Too late the other night a friend texted me links to several stand-up routines by the late Jackie Mason. I clicked on one and the inevitable followed: I went looking for more and soon descended into a privately curated comedy show with guest stars Don Rickles, Jonathan Winters and Norm Macdonald (all “late” in the last decade). Each reliably makes me laugh to the point of tears – one of my two tests for judging the success of a comic, with the other being his ability to make me laugh when I’m alone, without the social incentive to do so. Odd that comedy and sorrow make us weep. “Our laughter,” V.S. Pritchett wrote of Saki, “is only a note or two short of a scream of fear,” which suggests comedians and horror movies may have something in common and can trigger related reactions.
I’d been
browsing in Ambrose Bierce’s Devil’s Dictionary (1906; rev. 1911) again, and here is his entry for laughter:
“An interior
convulsion, producing a distortion of the features and accompanied by
inarticulate noises. It is infectious and, though intermittent, incurable.
Liability to attacks of laughter is one of the characteristics distinguishing
man from the animals— these being not only inaccessible to the provocation of
his example, but impregnable to the microbes having original jurisdiction in
bestowal of the disease. Whether laughter could be imparted to animals by
inoculation from the human patient is a question that has not been answered by
experimentation. Dr. Meir Witchell holds that the infectious character of
laughter is due to the instantaneous fermentation of sputa diffused in a spray.
From this peculiarity he names the disorder Convulsio
spargens.”
I don’t
question why something makes me laugh, and I’m not referring to the well-known appreciative, socially sanctioned, tight-lipped grunt. I mean a raucous, full-body,
snot-flying guffaw. It’s a gift. (The title of W.C. Fields’ funniest film.) Take
Bierce’s mock-definition of laughter.
Funny? Yes, especially the first sentence, but he goes on too long and you can
feel the strain. No tears or snot, just one of those polite, non-convulsive grunts.
You know what Polonius said about brevity. Beware of those who tell you, “You
shouldn’t be laughing at that.” The impulse to censor laughter, especially the genus Mockery, is an ironclad symptom not only of humorlessness but jackbooted bullying. The urtext on the subject is Max Beerbohm’s “Laughter” (And Even Now, 1920):
“[T]here is
to me something rather dreary in the notion of going anywhere for the specific
purpose of being amused. I prefer that laughter shall take me unawares. Only so
can it master and dissolve me. And in this respect, at any rate, I am not
peculiar. In music halls and such places, you may hear loud laughter, but—not
see silent laughter, not see strong men weak, helpless, suffering, gradually
convalescent, dangerously relapsing. Laughter at its greatest and best is not
there.
“To such
laughter nothing is more propitious than an occasion that demands gravity. To
have good reason for not laughing is one of the surest aids. Laughter rejoices
in bonds.”
2 comments:
When Norm MacDonald died I was puzzled by the flood of tributes, as I had never heard of him. (The last time I watched SNL Eddie Murphy was a cast member.) So I investigated via youtube and was instantly floored. I was actually glad that I had missed him for decades, as the delight of then immersing myself in Norm was so great. I highly recommend the book he wrote, too; it's surreally funny (no surprise there) and strangely moving.
I'm also a big fan of Norm MacDonald, as well as Mason and Winters.
Newcomer Ryan O'Flanagan is great. Absurd, edgy.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MfCJThOuPuo
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kf08gdYpJT8
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