Professional comedians will tell you that you cannot "learn" to be funny. You either have it or you don't. You either are or you aren't.They are, of course, lying.
For there is a craft to comedy, and it is learned. And comedians spend the early parts of their careers developing their craft. They get onstage. They suck. They get onstage again. They suck again.Eventually, however, those that persevere get the hang of it. They gradually begin to suck less. The audiences begin to laugh more.
However, beyond the craft itself, there is also an art to truly fine comedy, and this is what separates the gifted from the merely competent. This quality, perhaps, cannot be learned (or if it is learned, it is learned through life experience and not through practice of the craft).
But all comedians must learn the craft. It is a prerequisite to anything greater. And comedians (the gifted as well as the competent) spend considerable time and effort learning the craft.
We can look at the early careers of the gifted and see that this is true. Before Richard Pryor found his voice and changed the comedic world, he paid his dues in a conventional nightclub routine. Before George Carlin broke and redefined the mold of counterculture comedy, he began with safe media stuff ("Wonderful WINO! Wonderful WINO radio!"). Before Chris Rock shocked us, awed us, and brought us the pain, he languished as a second-string player on Saturday Night Live. Everyone spends their proverbial 40 years in the wilderness. link
No comments:
Post a Comment