Posted in Foreign Comedians in Britain

Those bloody foreigners coming over here, making us laugh?

Comedy has always been an innate part of British culture. Our sense of humour is internationally renowned for being self-deprecating, sarcastic, subtle and laden with innuendo. Yet, increasingly we are seeing foreign comedians finding success within our shores. So why is international comedy becoming so popular?

Foreign ComediansGiacinto Palmieri is one such comedian who has found success within the UK.  Born in Italy, he’s never actually performed in his home country. “Actually I’m having the opposite problem now because I’ve started to do comedy for an Italian audience; Italians living in London.” says Palmieri.  “British comedy is my native comedy approach, not my native language. Actually, now I’m wondering; if I go to Italy and do something for an Italian audience, should I do anything different, because whatever I learn, I learnt it here, and I did it in front of a British audience.”

“What I really find interesting is when foreigners talk about their host country because it is where they can really bring their perspective into things, particularly foreigners who are not native English speakers.  They can also look at the English language itself and try to express why they find it fun, surprising, charming and so on.” says Palmieri.

“Sometimes when I go outside London, I struggle a bit more I think because people relate a bit less to the experience of living in multicultural London” Palmieri told Laughing Stock.  “Maybe they are also less exposed to foreign accents – I find myself struggling a bit more to be understood when I go outside London or festivals.”

Another comedian performing in a second language is German comedian Christian Schulte-Loh, who claims he had to leave Germany because he was ‘too funny’. He has similar views of being able to bring a fresh perspective to the country.
“I kind of have the feeling I’m still visiting this place, and that makes you see things differently, things that other people don’t see.” he says.

“In Britain there’s no boundaries really – you can go really far – and in Germany I think people are a bit more squeamish – definitely about historic things. For example I would be able to do some edgy Hitler stuff in Britain which in Germany is a bit harder to get away with, you know for obvious reasons. But then again, for example football is still a thing that the English are a bit sensitive about – I would tell them for example during the gig that ‘English people can relax, there will be no penalty shoot out after this gig’ – they would sometimes freak out a little, which is fun.”

“I love both markets a lot, but I love the British because the Brits are lots of fun” he continued.

“If you travel, you see different cultures, you see the different ways people live, it does open up your comedic mind more.”

But why are the British getting a taste for foreign stand-up? Nigel Williams is a British born comedian, who honed his craft in Belgium. He has subsequently come back to England to perform.

“A good trick with international comedy is that if you have just one local reference, they will take you to heart. If they know you’re not from there, one local reference and it’s like ‘Ah, he’s looked this up, that’s good’ and people like that. That gives you a window of opportunity to start doing your thing, because they give you a little bit of credit then. It’s only ever that two minute credit gap you get, but at least it gives you that little bit of an edge.” says Williams.

“You get all these people enlisting in workshops and stuff to try and learn standup comedy, but the money they spend on that would be better off taking a city trip to Bratislava, and just sitting in a bar and writing stuff. If you travel, you see different cultures, you see the different ways people live, it does open up your comedic mind more.” he said.
So is there a joke that works across all cultures? German comedian Christian thinks being able to perform in a variety of countries is a sign of a good comedian.

“There’s a lot of jokes that work in every country.” says Schulte-Loh. “I would say, a really good joke has to work everywhere; it’s so good that people will laugh about it almost anywhere. The thing is, with controversial jokes,  you cannot open with them anywhere.

“You have to put them in the middle of your set because people have to first trust you and get to know you and they have to know that this guy is actually a nice guy, he’s not dangerous for us. So then later on when you do something really intense they would laugh with you and they wouldn’t be afraid. Generally I think a really good joke would work everywhere.” 

So with this year’s Edinburgh fringe packed with international talent, it seems like fresh foreign perspectives are here to stay on the British comedy circuit.

Posted in State of the Industry

Is there even room for any more funny?

The comedy industry is changing. In its current flux, comedians across the UK and US are seeing dramatic differences in how they can find their place in the world of funny.

Steve RoeWhilst a heap of promising new opportunities are rising, professionals in the comedy industry across the world are encouraging individuals to come forward and find their place now; whilst the time is right. Steve Roe, a teacher at UK comedy school Hoopla, said: “The comedy industry is changing; it used to be all about getting spotted at Edinburgh and then hopefully getting a TV deal or agent.

“Now loads of people are totally bypassing that; sticking their finger up to Edinburgh and TV, and just doing it themselves by making stuff for YouTube instead.

“The power is back with the performers, so they can focus on their audience and their act.”

It seems that comedians are getting more and more determined to break into the industry as they find their own creative way of getting heard. This is hardly surprising; after all, they’re creative people, right?

For those looking to break into the industry, one website that may be able to help you is The Comedy Business Digest. It describes itself as a ‘10-minute newsletter for a really tiny fee and can be so helpful’ and ‘a weekly email that delivers vital comedy industry information and new opportunities to your inbox.’ Keeping track of insider knowledge can really give you an edge in the industry.

Comedy DVD sales have been extraordinarily high in recent years- with standup comedians reaching the top ten in the charts at Christmas time. In 2011, Sarah Millican’s DVD ‘Chatterbox Live’ became the highest selling British DVD from a female comedian of all time.

Newspapers and magazines have even started publishing a list of the ‘top DVD’s as presents in the months leading up to the big C. Comedy finds its way into the lists, of course.

However, when the festivities are over, the comedians see in the New Year knowing that their time to shine is over for another year. Most comedy DVDs are released in November, as earlier in the year they will rarely reach the top 40 in the charts. However, the same cannot be said for comedy programmes and films; which remain largely popular 365 days a year, year in, year out.

‘Now loads of people are totally bypassing that, sticking their finger up to Edinburgh and TV’

Funny books have also started flying off the shelves in high numbers in the last few years. Bookseller websites offer a ‘best-selling in humour’ list for shoppers and comedian biographies are often found in the top 20 best sellers. Does it also seem that more and more comedians are sharing their life stories lately? If they are, we can hardly complain can we?

Comedy in music has still not seen the success that DVDs and books currently enjoy… and will it ever? The future looks tough for funny singers as even Chris Moyles, who is adored by millions, couldn’t find much success. December 2012 saw the release of his ‘Difficult Second Album’ and all Mr Moyles received for his hard work was a big fat pile of criticisms and complaints. One critic wrote that the album was ‘the musical equivalent of a rotting fish left behind a radiator by a twisted departing tenant’. Maybe it will just take the right kind of funny to wise crack the music industry.

 

So, despite its growing popularity and huge success since 2010, the comedy industry still has some room left for you bright talented stars that fancy yourself a bit of the stagelight. The future is bright. The future is funny.

Posted in Upcoming Comedians

Mark Smith

“I used to feel my bottom lip going, like I was going to cry”

mark smithLook out for this man- five years into his career in comedy, Mark Smith has seen so much success- but I bet you still don’t know who he is.

One of posh schooling’s finest funny boys, Mark found that he is a big fan of comedy after visiting a friend at  his university, and getting more out of the experience than he bargained for.

“I ended up writing sketches with him and Simon Bird and I thought Ah, this is quite cool- I might try this.”
Inspired by all the laughs, Mark went back to his own university and performed for the first time in the spotlight.
“I was terrible, obviously. Everyone is when they start. When I used to do public speaking I would feel my bottom lip going, like I was going to cry.”

Was that enough to put him off? Hell, no. Self-proclaimed sadistic at the start of his career, Mark got back up on the stage despite his fright and, luckily for us, grabbed a mic.

“I liked it enough to try it again. Within a year I’d done about 30 gigs- I wasn’t very good at anything else so I thought why not carry on?”

So what does Mark actually do now to try and break through to our funny bones?

“We do a double act, the other guy is called Max Dickins and we performed at Edinburgh in 2011. To be honest: now it’s just a podcast every couple of weeks on iTunes.

“We just talk sh*t for about half an hour. It’s quite nice- it’s a laugh.

“At the minute, though, I’m writing my first hour for Edinburgh this year- it’s quite stressful but it’s quite exciting as well. A whole hour on stage just you and a microphone seems so daunting.”

After appearing on Russell Howard’s Good News and being involved in the scripting, filming and editing of an impressive number of comedy programmes and appearances, what more can Mark do in taking the comedy scene by storm?

“The overall goal is to one day have my own tour. Just have my own little thing that I can go wherever and just do that.  I’d like to do it properly and have a mini-bus, like a party bus.

“I know it sounds soppy but I’d just like to be a better standup.”

Skillful standup and podcast pro; Mark loves the travelling part of the business and the varying crowds around the country.

“It’s good because you have such different audiences in different parts of the country. In smaller places they’re much more grateful, much more up for it and they’re a better crowd because of it.”
So, watch out fellow comedians, Mark Smith is out to win it all.

Follow him @marksmithcomedy.

Posted in Upcoming Comedians

James Acaster

James AcasterIf you haven’t been acquainted with James Acaster’s comedy yet, you soon will be. Since starting his comedy career back in 2008, James has moulded himself into an engaging and exciting   comedian, performing all over the UK and firmly establishing himself as one of the most intriguing and original voices of the new comic generation.

A self confessed show off, James Acaster first got into standup after his music career fell through. “I got quite bored. I used to be in a band and when the band stopped I started doing standup. It was just a way of filling the evening and not being bored. The more I did it the more I enjoyed it and it kind of took over.”

Influenced by comedians such as Eddie Izzard and Daniel Kitson; James has found that the more he performs the more he has enjoyed being part of the comedy world. “It’s exciting just creating something a bit different; being able to create your own world and start writing all these jokes that are fitting together in some way, to make up a little world of your own that people can enter into and inhabit as an audience.”

Acaster was nominated for the Edinburgh Comedy Award after he performed a string of events at the 2012 Edinburgh Fringe Festival. Speaking about his time at the festival he said: “The festival was stressful and long but all in all it’s a mixed experience. You’ll have some of the best gigs you’ve had all year you’ll have some of the toughest ones. It’s just a different crowd every night and you’ve got to take each show on its own individual merit and make sure you give them your best every night.”

Speaking on the state of the industry, James Acaster believes that the comedy world is open to anyone but it is self awareness that separates the boys from the men. “It’s probably fairly straight forward to make a living out of but it’s very hard to get good at and make a mark. Most comics are naturally funny and naturally witty, but I think self-awareness is the most crucial thing and it’s more important for a comic to be aware of how they come across and understand themselves on stage rather than being clever. The main thing that most comics have in common is this self awareness and understanding of themselves.”

Despite the new influx of comedians, morale in the standup world is as high as ever and standup comedians are keen to support others. “Most comedians tend to get on very well with each other and if there’s any competition, the competition only serves to make you write better and not become lazy.”

“Most acts are obsessed with constantly honing and getting better because it doesn’t really ever stop. You always want to improve.”

Follow James on Twitter @JamesAcaster

Posted in Jongleurs Comedy Club

The Queen of Clubs

MARIA KEMPINSKA

Thirty years ago, Maria Kempinska founded the most successful chain of comedy clubs in Britain. Some believe Jongleurs is responsible for giving a leg up to many of today’s most famous comedians. But, despite it’s popularity, the franchise has recently been pulled back from the brink by the very woman who founded it. And she can only see the franchise getting bigger and better.

Maria Kempinska, the daughter of Polish immigrants, opened the first Jongleurs club in Battersea in 1983. Having attended the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, she was inspired to create a place to showcase emerging comedians.

She said, “I was interested in new talent for the public at large and knew that there were few openings. I also wanted a comfortable and supportive ambience that would encourage new and experienced acts.”

Soon after the Battersea venue, other Jongleurs sprang up and by 2000 there were eight clubs across the country.

It hasn’t always been smooth sailing for the franchise. The venues were bought up by the Regent Inns pubs chain, which went into administration not long afterwards and many were sold off or closed. But Maria and her business partner Jonathon Davy had retained the rights to the brand and set about rebuilding the brand from the ground up. Soon after Regent Inns went bust, new Jongleurs clubs opened up in Hammersmith, Notting Hill and Bournemouth. The franchise faced legal trouble when Lee Evans sued the chain for using his image without consent back in 2010. But apart from the odd hiccup, Jongleurs has had an almost meteoric rise to success.

Now there are 14 venues up and down the country, from Portsmouth to Glasgow. But Maria isn’t planning on stopping there:

“Jongleurs will develop even further with more clubs and larger shows. UK standup may go down the ‘pay to play’ route in the smaller clubs unless we can maintain a standard of comedy that is worth paying for.”

She believes British standup has altered a lot in the last 30 years, with more focus on televised comedy:

“The style of acts has become homogenised and their content is becoming less radical. There are far more smaller clubs where comedians can practice their new material and there is more interest from television, as it is an inexpensive method of producing programmes.”

Jongleurs itself has been the staging area for several programmes dedicated to the acts that have performed there, with shows such as Cabaret at the Jongleurs, Live at Jongleurs and Jongleurs Unleashed. With so many years of history and hundreds of comedians having stepped onto a jongleurs stage, Maria is too polite to single out one comedian to call her favourite:

“There are seriously too many acts to pick out one individual but no one has beaten the wierd sketch group, The Greatest Show on Legs to date. I love Jerry Sadovitz and many anarchic comedians. But I also love Micky Flannagan, Tom Stade, Eddie Izzard, Rory Bremner and other interesting acts.

My favourite Jongleurs moment has to be Arthur Smith telling a joke in French which a member of the au dience had to translate line by line.”

Audience interaction often plays a big part in many comedians’ acts. But what is the Jongleurs stance on the often anti-social practice of heckling?

“No one is barred for good heckling. If someone adds to the night then it all becomes part of the show. People are thrown out if they are racist, disruptive or violent. Stupidity cannot be censored.”

The same goes for the comedians performing at the clubs. In the past, acts have been asked to cut material that could be seen as too racist, misogynistic or homophobic. Apart from that, almost anyone has the chance to perform there:

“Most acts that perform at Jongleurs are unknown. They must be funny and be able to to sustain their act for 20 minutes that’s all the credentials they need.”

Maria herself will be trying her hand at standup comedy for the charity Soldiering On, which raises funds for injured servicemen and women, and admits she is more than a little nervous.

“I’ve been told often enough women are not funny so have a very big hurdle to get over, so let’s see what happens. And yes I am totally petrified!”

It seems the only way is up for Jongleurs. With hopes to go global, the future of the franchise looks promising.

As for the future of British standup, she believes the industry depends on maintaining a high standard of comedy that is worth paying for:

“In Los Angeles comedians are paid $15 per slot even for the famous names. I hope we don’t get to that point or the best comedians could choose to go into a new profession.”

Maria will be performing her standup for the Soldiering On Through Life Trust at the Covent Garden Jongleurs on May 9th.

For more information visit www.jongleurs.com