Comedy at the Edge : How Stand-Up in the 1970s Changed America (Hardcover)
by Richard Zoglin
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Overview
What Peter Biskind did for filmmaking, "Time "magazine critic Richard Zoglin does for comedy in this meticulously researched and hilariously readable account of stand-up comedy in the 1970s.
In the rock-and-roll 1970s, a new breed of comic, inspired by the fearless Lenny Bruce, made telling jokes an art form. Innovative comedians like George Carlin, Richard Pryor, and Robert Klein, and, later, Steve Martin, Albert Brooks, Robin Williams, and Andy Kaufman, tore through the country and became as big as rock stars in an era when "Saturday Night Live "was the apotheosis of cool and the Improv, Catch a Rising Star, and the Comedy Store were the hottest clubs around. In "Comedy at the Edge," Richard Zoglin gives a backstage view of the time, when a group of brilliant, iconoclastic comedians ruled the world--and quite possibly changed it, too. Based on extensive interviews with club owners, agents, producers--and with unprecedented and unlimited access to the players themselves--"Comedy at the Edge "is a no-holdsbarred, behind-the-scenes look at one of the most influential and tumultuous decades in American popular culture.
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Books > Performing Arts > Comedy
- ISBN-13: 9781582346243
- ISBN-10: 1582346240
- Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
- Date: January 2008
- Page Count: 247
Customer Reviews
Publishers Weekly® Reviews
- Reviewed in: Publishers Weekly, page 38.
- Review Date: 2007-11-26
- Reviewer: Staff
Theater and TV critic Zoglin steps into the spotlight to deliver mirthful material also worthy of applause. A senior Time writer-editor who covered the magazine’s showbiz beat for 20 years, Zoglin once did major pieces on Carson, Cosby, Letterman, Seinfeld and others. Now he offers a comedy chronicle of laugh makers from the mid-1960s to the early ’80s with entertaining excerpts and funny one-liners. In an opening chapter capturing the charisma and revolutionary impact of Lenny Bruce, he notes, “What the younger comedians who were influenced by him brought was the discipline and craftsmanship that Bruce lacked. They were better actors and more accomplished writers.” The curtain then goes up on a merry mob of iconoclastic innovators: Andy Kaufman, Richard Lewis (“I left my shrink too soon; I had to take an incomplete”), George Carlin and “the seven dirty words,” the raw “racial anger” of Richard Pryor, Robert Klein (“Now you can get every record ever recorded!”) and many more. The book’s centerpiece is a potent profile of Albert Brooks, detailing the lampoons, conflicts and compromises of his now-forgotten standup career. Although some subjects (Steve Martin, Mel Brooks, David Letterman) were initially reluctant to be interviewed, Zoglin’s conversations with numerous top talents enabled him to add fresh quotations to his extensive research through books, magazines and liner notes. Always highlighting how these comics “transformed the culture,” Zoglin on standup is standout. (Feb. 1)
- ISBN-13: 9781582346243
- ISBN-10: 1582346240
- Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
- Date: January 2008
- Page Count: 247







