Being Funny
How the pathbreaking comedian got his act together
- By Steve Martin
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2008, Subscribe
In the late 1960s, comedy was in transition. The older school told jokes and stories, punctuated with the drummer's rimshot. Of the new school, Bill Cosby—one of the first to tell stories you actually believed were true—and Bob Newhart—who startled everyone with innovative, low-key delivery and original material—had achieved icon status. Mort Sahl tweaked both sides of the political fence with his college-prof delivery. George Carlin and Richard Pryor, though very funny, were still a few years away from their final artistic breakthroughs. Lenny Bruce had died several years earlier, fighting both the system and drugs, and his work was already in revival because of his caustic brilliance that made authority nervous. Vietnam, the first televised war, split the country, and one's left or right bent could be recognized by haircuts and clothes. The country was angry, and so was comedy, which was addressed to insiders. Cheech and Chong spoke to the expanding underground by rolling the world's largest doobie on film. There were exceptions: Don Rickles seemed to glide over the generation gap with killer appearances on "The Tonight Show," and Johnny Carson remained a gentle satirist while maintaining a nice glossary of naughty-boy breast jokes. Tim Conway and Harvey Korman, two great comic sketch actors working for the affable genius Carol Burnett, were deeply funny. The television free-for-all called "Laugh-In" kept its sense of joy, thanks in part to Goldie Hawn's unabashed goofiness and producer George Schlatter's perceptive use of her screw-ups, but even that show had high political content. In general, however, a comedian in shackles for indecent language, or a singer's arrest for obscene gestures, thrilled the growing underground audience. Silliness was just not appropriate for hip culture. It was this circumstance that set the stage for my success eight years later.
In a college psychology class, I had read a treatise on comedy explaining that a laugh was formed when the storyteller created tension, then, with the punch line, released it. I didn't quite get this concept, nor do I still, but it stayed with me and eventually sparked my second wave of insights. With conventional joke telling, there's a moment when the comedian delivers the punch line, and the audience knows it's the punch line, and their response ranges from polite to uproarious. What bothered me about this formula was the nature of the laugh it inspired, a vocal acknowledgment that a joke had been told, like automatic applause at the end of a song.
A skillful comedian could coax a laugh with tiny indicators such as a vocal tic (Bob Hope's "But I wanna tell ya") or even a slight body shift. Jack E. Leonard used to punctuate jokes by slapping his stomach with his hand. One night, watching him on "The Tonight Show," I noticed that several of his punch lines had been unintelligible, and the audience had actually laughed at nothing but the cue of his hand slap.
These notions stayed with me until they formed an idea that revolutionized my comic direction: What if there were no punch lines? What if there were no indicators? What if I created tension and never released it? What if I headed for a climax, but all I delivered was an anticlimax? What would the audience do with all that tension? Theoretically, it would have to come out sometime. But if I kept denying them the formality of a punch line, the audience would eventually pick their own place to laugh, essentially out of desperation. This type of laugh seemed stronger to me, as they would be laughing at something they chose, rather than being told exactly when to laugh.
To test my idea, I went onstage and began: "I'd like to open up with sort of a 'funny comedy bit.' This has really been a big one for me...it's the one that put me where I am today. I'm sure most of you will recognize the title when I mention it; it's the "Nose on Microphone" routine [pause for imagined applause]. And it's always funny, no matter how many times you see it."
I leaned in and placed my nose on the mike for a few long seconds. Then I stopped and took several bows, saying, "Thank you very much." "That's it?" they thought. Yes, that was it. The laugh came not then, but only after they realized I had already moved on to the next bit.
Now that I had assigned myself to an act without jokes, I gave myself a rule. Never let them know I was bombing: this is funny, you just haven't gotten it yet. If I wasn't offering punch lines, I'd never be standing there with egg on my face. It was essential that I never show doubt about what I was doing. I would move through my act without pausing for the laugh, as though everything were an aside. Eventually, I thought, the laughs would be playing catch-up to what I was doing. Everything would be either delivered in passing, or the opposite, an elaborate presentation that climaxed in pointlessness. Another rule was to make the audience believe that I thought I was fantastic, that my confidence could not be shattered. They had to believe that I didn't care if they laughed at all and that this act was going on with or without them.
I was having trouble ending my show. I thought, "Why not make a virtue of it?" I started closing with extended bowing, as though I heard heavy applause. I kept insisting that I needed to "beg off." No, nothing, not even this ovation I am imagining, can make me stay. My goal was to make the audience laugh but leave them unable to describe what it was that had made them laugh. In other words, like the helpless state of giddiness experienced by close friends tuned in to each other's sense of humor, you had to be there.
At least that was the theory. And for the next eight years, I rolled it up a hill like Sisyphus.
My first reviews came in. One said, "This so-called 'comedian' should be told that jokes are supposed to have punch lines." Another said I represented "the most serious booking error in the history of Los Angeles music."
"Wait," I thought, "let me explain my theory!"
In Los Angeles, there were an exploding number of afternoon television talk shows: "The Della Reese Show," "The Merv Griffin Show," "The Virginia Graham Show," "The Dinah Shore Show," "The Mike Douglas Show" and my favorite, "The Steve Allen Show." Steve Allen had a vibrant comedy spirit, and you might catch him playing Ping-Pong while suspended from a crane a hundred feet in the air, or becoming a human tea bag by dropping himself in a tank of water filled with lemons. In his standard studio audience warm-up, when he was asked, "Do they get this show in Omaha?" Steve would answer, "They see it, but they don't get it."
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Comments (56)
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What a load of smug, pseudo-intellectual, middlebrow horn-tooting. It certainly explains why he was never very funny to begin with, and today is not funny at all, making mainstream pablum movies and instead getting his creative outlet with middlebrow pursuits in art and writing. He wants us to believe that he was so sophisticated that no one understood his academic experiment. In fact, all he was doing was offering up tame, housebroken surrealism so middle-class cowards and naive college kids could have a safe, faint taste of the truly surreal (and otherwise groundbreaking) comedy of the time; just as today, he has tamed even that, simply pulling silly faces in terrible movies to make the intellectually lazy chuckle. He should have stopped at the insight that people will laugh mindlessly at anything--or nothing at all.
Posted by jk on September 27,2012 | 03:31 AM
I was there that night at Vanderbilt as well. You forgot to mention that Steve was hitching hiking...while still wearing the now trademark arrow through the head and fake nose and glasses. Yea, nobody stopped. But the bit with telling the Dean of Housing his name was Carmichael Towers was the most stunningly brilliant bit of improv I've ever seen.
Posted by david braman on April 29,2012 | 10:19 PM
Steve, Very good article, but I have to correct you. I was one of the 100 Vanderbilt students that would not leave the Different Drummer in the basement of Carmichael Towers, where you performed. That night we did not find a swimming pool. I'm sure the swimming pool happened during another night. You first told us all to hide behind the bushes while you tried to hitchhike. We were told to jump in the car when somebody stopped. No one stopped. We did go cross the street and filled a Krystal's. You ordered 6,000 hamburgers, but later changed the order to 1 french fry to go. You also did an encore of a magic trick with a paper napkin for the ladies behind the counter. On our way back to campus we were stopped by an University Dean, who had been contacted about a band of students terrorizing the Krystal. When asked for your name and student ID, you informed the Dean that your name was Carmichael Tower. It was one of my best memories of college. Thanks.. Steve!!
Posted by Robert Balaka on March 21,2011 | 02:20 PM
Jeff (post on March 5, 2010) -- they've invented this thing called the You Tube. Please post that radio show. Please.
Posted by Maddy Mud on April 25,2010 | 12:22 PM
I had the unique pleasure of being at the show at Vanderbilt University. I worked for the campus radio station WRVU and, after Steve's performance, convinced him to take phone calls on the air back at the station. He did about 45 minutes. I still have the recording. Priceless.
Posted by Jeff on March 5,2010 | 03:28 PM
I can't count the number of times your humor and sensibility has fired my neurons (occasionally burning them into ash, some would say) over the years, Steve. I've read your books, all worthy of deep enjoyment and reflection, I might add, and just wanted to say a sincere "Thank you."
You know, it's a pretty great thing to so develop a skill or facility that inspires so many to elevate both thinking and feeling, in synchrony; it's the evidence of a brain well-developed and cared for, in response to life's chaotic twists and mundane banalities. It makes me think that you would make be an amazing teacher, a lens for concentrating the passion of learning. It would not surprise me to discover that you have found this as a next great adventure. If you haven't, please go for a swim :)
Thanks again, Steve. We need more people like you. But of course, that can't happen!
Posted by Mike on February 19,2010 | 12:32 PM
I first saw Steve Martin when I was around 14 yrs old. He was at the Richfield Colusium in OH. I went with a church group that my brother belonged. They had an extra ticket, so I got to go. It was fantastic !! I had seen Mr. Martin on Saturday Night Live, but never thought I'd get to see him in person. What a treat !!! I've alway been a fan. I have "King Tut" on a 45rpm and the album. My mom even saved and still has, an original 'arrow', pink feathers still attached. If, Mr. Martin, you are reading this, Please tell Mr. Mull that North Ridgeville still looks the same !!
Posted by Patty on November 27,2008 | 11:13 AM
What an absolutely wonderful article ! Steve Martin has always been one of the funniest guys around. And to see how he worked so hard for so long, stuck to his own integrity, and still made it in the industry is a real inspiration, I think, to anybody in any industry.
Posted by JoJo on November 19,2008 | 01:01 AM
My first recollection of Steve wasa television appearance,I think it was Merv Griffen's show, white suit,bent arrow... hysterical, but.... i said to myself this guy is so funny he should ditch the props & distractions,just come out dressed in a plain professional suit....next time i see him he's in a plain suit, i must have been priviliged to see him at that transition point in his career.Jerry Modene's comment, loved it .i can just imagine,wish i'd seen you deliver that intro. Steve's dramatic roles as solid as his comedy. the mans a treasure.
Posted by mike on October 4,2008 | 06:10 PM
Hey, Netpuppet (above), I was at that Fronton show too! It was the spring of 1978. I hurt from laughing afterwards. I first remember seeing Steve Martin on what must have been the Midnight Special. It was fall 1974, and he did the "grab-the-mouth-and-jump-up-and-down" routine, as well as demonstrate how to impress women at parties: look off casually into space, drink in hand, and say, "Yeah, I make a lot of money." I also remember seeing him in an episode of the mid-'70s TV series "Doc," which takes place in New York City and stars Barnard Hughes as a kindly family practitioner. Martin plays Doc's visiting son, a Catholic priest who wants to try his hand at stand-up comedy. Which he does, banjo and all (including half of "Dueling Banjos"), in a local club. He's well-received; only his parents sit still, unhappily pondering their son's desertion of his vocation. The next morning Martin appears in their kitchen, dressed in his Roman collar and recommitted to the priesthood. I've never heard anyone refer to that guest spot.
Posted by Andy on October 3,2008 | 08:13 PM
What in the heck is a bango??? A banjo spelled wrong. I was just in such a hurry to sing the praises of Steve Martin and I should have said the Mark Twain Award at the Kennedy Center.
Posted by martha on October 1,2008 | 06:29 PM
Thank goodness for old Smithsonian Magazines in hospital waiting rooms...while my husband was in surgery I spotted the article by Steve Martin and lost myself in it, even laughing out loud...especially the encounter with Elvis. The Jerk is my favorite movie. I would have so liked to have been at the Kennedy Center Honors. Love the bango and during my 60 years Steve has always been one of the bright spots in my life. Many thanks!
Posted by Martha on September 9,2008 | 06:24 PM
This article is wonderful. It has truly brightened up a not so bright day. I will be referencing this to several of my friends. I have loved Mr. Martins movies & standup for years. What I do love is how you can relate (esp. in his movies) certain events or lines to other movies. He just seems to be himself in his movies and not acting. Thank you for this article.
Posted by Nichole on June 27,2008 | 11:30 AM
Page 71 of the 2/08 magazine says to see steve martin on the tonight show go to smithonsian.com/martin. It did. But there is no obvious link to view it.
Posted by stanley weinberg on March 23,2008 | 01:26 PM
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