of their sketches showed how strong
the material is.
|
Dud sans Pete
|
I really love his music (even the musical jokes) and I know he
had to flee Peter Cook's bullying and was ill not drunk when he stumbled on
stage; however his
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Good Jim Carrey
|
When his touch is light as in Eternal Sunshine of the
Spotless Mind, Man In the Moon, and The Truman
Show he is funny and moving.
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Bad Jim Carrey
|
Save me from The Grinch Who Stole Christmas, Ace
Ventura - Pet Detective and The Mask! Maybe Jim needs
to take his anti ADD meds before choosing or shooting a script.
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*I reiterate that this is by no means an exhaustive list. I have ommitted the brilliant John Clarke and failed to analyse the complex (scantily clad) body of work produced by Mr Benny Hill. I am keen to hear what makes others chortle or wince.
So as I was saying, a funny thing may have happened to me the other day when I entered a competition to find the wittiest pun by a Sydney blogger – I was really keen so I entered ten times. I thought that would give me an edge but I didn't win with any of my entries. That's right, no pun in ten did! Boom, tish!
Just found out that Denise Scott and Judith Lucy are doing a show TOGETHER in Melbourne - hope it comes to Sydney!