Comedy Writing Workbook
Comedy Writing Workbook
Comedy Writing Workbook
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Perret, Gene. Comedy writing workbook / Gene Perret. p. cm. Originally published: New York : Sterling Pub. Co., 1990. Includes index. ISBN 0-88734-647-2 I. Title. PN6149.A88P46 1994 94-20150 808.7-dc20 CIP
CONTENTS
BEFORE YOU BEGIN 6
23
35
42
50
57
65
73
84
91
100
108
116
123
127
132
142
151
160
174
178
185
When we first learn to drive a car we don't know what to do or how to do it. We aren't sure we can steer or work the pedals. We practise and we learn. Anyone who plays a musical instrument remembers struggling to get everything to work togetherreading the notes, moving your fingers to the right place, getting your hands to do what your mind was telling them to do. It wasn't easy. Now you do all that with ease, probably not even thinking about what you're doing. There are countless other examplestyping, knitting, mathematics. You know from experience that the more you do something, the better you get at it. Another reason for practice, though, is to fine tune skills you already haveto go back and review basics. I've always been a hacker on the golf course. If I break a hundred it's champagne for everybody. Most of the folks I play with are in the same class. It would always amuse me to see how our games could fluctuate. One playing partner would come out to the tee having just taken a lesson or read a new tip in the golf magazine. He'd concentrate so much on that pointer that he'd hit the ball magnificentlyfor about three holes. Then he'd get cocky. He'd feel he knew all there was to know about golf. He'd start adding a little flourish to his followthrough. Then he'd being playing worse than he did before the lesson. A good solid performance in any endeavor depends on all elements working together. If you allow any part of your performance to deteriorate, it can cause everything to collapse. That's why you want to review your techniques periodically, and brush up on those that are lacking. I once asked a tennis player while we were warming up before a match if he wanted me to hit him some lobs so he could practise his overhead smash. He said, "No, I never practise overheads because I'm lousy at them." Maybe he was "lousy" at them because he never practised them. If you spot a weakness in your skills, that's what you should attack with heavy-duty effort. In my own writing work I sometimes notice that my jokes are getting too literal. I haven't been letting them blossom out into fanciful or wacky references. They're not zany enough. So I force myself to write some "crazy" gags. Sometimes I get lazy and do the majority of my gags on the same subjects. That means I need to go back to basics and begin listing more references before I start the actual comedy writing. You hear the same things from people in every profession. Chris Evert wins a tennis tournament but says she wants to work on improving her serve to get ready for Wimbledon. Jack Nicklaus wants to add some distance to his drives. A college team is ranked number one in the nation and the coach says he isn't happy with the team's defensive work. Perfecting your craft is a never-ending duty. It's like properly maintaining a house. By the time you paint the outside, the inside needs wallpapering. After you clean up the backyard, the front lawn needs mowing. Keeping your skills in order is the same. It's a matter of constant checking and practising with workouts such as these. Consistent practice, too, keeps your skills sharp. Once, when I was producing Welcome Bac\, Kotter, we had a scene that involved a school yard basketball game. I visited the set, and the performers on the show were shooting the basketball at the hoop we had set up on the stage. I used to be a fair basketball player when I was a kida good shooter. So I called for the ball. They couldn't refuse since I was the producer. I dribbled twice, threw the ball toward the basket, and missed by about five feet. The ball sailed over the backboard and knocked over some scenery on the next set. Everyone laughed but me. I hadn't played basketball in 20 years, but I thought the eye
and the coordination would be the same as it was when I was a kid. It wasn't. If skills aren't used, they disappearto "skill heaven" or somewhere. Working out regularly is one way to keep them. There's a fringe benefit to constant practice, too. It happens automatically. That bonus is experience. There's no substitute for experience; there's no shortcut. You can't get it from reading or watching; you only get it from doing. These workouts, though, are doing. Practice is doing. Therefore, the more time you spend practising, the more experience you have. In your effort to succeed, your first duty is to be good, to learn your craft well. If your desire were to be a concert pianist, wouldn't it be wise for you to learn to play the piano? Many variables affect your success, but perfecting your skills is one that you can control. You can study and practise whether you have connections in the business or not. Even if you can't get an audition or a tryout, you can still get better and better. And if you get good enoughwhich is usually up to yousuccess can't hide from you. You have to make it. Excellence is usually in short supply, but there is a high demand for it. If you have it, someone will find you. How you use this book is completely up to you. The suggestions are on these pages, but the effort is your decision. You're the one who will decide how much effort to give to each workout. Of course, you're the one who will reap the benefits, too. The workouts will certainly make demands on your time. This is not the kind of book that you read through and set aside. It may take many months to complete the exercises. Don't rush through. The benefit, remember, is not in completing them; it's in doing them. Of course, you don't want to work through them too sluggishly, either. Sometimes postponing the work allows you to forget about it all together. These workouts serve no purpose unless you do them. So set your own pace. Be demanding but not ridiculous with your scheduling. Take as much time as you need, but keep working. A consistent, steady work pace is more beneficial than a quick, "Get it out of the way and move on to the next one" routine. I strongly recommend that the first time through this book, you do the workouts in order. Complete all the exercises in Chapter One before moving on to Chapter Two, Chapter Three, and so on. Don't skip any of them. Later, you can return to this book and redo the workouts in any order you like, but the first time through, do them allin order. I urge this for several reasons: First, it's good discipline. If there's any trait that is an absolute requirement for a writer it's disciplineboth in work habits and technique. Second, doing all of the exercises in proper sequence eliminates the temptation to skip over those that are difficult or tedious. You might become like the tennis player who didn't want to practise overheads because he was lousy at them. You might say, "I don't want to work with words because I have a horrible vocabulary." That's exactly why you should do the workout on words. Third, many of the workouts in the book depend upon both knowledge and material that you gathered from previous workouts. Attacking them out of sequence or skipping selected workouts would weaken the overall benefit of the book. It is a workbook, so it will be work. Not much is ever accomplished without some effort. Sean O'Casey said, "When I stepped from hard manual work to writing, I just stepped from one kind of hard work to another." Toil, however, can seem less tedious when you're having fun. Have fun with all the workouts.
Chapter One
However, that's another fringe benefit of watching the best: it can generate the passion we need to work hard at our craft. It can make us zealous enough to practise and perfect our technique, and perhaps eventually become as skillful as the masters we watch. Even the professionals watch other professionals. Why? Because they learn from them, too. They keep current. They discover innovations. To stay with our tennis example a little longer: years ago most top'level players hit all their shots one-handed. When young Chris Evert began learning the sport, she was so small that she couldn't handle the racket that well. So she swung at her backhand shots with two hands. It became a habit for her and she stayed with it. She ruled women's tennis for many years with that unorthodox swing. Others watched and decided to try it. Today, in the pro ranks there are just about as many top professionals using a two-handed backhand as there are using the more traditional one-handed swing. These first few workouts are designed to get you to watch the masters of comedy. They're supposed to force you to notice the techniques, and the strategies that the best use. By practising these workouts you'll see how they do what they do and why they do what they do. You'll be inspired, excited, and enthused by them. "Vbu won't be doing much actual writing in these first few workouts. However, don't mistakenly conclude that because you're not putting pen to paper, these work' outs are less important than the writing assignments that will come later in the book. Of all the writing workouts, these first few are probably the most universally practised by professionals. I have asked many comedy writers what they do when they're not in the mood to write or when the assignment is not one that they want to attack. I wanted to know how they forced themselves to get to the word processor to complete their chores. Most of them said they watched, listened to, or read the masters. One gentleman said, "I play just a few minutes of tape. I listen to the comedian I'm writing for It only takes a few jokes of his to get me into his comedy timing and to inspire me. After that the jokes'start flowing." Another watched videotapes for the same reason. A third writer said, "I go back and read some of the jokes I wrote for that same person a few months ago. It not only reminds me of that comedy rhythm, but it also convinces me that I wrote pretty good jokes then, and I can do it again." The professionals in almost every field use this tactic. So attack this first chapter of workouts with vigor. They'll improve your comedy writing immediately, and in the long run, they'll help you steadily improve your writing until it's of professional quality. So let's get to it. Let's go to Wimbledon.
= W O R K O U T 1A =
"My Collection of Favorite Jo\es"
This is primarily a research workout, ^fou'll get to read, look, and listen, to discover some of the good comedy that's being done by others.
"You'll uncover interesting things about your own tastes and sense of humor. \fou may discover you like comics that you dismissed earlier. You may be surprised to learn that the type of jokes you prefer are not the ones you thought you would. With 25 jokes to study and analyze, you'll begin to uncover patterns. Those trends will indicate the direction in which your own comedy style should move. "Vfou'll recognize how good the best humorists can be (They're not always great, but when they are, they're magnificent). It will give you a goal to shoot for in your own work. "Vfou won't be as ready to settle for mediocre after seeing how good it can get.
1. Bob Hope did this line when America was having trouble with its space program. Each rocket we fired failed and fell into the ocean. The Russians had already successfully launched Sputnik, but we hadn't yet sent a rocket into space. On the day of the Bob Hope telecast, another launch had just aborted into the Atlantic Ocean. He said: "Well, I guess you heard the good news from Cape Canaveral. The United States just launched another submarine." I like this for several reasons. First it was topical. The event just happened that day and everyone was talking about it. Second, it was great audience misdirection. We all thought the news from Cape Canaveral was bad news; he said it was good. Our ears perked up to find out what was good about it. Third, the punchline was kept hidden until the very last wordsubmarine. That one word changed the meaning of the entire statement.
2. Johnny Carson did this line on the night of the giant earthquake that hit the Los Angeles area in 1971. He opened his show that night by saying: "The 'God is Dead' meeting that was scheduled for tonight, has been cancelled." Again, it was topical, just a few hours old. And it was being talked about. It said by implication that all those folks who experienced the quake said a little prayer, whether they ever prayed before or not.
3. Will Rogers was asked about his political affiliation. He said: "I belong to no organized political party. I'm a Democrat." I love the way this line leads the audience in one direction and then tricks them. The first sentence is a standard cop-out from someone who doesn't want to reveal his politics. Then he changes it with the second sentence. He is saying in effect, "I'm a Democrat, but they're not organized."
4. Jay Leno said: "Did you read where this is National Condom Week? Hey now, there's a parade you won't want to miss." I love this line because it creates such a bizarre image. It's topical, but that's not the important part of this joke. It's also a little naughty, but not offensive. I think it's a bright comment that paints a funny picture.
5. Phyllis Diller said: "My husband, Fang, drinks too much. He cut himself shaving this morning, and he bled so bad his eyes cleared up." This joke paints a delightful graphic image. It says that his eyes were bloodshot without really saying it. It implies it.
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6. Here's a Rodney Dangerfield classic: "My father gave me a bat for Christmas. First time I tried to play with it, it flew away." I like this one because of the silly picture it paints, too. But this one also tricks the audience. Practically everyone thinks of a baseball bat, then the last few words tell us that it was a bat that lives in a cave. It's a goofy gift for a father to give a son. Funny joke.
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7- Jackie Mason had a line that went something like the following. I'm paraphras' ing: "My grandfather always told me, "Don't look after your money; look after your health." One day I was looking after my health, I found out my money was gone. My grandfather took it." It's a longer style of joke, but it misdirects the audience. All of us believe in the grandfatherly advice that we get from the older generation. They seem so wise, and that's the way Jackie Mason paints his grandpa. It's not until the last four words that we realize the old geezer was a crook. We've been fooled and we laugh. * * * * 8.1 loved this Henny "foungman joke. Again I'm reconstructing it from memory: "My son kept coming to me every day complaining about headaches. Every dayheadaches, headaches, headaches. I said to him, 'How many times do I have to tell you? When you get out of the bed in the morning, feet first.' " I like it because it's a funny picture and because you never see the punchline coming. None of us would guess that the kid dives out of bed each morning and lands on the floor on his head. But itis logical. If he did that, he'd have a headache.
9. Phyllis Diller has a line about her mother'in'law, a large lady she calls "Moby Dick." "Moby Dick gave me one of her old dresses the other day. I plan to have it starched and made into a summer home." I love the image this joke creates, and the fact that you can't see the punchline coming. \bu wonder what good one of those old dresses would be, then the comic gives you a zany, but logical use for it. 10. This last is a Phyllis Diller line, too. It kids her bad cooking. She tells about the time a "grease fire broke out in my sink": "The firemen put it out quickly, but three of them had to be treated for food inhalation." I like this one because the punchline is perfectly disguised. Up until the last two words, it's a normal statement. Substituting "food inhalation" for "smoke inhalation" turns the sentence completely around. It surprises the listeners; it makes it funny.
= WORKOUT IB =
"My Collection cf Favorite Quotes"
This workout is largely research, too. It might involve even more extensive research than Workout LA \fou're going to be looking for one'liners that have withstood the test of time. Ifou want to find some classic, but funny, quotes.
There are 15 different topics. Find at least one quote on each topic; the remaining 10 you can distribute in any fashion you like. Use a reference book for your research. Don't rely on your memory. First, memory can be inaccurate. % u may remember the wording differently from the original, and it's the original that holds the lesson. Second, in looking up the quote, you will read and consider many other quotes. The ones you don't choose can be as helpful in the learning process as those you do. 2. Assemble your collection of quotes, along with the authors' names, on paper. Save them. \bu may want to use them in later workouts.
In
Death: "It's not that I'm afraid to die, I just don't want to be there when it happens." Woody Alien
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Laughter: "He who laughs has not yet heard the bad news." Bertoit Brecht
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Cynicism.: "A cynic is a man who when he smells flowers, looks around for a coffin." H. L. Mencken
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Gossip: "If you can't say something good about someone, sit right here by me." Alice Roosevelt Longworth
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Marriage: "Marriage is a great institution; but I'm not ready for an institution." Mae West
Courtship: "She was a lovely girl. Our courtship was fast and furiousI was fast and she was furious." Max Kauffmann
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War: "War is only a cowardly escape from the problems of peace." Thomas Mann
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Friends: "Your friend is the man who knows all about you, and still likes you." Elbert Hubbard
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Virtue: "What, after all, is a halo? It's only one more thing to keep clean." Christopher Fry
Acting: 'The important thing; in acting is to be able to laugh and cry. If I have to cry, I think of my sex life. If I have to laugh, I think of my sex life." Glenda Jac\son
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Health: "Be careful about reading health books. "Vbu may die of a misprint." Mar\ Twain
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Intellectuals (real or supposed): "People who refer to themselves as intellectuals are automatically committing a social crime and, also, usually an error." Tracy Young
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= WORKOUT IC =
"My Collection of My Favorite's Favorites"
This research workout will be more fun because it's custom designed to your taste in comedy. Workouts 1A and IB extended your comedy awareness. They forced you to read and listen to other humorists to get you out of your comfortable comedy rut. Now Workout IC lets you back into that "comfort zone."
Then a week or so later, I chose different topics from the daily papers and tried to duplicate the form of Hope's monologue with the different subjects. It was great practice and I recommend it. Here are a few of his lines that I especially like: 'Tbu're only as young as you feel. When I get up in the morning, I don't feel anything until noon. By then it's time for my nap." "I go for a swim every single day. It's either that or buy a new golf ball." "I think travel is very educational. I can now say 'Kaopectate' in seven different languages." * "When I was a kid I slept in one bed with six brothers. We had one bed'wetter. It took us two years to find out who it was." "I like politicians who pray a lot. It keeps their hands up where we can see them." * "I always carry tranquilizers with me when I fly The hard part is getting the stewardesses to take them." * "I have the perfect simplified tax form for our government. Why don't they just print our money with a return address on it?" * "I had a flight attendant on the last flight who was so old, after she demonstrated the oxygen mask she left it on." * > "We've had a lot of mudslides in California lately. I was driving to work the other day, glanced out the window, and my house was making better time than I was." * * * "I like to play golf with Jerry Ford. \bu don't have to keep score; you just look back along the fairway and count the wounded."
(When he spo\e about the fire at his house in Palm Springs): "It's a terrible feeling to wake up one morning and find out that the black cloud hanging over Los Angeles used to be your home in Palm Springs."
(In reply to the question: "How's your golf game?") "If it was a boxing match, they'd stop it." There's a fantastic doz^n that should tell much about my comedy preferences. %ur selection will educate you about your style, too. Dig those lines out and have fun doing it.
= WORKOUT ID =
"My Collection of Favorite Cartoons*
This workout is largely research, too. It's similar to the other workouts in Chapter One except that it adds another elementthe visual.
I like this because it reminds me of so many people like thispeople who try the silliest things in the face of overwhelming odds. The caption carries this idea to the ultimate. The drawing clearly shows that no one could ever be more helpless than these two, yet the one guy still has an idea that he thinks might work.
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2. A sleepy father in pajamas and slippers is passing the room where his two sons are sound asleep with two large dogs on the bed with them. The Dad has tossed a cat in, and the drawing catches the cat in mid'flight. There is terror in the cat's eyes, and his hair is standing on end. The dad simply says: "Time to get up, boys." I like this one because it begins a story that the reader must finish. Anyone looking at that cartoon knows that all hell is going to break loose when that cat lands in the vicinity of those dogs. The reader will write his own funny material in his own mind.
3. This drawing shows cattle as far as the eye can see. They are grazing peacefully on the hillsideexcept for two who are in the foreground. They look sneaky. Their heads are lowered and their eyes seem to be scanning the surrounding area. One whispers to the other: 'The stampede's at midnight. Pass it on." I like this because it's so wacky, so zany. To me, it's a funny idea that cattle actually plan stampedes the way prisoners plan breaks. The devious look in the eyes of those steers made the cartoon a gem.
4. This cartoon shows two men suspended from a dungeon wall, chained there by the wrists. One of the men has been there quite some time. He has tattered clothing, long hair and a beard. The other gentleman looks rather sprightly He is a well' dressed court jester. Obviously, he's just been chained in the cell. With obvious enthusiasm, he says to the veteran prisoner: "I had 'em rolling in the aisles until I inadvertently mentioned the Queen's moustache." Frankly, I like this one because it has to do with the comedy profession. However, I think it's a great joke even aside from that. I can almost see the backstory, the incidents that lead up to his being chained in a dungeon. He was going good. He had everyone laughing, then he got carried away He said something he shouldn't have. The Queen stopped laughing. With just a few words and expressions on cartoon faces, an entire comic short story comes alive in my mind.
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5. This one shows a knight sitting on a bench in battle mail. Beside him sits a court jester. The knight says: "I don't see how you ever think 'em up." As a joke writer, I hear that comment many times. Seeing it in a cartoon fractured me. It's not so funny aside from that. However; that's a valid lesson, too. Humor has added impact when it hits the audience squarely between the eyes.
Chapter Two
As we develop a good working knowledge of language, we can use the inherent nuances in words to enhance the subtlety of our comedy ideas. The pen is mightier than the sword, but only if we work hard to keep it sharper. The following workouts will give you an appreciation for the playfulness of the English language, and help you learn how to use it to complement your own sense of humor. So let's get to them. Make way for the Segovias of comedy
= WORKOUT 2A =
"A Rose by Any Other Tiame"
If a softball pitcher delivers an underhand pitch, it means that he or she is throwing the ball legally That's the way the rules say you must pitch in softball. If a business person makes an underhand deal, it means he or she is doing something illegal or unethical. Same word, same spelling, totally different meaning. This workout will reveal how deceptive the English language can be. Words that seem to mean one thing can mean something else. Words that appear to have an obvious definition, can have several hidden meanings, too. It will also point out how flexible words can be. We can use different meanings at different times or different meanings at the same time.
2. to travel by airplane 3. to cause something to float on air currents, as in "fly a kite" Npte: Some may argue that these are all the same meaning, but they aren't when you're actually using them. A bird flying to Pittsburgh is much different than you flying to Pittsburgh. In fact, there's an old joke, based on this difference, that night' club comics used to use: "Ladies and gentlemen, I just flew in from Pittsburgh, and, boy, are my arms tired!" And the verbs in definition 1 and definition 3 are different in that one is passive and one is active. The kite isflying,but you areflyingthe kite. 4. a winged insect 5. a ball hit into the air 6. the front opening in a pair of trousers 7. a type offishinglure 8. the area above a stage or proscenium 9. to lift people or scenery in stage lingo. 'Toflythe scenery" is to lift it off the stage and hide it in the area out of view above the stage. 'Toflyperformers" is to lift them into the air and suspend them above the stage. 10. to travel or run fast, as in "They wereflyingdown the highway" 11. to gather momentum, as in "I started slow, but I'm reallyflyingnow." 12. to pass swiftly, as in 'Time flies." 13. to avoid or shun, as in "to fly from trouble" 14. a disease in turnips 15. a hackney carriage 16. the outer canvas of a tent 17. the frame that takes the sheets from the cylinder of a printing press.
= WORKOUT 2B =
"Mrs. Malaprop's Affliction"
In the previous workout we saw how one word can have differentsometimes contradictorymeanings. In this workout we'll see that one meaning can often have several words assigned to it. These are malapropisms. A malapropism is a ridiculous misuse of words, usually through the confusion caused by a resemblance in sound. For instance, someone might say, "I was feeling peppy when I woke up this morning, but now I'm beginning to feel a little dyspeptic." "Dyspeptic" in this instance is being used to mean "not peppy" It may sound like that, but it doesn't mean that. Of course, we all know the meaning of the words, "in alphabetical order," right? Wrong. Consider Casey Stengel's instructions to his players at spring training: "I want you all to line up in alphabetical order, according to your size." Again, we see that words are trickythey're playful. They can sound like they mean a certain thing when they really don't. In many cases, the "sound'alike" meaning can be more graphic than the real meaning. In writing comedy, we can take advantage of this phenomenon. In this workout, you'll be creating humorous malapropisms of your own, beginning from scratch.
Looking beyond the obvious is good training for a comedy writernot only with words, but also with ideas. This workout will teach you to associate one idea with another. When you find the given word, you are forced to search for sound'alikes. "Deter" could sound like "inter," "intern," "defer," "detour," "demure" and who'knows'howmany others. Searching for related words and meanings is good practice for later workouts when you'll be searching for related ideas and concepts as the basis of your humor.
2. 'The boss called me in and told me my services were being exterminated." The speaker meant "terminated."
3. "I've loved writing comedy ever since I was in my infantry." I think this person enjoyed writing since he was a small child; not since he served in the army He meant to say "infancy" * * * ' The next examples show a word that sounds right but is wrong. However, that wrong word gives a different twist, a funny twist, to the original sentence. 4. "The parson gave such a great sermon that the congregation gave him a standing donation." "Ovation" is the correct word here, but perhaps the parson would have preferred a "donation." 5. "I was such a great lover on my honeymoon that my wife gave me a standing ovulation." "Ovation" again is the proper word, but the incorrect word definitely changes the meaning, and the humor content, of this sentence.
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6. "I was on my best behavior with this blind date. I think I made a terrific first depression on the girl." 'Terrific first impression" connotes a positive reaction; "terrific first depression" is much different. This is funny because the man obviously thinks he did well, but what he is saying probably is closer to the truth. The last examples are malapropisms in which the speaker seems completely obhV ious to the meaning of the key words in the sentencebut each one makes its point!
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7- Samuel Goldwyn is reported to have said this: "A verbal agreement isn't worth the paper it's written on." It's hard to tell which Mr. Goldwyn was misusing, the phrase "verbal agreement," or the proverbial "paper it's written on."
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8. The Commanding officer announced, "Dress uniforms this evening will be strictly optional, and that's an order." I don't know precisely what he meant, but I'd wear my dress uniform just to be safe.
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9. 'Anyone who is absent from tonight's meeting will be sent home imme' diately." Pretty severe punishment for someone who isn't even there. I wonder if they will be physically carried out by the Sergeant'at'Arms?
= WORKOUT 2C =
"The Dictionary Must Be Wrong"
Words are mischievous, too, in that many times they're not the sum of their parts. For instance, "defile" means to insult, to soil, to tarnish; however, it sounds like the file drawer that you'd find between the Ofile and the E'file. Comedy writers can capitalize on this playfulness that's built into the language. We can use either the literal definition or the sound-alike meaning. In this workout we'll explore this phenomenon.
debase: what you slide into when you steal second debun\: the technical term for pushing a sailor out of bed. deduce: de card in de deck between de ace and de trey
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diatribe: what you do when you change the color of a whole group of Indians at the same time.
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intense: where Lawrence of Arabia kept his soldiers. * * pragmatic: an electronic machine that makes prags.
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snapdragon: a mythical lizard'like animal whose religious beliefs forbid the use of either buttons or dippers.
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= WORKOUT 2D =
"So You Wanna Be 7>loah Webster"
This workout is similar to Wforkout 2C, except that it approaches from a different direction. In this case, you'll have to manufacture a reasonably logical definition for a word that you don't know the meaning o Therefore, your only frame of reference will be the sound of the syllables or your assumed meaning of them.
sprent: what a drunk claims he did with all his money. * * * * stibiated: the logical conclusion one comes to when there are no doughnuts left in the box, and a lad named "Stibby" is the only one with powdered sugar around his mouth. Actually, "prunella" is a disorder of the jaws or throat; "sprent" is the obsolete past tense and past participle of the verb "spreng"; and "stibiated" means to be impregnated with antimony, which is a silvery-white, metallic chemical substance.
= WORKOUT 2E =
"Fun With Puns"
We've had some fun with words in this chapter. This last workout will give us a chance to do some research and see how past masters have played with words. Puns have been maligned as the lowest from of humor. They aren't. They can be and often are, but so are other bad jokes. A good pun can be a funny joke and a fascinating use of language. Oscar Levant said, 'A pun is the lowest form of humor when you don't think of it first."
Then there's one about a man who accidentally swallowed some varnish. It killed him, but they say he had a fine finish. * * * * Then there was the man who complained to his wife that the coffee tasted like mud. She said, "Of course it does; it was ground this morning."
= WORKOUT 2F =
11
Words often work in teams, and when they do they sometimes have a different meaning than they would individually For instance, "Get on the ball" has nothing to do with climbing onto a ball. It's a phrase that means to improve your performance. Phrases often have literal meanings that are different from their idiomatic mean' ings, and as a comedy writer, you can use either meaning or both of them. To illustrate, notice how the meaning changes as you read this following gag: "You know, I'm not drinking anymore. Of course, I'm not drinking any less, either." But the joke doesn't necessarily have to be based on double entendre. Often the meaning of the cliche lends itself to comedy. In this workout, you will analyze and pull apart phrases to find the fun that's hidden in them.
"You didn't just hit 50, man. %u beat the hell out of it."
Chapter Three
35
HI
= WORKOUT 3A =
"A Picture Is Worth a 'Thousand Punchlines"
A picture is supposed to be worth a thousand words. That's probably because a photograph can be very eloquently understated. It allows youthe viewerto do the talking. Ybu can interpret that picture any way you like. As we saw with words and with phrases, images can have a real and an imagined interpretation. In fact, several real interpretations may be possible. Is the person in the photograph going up or coming down the ladder? The humorist can assign a new and different meaning to any action in a picture. We see a boxer kneeling on the canvas. Obviously, he has been knocked down by his opponent. To the comedy writer, though, he may simply be looking for a contact lens. Or he might be praying. He can be doing anything the inventive mind of the writer wants him to be doing. In this workout you'll study photographs for hidden or different meanings and create a caption that explains your idea of what is going on.
Let's assume you're going with a photograph from a horror movie that shows a monster strangling a man. He has a garrote around his victim's throat and is pulling with all his strength. One caption might say, "Please. Igor, loosen it a little bit so I can cry out for help." That's fine, but it is leaving the action in the photograph exactly the way it was intendedthe monster is choking his victim. Another caption might say, 'Thank you, Igor, but I think I'll get someone else to help me with my bow tie." Now the action in the scene changes. The monster is not murdering the victim, he's merely helping him with the ever troublesome tying of a bow tie. It's funnier now. In trying to be friendly and helpful, he's got the hapless gentleman gasping for air Another caption may say, 'This may feel a little uncomfortable at first, but many of our clients have lost a lot of weight with this diet." Now the monster is tying a cord around the client's neck not to strangle him, but to help him lose weight.
WORKOUT 3B
"Pen and In\ Patter"
Pen and ink is mightier than the photograph. At least it's mightier in that it is more versatile. You can only photograph what actually exists; you can draw anything your mind can imagine. Therefore, you can see things in cartoons that you can't in photos. For example, with pen and ink you can show a person flattened out after being rolled over by a steamroller. We all accept that. The poor victim is only a half inch high, but everything else is in perfect proportion. The belt is still around the middle of the torso, the tie is still on, and so on. Naturally, a photograph of such a tragedy wouldn't look like that. That's the magic of cartooning. In the previous workout you captioned actual photos; in this one, you'll caption cartoons. The straight line you have to work withthe drawingcan be wackier, more bizarre.
talking to an Indian Chief What you must search for is the reason why the officer has been riddled with arrows. Here are a few possibilities: "I apologize, Chief I was always led to believe that 'How' was a. friendly Indian greeting." "Chief, I'm going to take this to mean that you weren't happy with the wording of the Peace Treaty." "General Custer warned me that you were a sneaky little % # @ $ # & . "
WORKOUT 3C
"Inanimate Playhouse"
Everything you see tells a story The photograph is real action, the cartoon is imagi' nary action, now we'll see that even inanimate objects can take actionat least in the mind. In this workout, you'll provide the image, the imagination, and the caption.
2. A plum is pictured next to a peach. The caption reads: 'The next time you expect to kiss me goodnight, Orville, you'd better shave first."
* * * * *
3. A can of sardines lies open. One solitary sardine is lying beside the can. The caption reads: "Why is it always me that has to wait for the next elevator?"
WORKOUT 3D
"Caption Tour Own"
For this workout, we're removing all restrictions on your imagination and in' ventiveness. You're free to go hog wild. \bu're going to create your own workout. It's just like a place where you make your own sundaes: you can add your favorite flavor or ice cream, your own toppings, and as much whipped cream as you like. In fact, this is so freewheeling, I'll even dispense with the normal format.
Chapter Four
Now analyze the jokes that you selected in Workout 1A. You will probably find that most of them are based on the interrelationship of two ideas. This relationship is the basis for the most humor. The comedian states the basic premise, then compares it to another idea. This second idea is often similar to the first, but it can also be opposite. It's related by being so unrelatedthe same way a word can have synonyms and antonyms. Sometimes the second idea has no connec tion with the original premise at all: it's a complete nonsequitur. As an example: "It's better to have loved and lost than to get your lip caught under a manhole cover." With these types of jokes, the second idea is often a mini'joke in itself It's a funny sounding or image'producing phrase, that would almost stand alone. For example, you could put a completely different premise before this example and have a new joke that works just as well. 'There is nothing worse than a woman scorned except maybe a woman who gets her lip caught under a manhole cover." There are three basic types of relationshipssimilar, opposite, and unrelated. Think of the word association test that psychologists give. The doctor offers a word and the patient is supposed to respond with the first word that comes to mind. The doctor could say "black"; the patient might respond "ink." That would be a similar response. However, the doctor could say "black"; the patient might say "white." That's a logical but opposite relationship. Or the doctor cduld say "black" and the patient could respond "Pee Wee Herman's undershirt." That obviously is a non'related response. It probably means the patient's either crazy or a comedy writer. Exploring these relationships is the first step in writing comedy. To get a joke on paper, you usually begin with your basic premisewhat you want to talk about and something that it's related to. Once you have those items you can begin to search for the phrasing, the wording, the expressions that you'll use to get your idea across. More importantly, though, learning to discover, uncover, and create these rela' tionshipssimilar, dissimilar, or unrelatedgive you a broader base for your comedy It gives you more ideas to select from, and it gives more variety to your comedy. You're like an artist. The more colors on your palette, the more shading, detail, and depth you can add to your painting. The following workouts will help you practise finding the relationships that will aid in your comedy writing.
= WORKOUT 4A =
"That Goes With This"
This workout will be practice in searching out similar ideas to relate to your basic premise. Below are the two basic ideas that you will be working on: 1. Mikhail Gorbachev visiting New York City in December of 1988. He travelled around the city extensively, visiting many tourist attractions and attending official meetings. He travelled, though, in a motorcade of 49 cars. That's your premisethe size of that motorcade.
2. Some years ago Queen Elizabeth II visited California and was scheduled to visit then President Reagan's Santa Barbara ranch and then enjoy some horse' back riding with the President. However, heavy rains threatened to cancel the riding. Your premise is this: The Queen and the President would ride despite the rains and wet conditions.
"Talk about bringing coals to Newcastle. Here's a man who brings his own traffic jam to New "Vbrk City." "I hope he brought along good drivers. Can you imagine how long it would take to file an accident report involving 49 cars?" Here are some of the ideas that relate to riding a horse in wet conditions, along with the resulting jokes: get a horse with webbed feet get a horse that treads water hook an outboard motor to the horse get a horse with oars get a horse that is at home in the water 'They've decided that the Queen is going to go riding despite the weather. They've finally come up with a horse that has webbed feet." "The Queen is going to go riding with the President. They got the saddles on the horses with no problem. The most difficult part was keeping the horses still while they hooked up the outboard motors." * "The Queen and the President are going to go riding today. The President shouldn't have any trouble, but it'll be hard for the Queen to row while sitting side-saddle." "The President rode his regular horse, while the Queen rode 'Shamu, the Killer Stallion.5 "
= WORKOUT 4B =
"This Doesn't Go With That"
This workout will be practice in uncovering dissimilar relationshipsthose that relate to your premise by being practically opposite. Use the same two premises that you used in Workout 4A.
Hi
"When the motorcade pulled into a corner gas station, the owner got on the phone to his wife and said, Tell Jimmy and Sue to start packing, Mom. The kids are going to college after all." Here are some of the ideas that I didn't feel were consistent with wet horseback riding, and some of the jokes that grew from them. a horse that can't swim a horse that's afraid of water a horse that doesn't have non-skid hoofs a horse that leaks a horse that stalls in wet weather 'The horse that the Queen had refused to go out in the wet conditions. They should have known better than to get a horse who had just seen the movie, Jaws, Part 2." 'The Queen's horse reared up when they got out on the trail. He was spooked by a passing school of tuna." 'The Queen almost drowned during the ride. Unfortunately, they got her a horse who only knew how to float on his back." A W O R D BEFORE Y O U S T A R T You can see that these jokes fit with the basic premise just as well as the previous jokes, though they were arrived at from a different angle. It's like having two routes to get to your destination. Both of them get you there, but they add a little variety and some options. Have fun with this workout.
Hi
= WORKOUT 4C =
"That Ma\es Absolutely JS[o Sense at All"
This workout provides practice in using the non sequitur type of relationship. This device can quickly become cloying if used too much, especially in the same routine, but it's very effective when used sparingly. It's a zany type of humor, and it adds flavor and variety to your writing.
= WORKOUT 4D =
"What Can You Say About So'and'So?"
This is a combination workout. \bu can use any of the techniques that you learned in Workout 4A, 4B, and 4C. \bur basic focus in this workout will be a familiar personality.
Chapter Five
Humor is best when it's most graphic. A good image can produce a powerful picture in the listeners mind. That enhances the comedy. Second, a good joke has a certain rhythm to it. It's a seat'ofthe'pants kind of rhythm with few rules and regulations, but the comic feels when it's right and when it's wrong. The use of imagery can sometimes stretch the punchline out to a more manageable number of syllables. It can add a lilt to the joke that helps comedy timing. In our golf game example above, the word "bastard" was too direct. It allowed no room for the joke to fall out smoothly. It came out harsh and rude. The image wording, though, came out softer. It allowed the priest to speak delicately, politely, yet offer the same insult. Third, imagery challenges the listener. It makes the audience think. Probably, when you read the story that opened this chapter you were puzzled. It made no sense to you, until you realized what the statement meant. Then you saw the humor of it. That made you a part of the story. \bu chuckled or at least smiled inwardly as a reward to yourself. "Vbu solved the puzzle. \bu figured out the punchline. That's a big part of humor. The audience likes to have something left to the imagination. They want to do part of the work. The ideal joke is one that hides just enough of the punchline to make the audience have to figure it out, but they need to be able to figure it out quickly enough so that the premise isn't destroyed. Obviously, there's no reward for a nightclub comedian in telling jokes that the audience will understand and finally laugh at as they're driving home. Imagery can hide the punchline, and still be clear enough so the listeners catch on quickly enough to enjoy it. Fourth, saying the punchline without really saying it adds some surprise, and surprise is a major part of comedy. The payload is less of a direct statement. It's less abrupt. The audience might be expecting a direct statement, but they don't hear it. Then they realize that they really did hear it, but it was disguised, hidden. That's comedy. W C. Fields, who knew a little bit about humor, said that comedy is when you expect something to break, but it only bends. In the following workouts, you'll practice substituting an alternate meaning or a visual image for some statement or idea. The work may be challenging, but it will pay hefty dividends in your comedy writing.
WORKOUT 5A
"Say It With Pictures"
Most success depends on elbow grease, burning the midnight oil, and cracking the books. Translated that means hard work, late hours, and study. But the sentence never said those things. It didn't have to. The images said them more graphically and more colorfully. "Elbow grease" is only one cliche phrase that denotes effort. There are others. "Break a sweat," "Lift that barge and tote that bale," "Keep your nose to the grindstone," and "Put your shoulder to the wheel," are other common symbols for dedicated labor. There are non'diche symbols, too. Those are the ones that inventive minds create. These can be used effectively in writing comedy I remember my mother once cheering up a friend who was having some bad luck. My Mom said, "Don't worry, Agnes. Your ship will come in." Agnes replied, "Mary, by the time my ship comes in, my pier will have collapsed." This workout will be practice in searching out symbols or images for common, ordinary words and ideas. You'll recall everyday expressions that you can use, and you'll also create some new ones.
= WORKOUT 5B =
"Say It With Funny Pictures'
This workout will use the research you did in Workout 5A to create comedy.
"She was always large. When she came down the aisle as a bride, 14 guests were overcome with snow blindness." "In that white bride's gown she looked like a Good Humor truck" * * * * ". . . with the tailgate down." I also did some similar lines many years ago for a black comedian. These came out about the time the movie Lawrence cf Arabia was playing in the first-run theatres. "I wouldn't go see that movie Lawrence <$Arabia. I can't enjoy a movie that has that many people running around in white sheets."
* * * * *
" . . . I get nervous if I see two or three Good Humor men hanging around together" Here's an example of this same comedian using imagery with the color black:
"Ifirmlybelieve what my people are saying, that *black is beautiful.' So I painted my house black, inside and out. I bought black furniture. I bought black clothing for me, my wife, and my children. First thing I lost was my bowling ball."
A W O R D BEFORE Y O U S T A R T
\bu can sense how the joke almost flowed out of the research. By doing the advance work, figuring out some references and symbols, the second part of the joke fell into place. By now you'll probably be able to sense that a joke could be written about Moby Dick wearing white, using any one of the 20 images that I listed in Workout 5A. When the preparatory work is done well, the writing becomes easier and faster, and you should be able to write more and better jokes. See if this workout doesn't prove that to be true. Have fun with it.
= WORKOUT 5C =
"The Bobsled Man's Bottom"
This workout is more complex, more difficult, and more challenging. It's also harder to explain. For that reason, I'm going to give the example now so it will be easier for you to understand how it works. Jack Benny used colorful imagery to explain comedically how blue his eyes were. He said: "My eyes are as blue as the bottom of the fourth man on a threcman bobsled team." \fou'U notice how he used a few ideas to convey his imagery. The listener has to visualize that the fourth man doesn't fit on a three'man bobsled, therefore his bottom would hang over. It would hang over onto snow. Snow is cold, and cold turns your skin blue. It's a long way to go, but the very complexity of it is funny, and the image is funny.
HERE'S W H A T Y O U D O F O R THIS W O R K O U T
Select two examples from each of the three sections in Workout 5A and try to construct visual images that roughly follow the form of Jack Benny's joke.
= WORKOUT 5D
"Say It By Not Saying It'
Someone once explained that part of the charm of comedy is that it says something people are thinking, but says it in a way they would never have thought of That's part of the purpose of this series of workoutsto learn to state ordinary ideas in an extraordinary way This workout will be good practice in converting the pedestrian to the unique.
Chapter Six
become a good enough performer to merit an appearance at the prestigious Carnegie Hall? What's interesting is that none of these phrases is forced or unnatural. Each one is a well'phrased, grammatically correct, easily understood sentence. And the meaning is obviouswe think. However, each has another meaninga secondary interpretation. Probably, each one has a third and fourth interpretation, too. Most sentences, no matter how well constructed or how carefully thought out by the author, do have secondary meanings. Take for example, this simple declarative sentence: "I want to go home." The meaning of that seems obvious. But is it? What is the speaker really saying? You can give three different shadings to that sentence just by saying it with different emphasis. Try it. Say it three times, each time emphasizing the underlined word. Like this: I want to go home. I want to go home. I want to go home. You can hear the difference. The first means the speaker is the one who wants to leave. Someone else probably doesn't, but the speaker doesn't care who else goes along. He or she is definitely heading homeward. The second denotes a strong desire, a goal. There are obstacles. It may not be possible to head home. Who knows? But this person definitely wants to go and may not get there. The third emphasizes where the speaker is going. Others may want to go to a movie. They may want to stay right where they are. None of that matters. The speaker has only one destination and is ready to fight off all other possibilities. Sometimes, the alternate meaning might come from the words themselves. For example, this innocent question, "Can you tell me how I can get to Broad and Market streets?" can have at least three different shades of meanings. The reply to the obvious meaning would be, "Go straight ahead two blocks, then turn right." However, if you emphasize the first word, "Can," the response might simply be, "Yes." Emphasize the word, "I," and the answer might be, "The same as everyone else gets there." We can use these alternate meanings for comedy. How? Groucho Marx showed us with this line from one of his films in which he was on safari: "Last night I shot a lion in my pajamas. How he got in my pajamas I'll never know." The joke obviously needs no explanation, but the mechanics of it might. We assume from the first sentence that Groucho was the one wearing the pajamas. He tells us in the next sentence that he wasn't. Doing these workouts with alternate meanings is good training in looking beyond the obvious. Most sentences have a primary meaning, an interpretation that hits you right between the eyes. The creative writer learns to go further. Looking beyond the
obviousnot just with sentences, but with thoughts and ideasis a major facet of humor. These workouts will help you to analyze your sentences for hidden meanings. That skill serves a comedy writer well. Much of comedy creating is investigative. "Vbu have to pull a topic, an idea, a subject apart before you can write well about it. These workouts are good practice. The workouts emphasize the element of surprise in humor. The primary meaning is so strong that most people migrate to that one. When the comedian springs a second or third meaning on them, it stuns them. It surprises the audience and produces the laugh. These workouts should be fun, enlightening, and beneficial.
= WORKOUT 6A =
"But It Could Also Mean"
This workout is practice in searching out the hidden meanings in almost any sentence.
= WORKOUT 6B =
"How Do I Get to Carnegie Hail?"
In this workout, you have more control, but that might only prove to be more of a challenge. Basically, this is the same as Workout 6A except that you compose the questions and write a joke answer to them that you think really works. That should produce better comedic results. In Workout 6A, you were primarily looking for alternative meanings; in this workout, you want more humor.
WORKOUT 6C
"101 Tom Swifties"
When you read the requirements for completing this workout, you'll think I've gone masochistic. You'll swear it's too much workalmost impossible to completeand not much fun in the process. You're wrong on all three counts. I've given this exercise to many students and it always turns out to be the most popular. Many people complain at first that it's too much effort, but once they get into the swing of the workout, they can't stopor rather, don't want to stop. They invariably produce more than the minimum requirements. I've nicknamed this exercise "101 Tom Swifties" because you need to produce 101 of them, and because they're based on a grammatical form that was used in the writing of the "Tom Swift" books. That author used the "ly" form of the adverb often. ("Stop doing that," Tom shouted angrify.) However, in this workout, you're going to give an alternative meaning to the "ly" form of the adverb. You're going to convert it to another meaning. For instance: "You put too much chili powder in this recipe," Tom said hotly. The adverb, "hotly," normally used in this context would mean angrily. However, because of the sentence that precedes it, it takes on an alternative meaning. It means that the chili powder was burning his throat. You can also play the Swiftie in another way You can give alternative meanings to only parts of the word. For example: "Your dog chased me down the driveway and tore my trousers," the mailman said deceitfully. "Deceitfully" doesn't mean the mailman was lying; it means "de'seat'fully" The seat of his pants was chewed up by the dog. Other than the fact that the key word must end in "ly," and that you need to apply some kind of alternative meaning to the key word, there are no rules. You may bein fact, should beas creative and innovative as you want. The examples that follow will explain this more fully.
you get into this workout, you'll get caught up by it. As you have fun with it, you'll produce better material. (Trust me on that.) That's a lesson for writers, too. Try to generate some enthusiasm for your project. It's practical and it improves your product.
"I should have known better than to try to shove food down a lion's mouth," the animal trainer said offhandedly These are puns, too, but they present a graphic, if somewhat grotesque, image. "I'm a performer at a topless club," the stripper said barely "I work at a bottomless club," another said cheekily 'And I work for the Vice Squad," the policeman said arrestingly Here I had a little fun by tying several of the 'Tom Swifties" together to tell a little story, with a surprise ending.
Chapter Seven
Television humorists have to discover topics that are universal, that everyone knows about and recognises. Bob Hope and Johnny Carson do it by following the national headlines. They talk about what people are reading about and hearing about. Some other comics talk about what's on televisionthe shows or the commercials. Other young comics comment on universal topics like dating, school, getting a job, and the like. All of these, though, require a keen sense of observation. Which headlines are hot? What's happening on TV? What experiences do I have in common with my au' dience? The more unique you can make your topics, and still retain that recog' ratability, the funnier your material will be. Like me overlooking the John McEnroe topic, we all overlook valuable sources for humor. The raw material is there, we simply don't recognize it. We don't realize its usefulness. George Carlin lives basically the same kind of life that you and I do. "Vfet he dissects it into humor. Robert Klein watches the same T V shows that we do, but he finds the irony in them. Carson reads the same headlines as the rest of the nation, but he uncovers the fun in them. Roseanne Barr is funny because she says about her marriage what many women want to say about theirs. She just thought to say it. I watched Jay Leno do a funny routine about his Mom and Dad reacting to the new television set he bought them with a remote control unit. His Mom was afraid of it. She thought if she aimed it at the set and missed, she'd blow a hole in the wall. His Dad never used it because he didn't want to burn up the batteries. My Mom and Dad were the same way with new technology, but I never thought of doing a routine about it. I saw Bill Cosby do a hilarious routine about his first pair of bifocals. When he left the doctor's office, everything was distorted. The elevator was 300 feet long and the people in it were only seven inches high. I laughed because I had the same experi' ence. The difference is that Cosby noted it, wrote it, and performed it. I've seen many young performers in comedy clubs and on television (and you probably have, too) do routines where I laughed and said, "Yeah, that's happened to me. Funny, nonsensical, ironic things happen in all of our lives. They probably happen every day of our lives. Humorists find them, observe that they're funny and then mold them into comedy routines. This group of workouts will help you to become more aware of the comedy that's happening around you. They will help you observe and then refine that comedy into presentable form. Then others can listen to you and say, "Doggone, that exact same thing happened to me."
= WORKOUT 7A =
"Truth Is Humor"
This workout is primarily research.
HERE'S W H A T Y O U D O F O R THIS W O R K O U T
Compile a list of 15 jokes that are basically observations. The gags should be little more than statements of fact, but those facts should be funny or ironic. For example"He who laughs last. . . ." One observation might be: "He who laughs first probably told the joke." It's funny, but it's also a recognizable truth. The gag line is simply stating the truth. Use the jokes that you compiled in Chapter One, or research new lines, or simply list lines that you recall from your memory
HERE'S W H A T T H I S W O R K O U T WILL D O F O R Y O U
This workout shows you how other humorists use their observations to generate comedy Notice that often the observation itself is the joke.
H E R E A R E SOME EXAMPLES
When the audience groaned at one of Jack Benny's jokes at a rehearsal for his radio show, he quipped, "What are you complaining about? \bu all got in for free."
* * * * *
Gallagher was talking about the problems with today's mail delivery. Then he said, "But how about those Jehovah's Witnesses who always come to your door? Hey, I've got an idea! Why not let them deliver the mail? They're going to be in the neighborhood anyway" * * * * David Brenner used this line in a routine he does about people asking stupid questions: "Excuse me, but are you reading that paper you're sitting on?" * * * * George Carlin notes that people often use time to replace distance. "How far do you have to drive to work?" "Oh, just about 15 minutes." He observes, though, that it's not interchangeable. It doesn't work when you use distance to replace time. "What time do you have?" "Oh, it's about three miles past noon."
A W O R D BEFORE Y O U S T A R T
None of the lines above needed any sort of rewrite from the comedian. They are funny as is. Very little "writing" had to be done. Once the observation was made, the jokes practically wrote themselves. Have fun with this workout.
SOI
= WORKOUT 7B =
"What You See Is What You Laugh At
In this workout you will practise looking for the ironies, the contradictions, the fun in everyday life. You will call upon your powers of observation.
WORKOUT 7C =
"Observation Field Trip"
This workout is more pointed. It's a kind of field trip in observation. In it you purposely put yourself in a situation where you can study people and that leads to observations about them.
5. Some folks listened to the comedy channel on the headset and laughed uproariously, completely unaware that most of the rest of the folks on the plane were laughing at them laughing at the comedy albums.
= WORKOUT 7D =
"You Know It's Time % . . . When . . ."
In this workout, you will use your powers of observation, coupled with your creativity and sense of humor, to write jokes. The form will be: "You know it's time to (blank) when . . ." You'll fill in the punch' line. For example: "You know it's time to leave the amusement park when . . ." "You know it's time to buy a new car when . . ." "You know it's time to go on a diet when . . ." You may change the form slightly if you wish. It can be something like: "You know you're about to be fired when . . ." "You know someone's car is brand new when . . ."
. . . you receive word that your child will miss dinner this evening. He is being kept after school. . . . until the year 1997. * * * * . . . you receive notice that your child has not only been expelled, but also deported.
Chapter Eight
It should kid your guest of honor goodnaturedly, and if the reference is right, it will get big laughs. It will also set the tone for the eveningfriendly, barbless banter. The key words there are "if the reference is right." We just took this joke through five punchlines, none of which pleased you. How then can you write a new one? Actually, it would be easy if you had a list of 50 to 75 references of this type. If such a list existed, you could just glance at it, select the one that fit this joke perfectly, and write it in. "But," you say (you're starting to get on my nerves with that "but"), "where can I get such a list?" There's the rub. You have to create it. You have to think about it, let it meander through your mind, jot down any ideas you have, and generate your own list. Not all of the references will be good; not all of them will work as the punchline to this joke. But one of them should, and that's all you need. That's what is meant by "analyzation." We've already seen that a joke is usually composed of two interrelated parts called the "setup" and the "punchline." The first part is a slowmoving process. It's the part we talked about and practised in the workouts in Chapter Seven. It's usually a slow, methodical effort to find what we will make the setup for our joke. The second part, though, is a lightning fast, computerlike process of scanning and evaluating relationships that go with that setup. We roll thoughts through our brains almost quicker than we can think of them. And we reject many of them just as quickly Then our mind settles on one that might make a joke. The mind presents it to us and says, "Here's your joke; refine the wording." It seems reasonable that the more ideas we have to scan, the better our chances of finding a joke, and the better the joke will be. In our example, we suggested five associations. None of them were satisfactory. If we had ten to select from, we might have found a usable joke. If we had 100 to study, we might have found a better joke. And if we had 10,000 choices available, we'd probably have located the ideal joke. By analyzing our topic, we're presenting our mind with as many options as we can. Not all of them will be used, but that's all right. Having the list will still provide us with the punchlines we need quickly and with relative ease. Some of the punchlines we think of won't come from the list. Again, that's all right because the list is generating another list subconsciously. As you begin writing, it stimulates your mind to think of even more associations. Do all gag'writers go through this association procedure? Yes. Do all professional writers make a list before beginning to write their gagas? No. That's because they become so proficient at writing punchlines that they can run through a list of associations without jotting them down. Should you make a list? Yes. It's good practice to get your mind thinking of associations, and they are the heart of joke writing. Secondly, it will speed up the plateau'jumping of a comedy writer. You'll be able to move much more quickly to that time when you won't have to jot down all of your thoughts as preparation. Again, remember that these are workouts to develop and strengthen your writing skills. Be faithful to them now and they'll pay dividends later. The musicians whose fingers fly over the keyboard attained that skill by plodding through the exercises in their earlier training.
= WORKOUT 8A =
"Random Associations"
This workout gives you practice in letting your mind ramble through any topic and come up with random associations that may or may not be used later as setups or punchlines for jokes. The items that you generate in this workout don't have to be funny In fact, they don't even have to be too closely related to your topic. It's almost a free association exercise. If your topic is "hunting" and your mind says you should jot down "whales," don't fret, don't censor, don't question; jot it down. Who knows? It just might lead to a "Moby Dick" or "Captain Ahab" line that does tie in with your "hunting" premise. Trust me on this first workout. When we do the other workouts in this chapter, it will all tie together.
factory air (conditioning) options factory rebate making a deal financing make and model car salesman showroom floor four on the floor "car of the year" Car and Driver Magazine shopping around "Make me an offer" "Would I lie to you?" "Used by a little old lady who drove it back and forth to church" "I can't do any better" "drive it off the lot" racing stripe
mileage trunk space "comes equipped with" lemon "goes from z^ro to fifty" handles beautifully hugs the road stops on a dime turning radius engine hum "Take it to your mechanic" "Sign here" insurance 2' or 4-door 6' or 8'cylinder cruise control leather interior roomy interior new car smell mag wheels
= WORKOUT 8B =
"Focused List of Associations"
This workout is similar to Workout 8A, except more focused. In the previous workout, you allowed your creativity to wander through the topic without direction or interference. It was free association. In this workout, you'll focus on certain facets of your premise and try to extract even more associations. The purpose is the sameto gather more information that might be useful when you begin the writing process.
You may write these associations in any form you choose. You can use different areas of a scratch pad, generate a typed form on your word processor, or draw up a ruled form and have it reproduced. This is a format that I use.
SIMILAR
WORDS. PHRASES, CLICHES
OPPOSITE
3. Fill each blank with at least 3 selections having to do with your premise.
PEOPLE
PLACES
THINGS
EVENTS
SIMILAR
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ASSOCIATIONS FORM
SIMILAR
WORDS, PHRASES, CLICHES
OPPOSITE
PEOPLE
PLACES
THINGS
EVENTS
= WORKOUT 8C =
'A Specific Associations List"
This workout is a combination of Workouts 8A and 8B, except that in those you selected your own topic, and in this workout you'll work on a prcassigned topic. The process you go through, however, will be exactly the same, "four prcassigned topic will be "exercising."
= WORKOUT 8D =
"Writing from Tour Associations List"
This workout will finally get you to that writing process we've mentioned so many times throughout this chapter. Here you'll get to reap the benefits of the preparatory work you've been doing, You're going to write punchlines to given setups. They should lie somewhere in the lists you've been compiling.
= BONUS WORKOUT 8E =
"Finish the Jo\e"
We began this chapter with a joke setup that we never really resolved. The joke began: "Our guest of honor is to accounting w h a t . . ." Then we tried to find some references that were funny because they were so incongruous. Now that you see the benefit of having a list at your fingertips, and since that is a reusable joke form, you might compile a list of 15 such references. I'll get you started with a few, then the rest of this workout is up to you. 1. Dracula is to a balanced diet.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
2. Quasimodo is to good posture. 3. M E Rogers is to the world of wrestling. 4. Colonel Kadaffi is to the Dale Carnegie course.
* * * * *
5. The Frankenstein monster is to tap dancing. Keep going and have fun in the process.
Chapter l<line
aren't that many jokes available on one topic. It's staggering. It defeats you before you even begin. Because it feels impossible, you begin the project with a negative attitude. You think you can't do it, which makes it that much harder. If instead of thinking about writing 30 jokes on one topic, you turn it into writing five or six jokes about five or six different topicsit suddenly becomes manageable. If you do five lines about airline food, and five more about overhead luggage racks, followed by five jokes about late flights, then five more jokes about lost luggage, add in five gags about unpleasant flight attendants, and finish it off with five punchlines about the safety of flying; you now have a 30-joke routine about "Air Travel." You may say that you've watched all the young comics on T V and none of them does that many jokes about one particular topic. True. But the jokes they do are usually pretty good. Quantity enhances quality By writing 30 or 35 lines, you now have the luxury of dropping the weaker lines. You can now get rid of two'thirds of your work and still have 10 usable lines. The speed of the writing enhances the quality, too. If you find the 10 remaining lines aren't quite strong enough, you can add more subtopics and repeat the proced' ure. That should give you several more quality lines to add to your routine. With this technique, you're making your comedy writing easier, quicker, and you're playing the percentages to make it better. The next time you watch Johnny Carson's monologue on television, count the jokes. He may do 25 of them. Carson may have a staff of 8 to 12 writers working on each day's monologue. Do you think they only submitted 25 jokes? Of course not. They turned in at least ten times that amount. Carson filtered out the best. If he didn't get enough good lines, you can be sure he told the writers to try againto submit more lines. That's the technique the good comedians use to make sure they step on stage with only the best. You as a writer can use the same technique. Remember, it doesn't matter how many gags you throw away. What's important is how many you sell. Here's how this subtopic "shortcut" works: You decide on a main topic and then analyse it, breaking it into five or six subtopics. The subtopics would be a part of the main topic. For example, earlier we talked about "airline travel" as our main topic. The subtopics were: a) how bad airline food is b) overhead luggage compartments c) late flights d) unpleasant flight attendants e) the safety of flying These are arbitrary facets that I selected as examples. There are no rules in choosing subtopics. There could just as well have been: a) terminology people use in flying b) the way people dress to fly c) ways to keep busy on an airplane d) people you've met while flying e) travelling to and from the airport
Either one of these groupings or a combination of both can produce workable material. The subtopics are a way of focusing your creative attention on one area and also overcoming fear at the immensity of your task. You needn't stick with one subtopic until it's completed. Jump around as much as you like, but it is a nice scorecard to return to. When you find yourself pressed, glance at your subtopics and focus on just one of them. Also, don't limit your creative juices once they start flowing. If you find that you can write 20, 30, or even 40 jokes on just one subtopic, go with it. You can always use the others as the beginning of another routine. You might surprise yourself and get two workable monologues for the price of one. Give these workouts your best effort. I think you'll find that they'll help your creativity and your productivity.
= WORKOUT 9A =
"Fast and Funny"
This first workout is a speed exercise.
*
log
I asked the pro what I was doing wrong. He said, "Damn near everything." "I asked the pro if he could help my game." He said, "I'm sorry Our club doesn't have an intensive care unit." When we finished playing I said, "Now I have to go home and write jokes." My partner said, "It's going to be tough for you to be funnier than this." (Just for the record, and as a sort of encouragement, these lines too\ about six minutes.)
WORKOUT 9B
"Topics to Subtopics"
In this workout, you'll get some practice in dissecting a topic into several subtopics. There are no hard and fast rules about how to do it. Any subtopic will serve the purpose so long as it helps you to focus your creative energy and to divide the main topic into manageable pieces.
= WORKOUT 9C =
"More Topics to Subtopics'
This workout is exactly the same as 9B except that you select your own main topics to subdivide.
= WORKOUT 9D =
"Writing Fast and Funny from Subtopics"
This workout will put the previous three exercises to the acid test. Here you'll try to write jokes for each of your subtopics, put them together, and form a 30-35 joke routine on one main premise.
HI
Hi
Chapter Ten
We'll discuss three basic techniques that should help you think funny The first is making statements about your topic and then captioning these statements. We worked with this technique in Chapter Three, except there we captioned visuals. We worked with photos, drawings, and other graphic images. We saw in Chapter Three that we could generate humor if we had a straight'line to work with. The straight'line in that chapter was visual. Here we're manufacturing our own straight'lines with factual statements. The statements we list don't have to be funny. They're usually more effective if they're not. That way they provide more of a contrast with the punchlinemore of a surprise. The statements should be facts, ideas about the basic premise that we can use as raw material for our comic punchlines. The second technique is to ask questions about the main premise. By asking questions we generate even more ammunition for our minds to work with. How does this idea affect other people? How does it affect us? What effect will it have on the future? What effect did it have in the past? Will it last? What would it be if we changed it? There are an infinite number of questions we can ask about practically any topic, and the answers to those questions stimulate our thinking. They force us to fantasize. When questions like these are asked in a court of law, the attorney invariably shouts, "Objection. That calls for conjecture." In a court of law they don't want that; as creative writers we do. We want to conjure up all sorts of fantasies, daydreams, unbelievable situations. Asking questions helps us to do that. It helps us be creative and funny. The third technique is to use a joke formula and then fill in the blanks. This sounds terribly uncreative but it isn't. All comedians and in fact all writers use formulas. The formula itself doesn't make something trite or cliche; it's how you fill in the blanks. "It was so cold out my teeth were chattering" is a cliche, but it's also a formula. When Carson's writers take that same formula and say, "It was so cold out that flashers were just describing themselves," it becomes a joke. Hope's writers used the same formula to write, "It was so cold out that in New York the Statue of Liberty was holding the torch under her gown." Some people condemn formula writing. They say, "There are only seven basic jokes," or, "There's no such thing as a new joke." That's silly Formulas don't restrict creativity; they offer it another avenue. There are only 11 different notes on a musical scale, but they can be used in combinations that create beautiful, enchanting melo' diesall different. In the following workouts we'll learn to use statements, questions, and formulas to help you think funny.
WORKOUT 10A
"Statements to Jo\es"
In this workout, you study a topic and extract factual statements that may provide fodder for your comedy material.
. . . It's a good thing he has the Secret Service accompany him everywhere he goes. "&u wouldn't want to leave a car like that in the hands of a parking lot attendant.
* * * * *
. . . Of course, the President didn't pay cash. He just told the dealer to add it to the National Deficit.
* * * * *
. . . There's no word yet on how much Dan Quayle's moped cost. . . . but the car comes equipped with everythingair conditioning, power steering and windows, a telephone, and a bumper sticker that reads, "I brake for Democrats."
WORKOUT 10B
"Questions to Jokes'
This workout will be practice in reading between the lines. It gets you to go beyond the facts, to manufacture new facts. It recommends that you fantasize about your topiclet it get a little bizarre. You do that by asking "What if?" Actually, you ask more than "What if?" You ask anything and everything you can think of about the topic. Investigate its beginnings, and what will happen if you project it to its natural or unnatural limit.
I wondered about other things that would be in that price range and came up with this observation: 'That's typical of American consumerism. We have a Presidential limousine that cost twice as much as the President." And I wondered if the newlyelected President got involved in the purchase price of the car and got this line: "George Bush doesn't care what the car cost, just so long as it comes with an 8' year warranty"
WORKOUT IOC
"Finding Jo\e Formulas"
This workout will familiarize you with the formula joke structure, and show you that it can lead to very sophisticated, classic punchlines. There are many joke formulas and they vary from comedian to comedian. Steve Allen does this word formula joke quite often. "Here's something that really gets my goat. . . and you know how painful it can be when your goat's been gotten."
* * * * *
'This will warm the cockles of your heart. . . and you know how uncomforta' ble you can be when you've got cold heart cockles." Bob Hopes does definition formulas frequently "I came over here in a jeep. \bu all know what a jeep isit's a New York taxicab that's been drafted."
* * * * *
"\fou all know who Phyllis Diller is. She's Dolly Parton after taxes." There are reverse formula jokes: "This guy is so rich, when he writes a check, the bank bounces."
* * * * *
"My mother-in-law is so ugly when she sees a mouse, the mouse jumps on the chair." I just listed these jokes to show you that the formula is alive and well in comedy And that doesn't mean it's old. Listen carefully to the newer comics. Even Robin Williams uses repeating patterns; almost everyone does. It's a matter of styleform. No one can do a lot of comedy without repeating patterns. There are so many formulas that it's practically impossible to list them. Besides, which ones do you list? The ones Robin Williams does, or Steve Allen's favorites, or Bob Hope's standards? This workout is designed to help you discover some of these formulas, and also learn which ones you prefer and can use in your own writing. In this workout, we'll put your powers of observation and analyzation to work again.
= WORKOUT 10D =
"Formulas to Jo\es"
Now that you see the value of joke formulas, this workout will help you to put them to use. HERE'S W H A T Y O U D O F O R T H I S W O R K O U T Write at least ten jokes using the joke formulas that you uncovered in Workout IOC. Don't write all of your jokes using the same formula, though. Use at least five different formulas. HERE'S W H A T T H I S W O R K O U T WILL D O F O R Y O U \bu'U learn the value of joke formulas and how plugging different values into the "blanks" can generate exciting, creative, funny new humor. H E R E A R E SOME EXAMPLES I've been giving examples of this type of comedy throughout this chapter. Now you come up with them. A W O R D BEFORE Y O U S T A R T Joke formulas are valuable, provided that you don't overuse any of them. Work with many different styles and use them sparingly Otherwise your writing may tend to get predictable. Have fun filling in the blanks.
Chapter Eleven
100
out even more. Magnify and highlight them. Distort them out of shape. Tug, twist, and pull them into ridiculous, funny conceptsthe same way crazy mirrors reflect wacky images of your body Distortion and exaggeration stimulate humor in two ways. First, they create a bizarre image that can be funny in itself. David Brenner does a line about his own nose: "My nose is so big, when I was a kid I thought it was a third arm." Second, distortion or exaggeration can lead our minds into humorous avenues that can generate other lines. For example: "If our budget deficit keeps growing, by the year 2015 the Statue of Liberty will get rid of the torch and replace it with a tin cup and pencils." In that line, exaggeration led the thought processes to the future, which generated the gag. How far can you go with exaggeration and distortion? There is a limit. "Vbu must retain enough connection with the original for the concept to be recognized. If the crazy mirrors reflected only colors and unrecognizable shapes, they wouldn't be funny They might be interesting, but not funny The reflectionalthough horribly distortedhas to be recognized as you. In the same way, your topic has to be identified in your exaggeration. However, the mind is very flexible when dealing with these ideas. To illustrate, let's do some variations on the "university" line from above: "My friend visited me recently. He stayed at the local hotel. Rooms 516,517, and 518."
* * * * *
"He had a terrible day at the beach. He came home with 14 harpoon wounds."
* * * * *
"One day he stood on the corner wearing a red, white, and blue shirt, and a man came up and threw a letter in his mouth." Notice in this routine, how the man's size keeps changing. First he's the size of a university, then the size of three motel rooms. From there he changes to about the size of a whale, then to the size of a mailbox. The sizes and shapes differ, but the mind has no problem accepting them. It's similar to the continuity of a dream. We can be on a bus that magically transforms to a yacht that then converts to a desert that then becomes the interior of a nightclub. All of this is impossible, but the dreaming mind continues with the story, never pausing to question the transitions, never stopping to ask how or why. These workouts can be playful, fascinating, and challenging. They can also be very useful for uncovering humor in most situations. Have fun with them.
= WORKOUT 11A =
"Big and Small Improvisation"
This is an improvisational workout that is meant to teach you to see things differently than they are intended. You will become the crazy mirror, reflecting dis' torted, disproportionate images. It's good practice in not seeing things for what they are, but for what they might be.
3. A wooden rolling pin became: a) Tammy Bakker's makeup applicator b) Leon Spinks's toothpick
= WORKOUT 11B
In this workout you'll find humor in distorting dimensions of time and space.
"Charlie's been out of town for a few days. He went to the front gate to pick up the mail."
* * * * *
"He installed little lights along the front walkway The only problem is that planes from San Francisco keep landing on it."
"It's a beautiful home. Charlie and his wife not only have separate bathrooms, they have separate zip codes."
* * * * *
"It's a big house. Over the couch in the living room, there's a painting of Mt. Rushmoreactual size."
WORKOUT 11C
"Bending Abstract Ideas
This workout is similar to 11B except that it deals with the exaggeration of abstract ideas.
how can
> how dumb your friend is * how intelligent another friend is >
". . . and in the display case, all the legs of lamb had to be crossed." "When a tourist went into the drugstore to buy condoms, he had to describe them to the druggist."
WORKOUT 11D
"Ta\e It to the Limit"
In this workout you'll take a basically true premise and extend it to its ultimate conclusion. It may be a fact today, but sometime in the future it will be a joke.
'Traffic is getting so congested. Today you have trouble finding a parking spot. Someday you may have trouble finding a moving spot." * * * * "Pretty soon you may not be able to pull onto a freeway until somebody dies and lets you have his place."
Chapter Twelve
The first thing a joke must do is provide information, or be certain that information is assumed by the audience. Unless a magician first convinces us that a red scarf is in his pocket, there's no surprise when a white scarf appears there. With the joke, as with our magical analogy, certain necessary information has to be provided. We generally call that information the joke "setup." The setup is the first part of the structure and it has to accomplish three things: 1) provide enough information 2) not provide too much information 3) provide the correct information Let's study each function separately. 1) PROVIDE ENOUGH INFORMATION: In my speaking engagements I sometimes tell a story about my travels to Beirut with the Bob Hope television show. I travelled with the cast of the show to entertain the servicemen. That cast included Bob Hope, George Kirby, Vic Damone, Ann Jillian, Cathy Lee Crosby, Miss U.S.A., and Brooke Shields. You can understand that I wasn't the person that was usually mobbed. On this trip we all wore white satin tennis jackets that the USO provided for cast and crew. It had a giant caricature of Bob Hope on the back and large writing that said, "Bob Hope ShowBeirut, Lebanon." So one day, a crew member came over to me after the cast had left to do a non' televised show. He asked if he could have his picture taken with me. I was delighted until I found out he wanted me to turn around. All he wanted was the back of my jacket. It's a cute, self-deprecating story that I enjoyed when it happened and enjoy r e telling. The audience usually enjoys it, too. But sometimes I forget to tell the listeners about the jacket that the USO provided. So when I tell them that the marine wanted a picture of my back, they don't know what I'm talking about. How could they? Consequently, there are no laughs. Why should they laugh? I haven't said anything amusing. It was the exact same story, told in the same wayexcept that I omitted an important ingredient. To get people to think the way you want them to think, you have to be sure they have the necessary information. 2) NOT PROVIDE TOO MUCH INFORMATION: This caution is important for two reasons. First, providing too much data can destroy the surprise. Let's go back to our magical analogy. The performer who says, "I have a red scarf in my hand," has told us enough. The white scarf then comes as a surprise. If the performer says, "I have a red scarf in my handwell, it isn't neces* sarily red. There's a very good chance that it could be another color, like blue, or green, or hey, how about white?" That performer has given us too much informa' tion. It detracts from the surprise. The same thing applies with gags. You don't want to give so much data that you "tip" the punchline. \bu don't want the audience to see the joke coming. Second, humor has a certain economy to it. The audience invests time listening to you. If they invest a little time and get a fair punchline, that's okay If they invest a lot of time and get a great punchline, that's okay. But they don't want to listen for a long
nt
time and get a mediocre joke at the end. That gets groans instead of laughs. As a humorist, you protect your investment by being very economical with the setup. Don't dillydally with unnecessary words or information. 3) PROVIDE THE RIGHT INFORMATION: As a humorist, you want to control the audience's thoughts. \bu want the listeners to be picturing some image in their minds; therefore, you have to give them the information that will paint that specific picture. Supply the wrong input, and you'll get the wrong result. When I discuss this with writers in lectures, I tell about a friend I had in the very early grades in elementary school. This companion was a troublemaker, but a real charmer. We would both get into mischief that my good pal usually instigated, but I would suffer the consequences. My friend flashed that sunny personality and cher ubic innocence and got off lightly every time. We went our separate ways eventually, but I still cherish that friendship and envy that bubbly, charismatic personality. Then I ask the audience to paint a picture of this friend. Offer a description. In fact, why don't you do that briefly now? Put an image to the person I described in the last paragraph. Most people paint a Huckleberry Finn type of character. Freckk'faced and red' headed are often included in the description. Very rarely does anyone guess that my good buddy was a little girl. I sometimes use this story to illustrate how a humorist can direct an audience's mind in a certain direction. Here it shows you how essential it is that you provide the correct information If you go back and reread that particular descriptive paragraph, you'll notice that there are no masculine or feminine pronouns. If I slipped up and said, "He always got me in trouble," that would certainly help the misdirection, but it would destroy the story It could no longer be a girl. And of course, if I made a mistake and then corrected itif I said, "He always, I mean my friend always. . . ."I've tipped my hand. Everyone would know that I'm hiding the fact that she's a female. Here's a story a client of mine used to tell that shows what I mean. He was reading some fictitious letters to "Dear Abby." One read: "Dear Abby, I'm 13 years old. I think I'm old enough to wear lipstick, rouge, and eye shadow. Yet every time my mother finds these, she throws them out and punishes me. Please write back and tell me who is right. Signed, Ralph." The second part of the joke structure is the "punchline." It's the surprise. It's discovering a red scarf where we though there was a white scarf It's called a punchline because it has to hit with the power of a punch. It has to be so sudden and unexpected that it almost knocks the wind out of the audiencefiguratively, of course. One way of accomplishing this is by saving the key words for the end of the joke. Consider these: Heavy drinker W C Fields said, "What contemptible scoundrel stole the cork from my lunch?" *
He also said, 'The cost of living has gone up another dollar a quart." Here's a put'down that I've heard from many comedians. "He considers himself a legend in his own mind." Notice that all of them are straightforward statements until the very last word. That's an ideal structure, but it's not always possible. It does, though, illustrate the effectiveness of holding the surprise as long as possible. The economy of humor affects the punchline, too. It should remain crisp and uncluttered. Additional words and phrases often weaken the effect. In the W C. Fields example above, the word "lunch" is perfect. It's quick and effective. Changing it to "my bottle of lunch" or "my 100'proof lunch" would only diminish the effec tiveness of the line. These rules are flexible and subject to translation. One humorist may feel a few additional words help the punchline; another may feel they don't. That's the "seat-of the-pants" nature of these guidelines. Language may make a difference, too. Putting key words at the very end of the punchline may make it unwieldy If it does, go with the natural rhythm of the joke rather than adhering to some regulation. Winston Churchill pointed up the silliness of following rigid rules for language when he scribbled on the margin of a document, 'This is the sort of English up with which I will not put." The joke structure needs to allow room for innovation and creativity Creativity is supreme; rules, regulations, and structures are simply guidelines that help inspire originality and express it better.
= WORKOUT 12A =
"This Is My Life"
This workout is somewhat removed from humor writing, it is practice in the econ' omy of words.
= WORKOUT 12B =
"From Page to Stage"
This workout is an exercise in using the joke structure for writing the spoken joke. HERE'S W H A T Y O U D O F O R T H I S W O R K O U T 1. Collect six jokes from magazines, joke books, newspapers, or other publications. The jokes can be on any subject and should be gags that you personally enjoy. 2. Convert these jokes to conversation. Try to make them as effective as spoken jokes as they were as written jokes. HERE'S W H A T T H I S W O R K O U T WILL D O F O R Y O U "Vbu'U develop your ear for comedy. "You'll learn that what is written for publication is often too literary for spoken presentation. You'll also discover that the published form usually has to be longer. It needs more description and explanation because it doesn't have the voice to add inflection. A comedian on stage can say the words 'Thank you" in an unmistakably sarcastic tone. On the page, the words "Thank you" always seem pleasant unless qualified. H E R E A R E S O M E EXAMPLES Here's a joke as it might be published: Two of my luncheon companions were rawing me one time about my thrift. I was defending my frugality as a virtue. I said, "I'm quite proud of the fact that I take care of my money. Do you know I still have the first dollar I ever made?" One friend quickly added, 'And also the arm of the man who handed it to you." Here's the same joke as I might present it verbally. "I'm actually kind of a thrifty guy. My friends call it 'stingy.' My wife says, 'I not only have the first dollar I ever made, but also the arm of the man who handed it to me.' " This could also be rewritten to put the joke on the other guy "I have a friend who's really cheap. He not only has the first dollar he ever made, but also the arm of the man who handed it to him." A W O R D BEFORE Y O U S T A R T This workout will show how to boil down a joke to just the essentials for verbal presentation. In the rewrite above, the sentence, "My friends call it 'stingy' " was removed without hurting the gag at all. I liked keeping it in because I thought it was a secondary little joke along the way Others might feel it detracts from the main punchline. A head writer I worked for had a plaque in his office that read, 'There are very few good judges of comedy, and even they don't agree." Have fun playing with these jokes.
= WORKOUT 12C =
"From Stage to Page"
This workout is the opposite of 12B. It's practice in writing jokes for publication. HERE'S W H A T Y O U D O F O R THIS W O R K O U T 1. Collect six jokes that you've told or heard others tell. They should be stories that you've only heard, not read. 2. Convert each of these to a short, funny paragraph. HERE'S W H A T T H I S W O R K O U T WILL D O F O R Y O U This workout is good practice in writing a more literate form of joke. However, the rules of structure still apply. Say all that you need to say for the reader to appreciate the comedy, but keep the joke concise. \fou'll learn that you have to do more for the reader with this form, ^jbu have to explain and describe more because you don't have facial expressions or vocal inflections to help get your point across. H E R E A R E SOME EXAMPLES Here's a joke that a stand-up comedian might do: "I think television is much better than the newspaperexcept, of course, you can't swatflieswith it." Here's how that might be converted to a brief, humorous item for publication: "Our family was trying to watch TV one evening as my husband and son were debating the merits of thetelevisionmedia as opposed to the daily newspaper. Dad favored TV As he was listing the merits of television, a fly started buzzing around his nose. My son said, 'Dad, why don't yourollup the TV and swat him with it?' " Of course, that's only one version. It could be much simpler. Consider this version: "Two gentlemen were discussing television news as opposed to newspaper re porting. One said, 'What possible advantage does the newspaper have over television? ' The other replied, "rou can swatflieswith it.' " A W O R D BEFORE Y O U S T A R T These two workouts, 12B and 12C, highlight the difference between spoken and written humor. Each example could be redone by a different person and would come out differently. Yet the structure would remain intact. Notice, though, that in all the examples, the punchline comes toward the end. It speaks for itself because a good punchline doesn't need embellishment. Any joke that ends with "\bu had to be there" or some such line, is not a joke at all. It's a plea. Have fun with this exercise.
= WORKOUT 12D =
"Play With the Way You Say It"
Here you'll experiment with joke structures and rewriting gags.
* *
4) "Take my wifeanybody"
* *
* *
* *
* *
5) "Take my wife. In fact, you don't have to take hen I'll give her to you." The first one's wordy. It doesn't have the impact of \foungman's version. The second version is good, but for another comedian. Henny Ybungman's speech style is so clipped that the shorter version is better for him. But the rewrite isn't bad. The third is almost the same as the original. The few added words, though, don't really improve it. The fourth is a complete change of thought. It's not bad. The fifth is a new joke, too. It's not a Henny "ibungman line, but it might fit a comedian who has a different style.
= WORKOUT 12E
"This Is My LifeAgain'
This workout is the completion of Wforkout 12A. It is separated from the first part of the workout so that you wouldn't read on and write with the second part in mind. This is practice in the economy of words, which can be important in joke writing.
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^* f i p #
Chapter Thirteen
2) SWITCH THE PUNCHLINE: Here it's the punchline that changes with basically the same setup. \bu've all heard some variation of the panhandler joke: "Buddy, can you spare $5.00 for a cup of coffee?" "Why do you need $5.00 for coffee?" "Can I help it if I'm a heavy tipper?" That might be switched to: "Buddy, can you spare $2,000 for a cup of coffee?" "$2000! Why do you need $2,000 for a cup of coffee?" "I want to drink it in Paris." 3) PARALLEL THE JOKE: With this method, you switch both the setup and the punchline: "I bought this toupee very cheaply. The only problem is every time I pass a fire hydrant, one corner of it lifts up in the air." That joke might be changed to: "I think my wife knows the fur coat I bought her is a cheap imitation. Every time she wears it in public, it chases cats down the street." Both gags are based on cheap animal fur replacing more expensive material, and the results. However, in the first one the setup uses a toupee and the dog pauses at fire hydrants. In the second, the setup is a fur coat and the dog chases cats. These are two completely different jokes based on the same humorous idea. 4) BUILD ON THE INSPIRATION: This is a generous interpretation of a switch. There's almost no logical explanation for the thought process. However, it does happen occasionally, so I'll list it here. Let's get back to our analogy of the rambling conversation. Washington Street triggered Washington D.C. D.C. reminded someone of politics. Those associations are logical and understandable. Sometimes, though, thoughts pop into our heads that aren't logical. An airplane story could remind you of fruit salad. \bu don't know why it happens, but it happens. The same phenomenon may occur when you're writing jokes. If it does, go with the flow. Profit from the inspiration. It's difficult to illustrate this method because it's so capricious, but I'll try. Let's suppose the original jokes was about how old commercial planes are getting. It reads: "Planes are getting so old now they fly on a mixture of jet fuel and prune juice." For some reasonmaybe that Ronald Reagan flies around to his speaking engage ments, or maybe the prune juice reminded you of Reagan's ageit brings to your mind the fact that he gets $50,000 a speech. That motivates you to compose this line: "Reagan now gets $50,000 for after'dinner speaking. That's a nice way to get a free lunch and a small fortune all at the same time, isn't it?" Switching is also a valuable formula for improving jokes. In other words, if you have a joke that comes close but doesn't quite get the laughter you expect from an audience, try switching it. "Vfou might just come up with a real gem.
= WORKOUT 13A
"Switch the Straight'Line
In this workout we'll try creating new jokes while retaining the same punchline or, at least, the same punchline idea.
"Ronald Reagan is one politician who doesn't lie, cheat, or steal. He's always had an agent do that for him."
* * * * *
"One factory supervisorthe meanest boss in the whole plantdied suddenly. He had no friends, yet people turned out in droves for his funeral. One worker couldn't understand it. He said to his companion, 'How can he get this many people to show up at his funeral?' His buddy replied, 'It just goes to show you give the people what they want . . .' "
"I've travelled a great many miles to be with you people tonight. But with all the troubles that I experience in travelling, once I reach the stage and look out at the smiling faces, I'm always glad I came. I've never once had second thoughts . . . until tonight."
= WORKOUT 13B =
"Switch the Punchline"
This workout is practice in changing the punchline. You often see this done if you watch The Johnny Carson Show. Johnny says, "It was so cold out there today that . . ." The new punchlinethe switchfollows. Practically every comic does a variation of this.
HERE'S W H A T Y O U D O F O R THIS W O R K O U T
Write at least ten punchline variations on each of the following three jokes: 'A panhandler came up to me on the street today and said, 'Hey buddy, can you give me $27.50 for a cup of coffee?' I said, 'Why do you need $27.50?' He said, 'I hate the taste of coffee, so I want to wash it down with a quart of scotch.' " * * "A rabbi and a priest were seated in adjoining seats on a plane. The stewardess served the priest his dinnerbaked ham. The rabbi said, 'I'd rather commit adultery than eat ham.' The priest said, 'I didn't realize we had a choice.' " * * "I visited my friend in the hospital and the guy in the next bed was completely wrapped in bandages from head to foot. The only thing that wasn't completely wrapped in bandages was his right eye. Then the doctor came in, stood by his bed and said, 'I don't like the looks of that eye.' " ?iote: Remember that you can change the setup slightly to accommodate any change you make in the punchline. For example, in the third joke above, instead of a doctor standing by the bed, it can be a nurse, or a friend, or even a burglar, if you like.
H E R E A R E SOME EXAMPLES
"You know, they say that the family pet can often warn you when an earthquake is about to hit. That's true because we had an earthquake at six o'clock this morning, and last night my Irish setter took the family car and drove to Arv zona."
* * * * * * * * * *
"(Same setup) That's true, because last night my cat converted to Catholicism." "(Same setup) That's true, because last night my goldfish hired some workmen to put a lid on their bowl."
A W O R D BEFORE Y O U S T A R T
You notice that most of the jokes are basically the sameswitches on the original line. Some may be improvements, others may not. But if I write ten, the eighth one may be the gem. If three of them are gems, I could do them as a series of variations, building to the strongest one. By switching punchlines, you can search out your strongest joke. Have fun playing with this workout.
WORKOUT 13C
"Parallel the Jo\e"
This workout is a combination of the previous two. It's a switch on both the setup and the punchline. The result is usually a joke that parallels the original. HERE'S W H A T Y O U D O F O R T H I S W O R K O U T Write at least five new jokes that parallel each of the following: "A friend of mine spent $500 dollars to go to karate class to learn how to defend himself But it didn't work. So now he just pays the teacher to walk him home at night."
* * * * *
"My wife and I had an argument. She wanted to buy a fur coat and I wanted to get a new car. So we compromised. We bought the fur coat, but we keep it in the garage."
* * * * *
"My uncle's a great inventor. He just crossed a gorilla with a mink. It makes beautiful fur coats, but all the sleeves have to be shortened." H E R E A R E S O M E EXAMPLES Here are a few parallel switches on "How big my mother'in'law is." They are variations on the form, "When she wore a white dress . . .': "She wore a white dress one time and a bunch of kids thought she was the Good Humor truck."
* * * * *
"She wore a yellow dress one time and Big Bird got fresh with her"
* * * * *
"One time she wore a green dress with white stripes and two college teams played football on her"
* * * * *
"She wore a black dress once and threw the scientific world into turmoil. They thought it was an eclipse of the sun." Those are all basically the same joke, but paralleling can also create entirely new jokes. Here's an example: Original ]o\e: "Do you like my ring? My grandmother gave this to me on her deathbed. She gave me $500 and said, 'Get a nice stone.' "
* * * * *
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Changing both elements: "I'm a very independent man today because of something my father said to me when I was a child. He said, 'Get the hell out of my house and don't come back.'" Or: I left my job today because of something my boss said to me. He said, Tfou're fired.'"
= WORKOUT 13D =
"Switching 7s(ew Jo\e$ from Old"
This workout will be practice in using the switching formulas we've learned. %u'll decide which method to use and how to use it.
HERE'S W H A T Y O U D O F O R THIS W O R K O U T
1. Gather ten jokes from your selection of your favorites. 2. Do at least three switches on each joke you've selected.
HERE'S W H A T T H I S W O R K O U T WILL D O F O R Y O U
You'll be learning how to put the lessons of this chapter to work on good basic gags.
H E R E A R E SOME EXAMPLES
I've picked one of the jokes from my selection and have done switches on it. I tried to illustrate this workout by doing one of each type of switch. You needn't do this, though. Just relax and have fun doing any style that pops into your mind. the Original Joke: "Be careful about reading health books. You may die of a misprint."
Switching the Setup: "My uncle learned how to survive in the wilderness by reading a book about it. He poisoned himself on a misprint."
Switching the Punchline: "Be careful about reading health books. A torn page could take five years off your life."
Paralleling "My uncle tried to become a champion diver from reading a book on the subject. It killed him. Somebody tore out the chapter about filling the pool."
A W O R D BEFORE Y O U S T A R T
Switching can generate lines that are related to the original but very different from them. It's a functional form of joke writing. The original setup and punchline give you a form to follow in writing your new version. They also focus your thinking, which always helps in comedy writing. They concentrate your mind on one form of joke, and prompt you to search out variations on that form. That focus stimulates the creative process. Have fun practising it with this workout.
Chapter Fourteen
WORKOUT 14A
"Potch\ey"
This workout is practice in "potchkeying" with jokes, "feu will allow the jokes to roll around in your mind and change them in whatever way occurs to you. Some changes may be better, some may be worse. However, save that judgment until after you play with the gag.
2. My husband is a klutz;. He can't buy a hammer unless it comes with instruc' tions.
3. My wife says she has nothing to wear, but if she bought it she wouldn't have any place to put it. 4.1 know a guy who always cheats at golf He once got a hole in one and wrote down a zero.
5. My uncle is such a bad driver. He considers a red light a recommendation. 6. My girl friend was so promiscuous, when she went to driving school, she spent the first two weeks learning to sit up.
7. Friends carried my husband home drunk so many times that they finally chipped in and bought him a suit with handles.
8. There's more than one way to skin a cat, and the cat's not crazy about any of them.
10. My uncle hasn't touched alcohol in four months. He has a friend feed it to him.
11. My wife's such a bad cook I went in the kitchen the other day and caught a cockroach eating a Turns.
12. My uncle is so lazy, he never gets to the ballgame until the second inning. He wants to make sure he doesn't have to stand for the National Anthem.
13. My aunt is such a bad driver that people she drives by aren't called pedestri' ans; they're called survivors.
14. I didn't do badly gambling in Las Vegas. I went there in a $15,000 car and came home in a $200,000 bus.
15. My uncle invented a breath mint made from peanut butter. Your breath can't smell bad because it sticks to the roof of your mouth.
16. My uncle invented a new deodorant. You spray it on your body and you disappear. Then everyone stands around and wonders who smells. * * * 17.1 know a girl who is a real knockout. Men are just fighting to get a date with her. Unfortunately, they're fighting her husband. * * 18.1 divorced my husband because of his bad memory He kept forgetting he was married.
19. My children aren't bad kids. They're good kids who do bad things. 20. My parents had three childrenone of each.
WORKOUT 14B
"Write and Potch\ey"
This workout is basically the same as Workout 14A except that you do it with jokes that you create instead of jokes written by others.
Chapter Fifteen
WORKOUT 15A
"Tuning In to Toppers"
A topper is any punchline that follows another punchline and utilizes the same straight'line. Many comics use them, but sometimes they happen so fast that we fail to notice them. This workout is going to help you to become aware of them.
(From a speaker at a management association dinner) "This is the first time I've ever addressed a management association. I hope I don't catch pneumonia. Before I came on stage, they made me remove my union suit. " . . . They were afraid I couldn't keep my trap shut."
WORKOUT 15B
"Topping the Tops'
Now that you know the form and have heard and seen it used often, this workout will get you to create a few toppers.
= WORKOUT 15C =
"Write a]o\e and Keep Going'
In this workout you'll create some comedy lines of your own that lend themselves to the topper formulalines that can support a number of variations.
WORKOUT 15D
"Taunts and Toppers"
In this workout you'll experiment with the comeback form of the topper. These are gags that build on the same straight'line, but reverse the direction of it.
Chapter Sixteen
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133
The workouts in this chapter deal mostly with rewriting the individual jokes. In the next chapter we'll discuss monologues, that is the blending of the jokes into a unified piece of material. That requires its own type of rewriting. For now, let's content ourselves with the process of improving the single gag. Here are a few things to look out for in your final read through: Most important, is it funny? If it is, you can go by it. You might try to improve it quickly as we saw in the previous chapter, or you can just be content with your work and move on. "If it ain't broke, don't fix it." If it's not funny, find the reason why it isn't and do the necessary patchwork. Some gags aren't funny because they're too direct. The joke is obvious and there's no surprise for the audience. The sentence is more a statement than a joke. You rewrite this type of gag by hiding the joke element more. You imply it. You say what you mean by not saying it. The work you did in Chapters Four and Five would be a good review for this type of rewriting. It is substituting an image or a reference in place of a direct statement. The nightclub comic's comeback to a heckler is an example. "I'm surprised to see you here tonight. What are they doing? Cleaning your cage?" That line doesn't say the heckler is an animal or is acting like an animal. It implies it. He must be an animal since he lives in a cage. Some of your gags, though, may go too far in that direction. They may hide the joke so much that they become obscure. They may leave too many steps for the audience to fill in. For example: "You should see his girlfriend. He's late for every appointment he makes." Where is the humor in that gag? Well, the author intended it to imply that his girl is so ugly her face could stop a clock. Okay, the reference is there and the humor might be there, but it's too much to ask of a reader or listener. That joke needs a rewrite that would either explain the connection better or, at least, lead the audience further along so that they could more easily make the connection. For example: "His girl has a face that could stop a clock. He hasn't been on time for anything since he's been dating her." Some of your jokes may need more graphic references. For example, you might say a man is "as nervous as a guy waiting to see his doctor." Well, that may explain the nervousness, but it doesn't really create a graphic, comic image. However, this line does: "He was as nervous as a long'tailed cat in a room full of rocking chairs." Other references may be perfect for conveying the image you want, but they need more color, more "pizzas." You could rewrite those by adding colorful phrases or images. For instance: "The sand was so hot that he walked across it like a tap'dancing chicken." That's not bad, but you might improve it with even more descriptive language. "The sand was so hot that he walked across it like a chicken tap'dancing to a record being played at the wrong speed." Rewriting is a very individual art. Each of your jokes deserves one last look, but it may not require a revision. If the joke satisfies you, it's finished. If it doesn't, rework it. Just be wary of writing comedy into non'comedy. Your first reaction is usually correct.
Hi
= WORKOUT 16A =
"Mar\ and Ma\e It Better"
In this workout you'll practice reading over your "finished" jokes, with a critical eye toward those that need a rewrite.
A/
"I got my driver's license by default. The officer gave it to me rather than get in the car with me.
*V-
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/!4dfr QgAPt+tC
I don t know if I can park or not. Some policeman always makes me get out or the car before then.
"My father taught me how to drive years ago.. . . when I mentioned I was thinking about leaving home.
R1T6& oJon&i*Sb :
"He skipped all the technical parts. He just got me to a steep hill and pushed.
* * * * *
"My kids won't drive with me. They claim they're too '^>~-~-zTA*&4,frSf young to die. J </ *** 'nirfl **"*
"I once got a $750 dollar fine for parking. I don't care what the officer says, I was there before the airplane ^j!~- G& was." """Sa/^a ^fL^A^6*-
= WORKOUT 16B =
"Redirect the Too Direct"
In this workout you'll get practice in hiding the joke more. You'll learn to say something by not saying it, but by implying it.
137
4) if it's the last thing I do 5) deader than a door nail 6) buying the farm From that list, I settled on a variation of "leave this world," because it ties in with parenthood or "bringing someone into the world." I rewrote the joke as follows: "My kids won't drive with me. They say they'll settle for just having me bring them into this world."
WORKOUT 16C
"Ma\e It More Vivid"
In this workout you'll get some practice in finding more vivid references to rejuvenate your jokes.
I don't know if I can park or not. Some policeman always makes me get out of the car before then.
* * * * *
Basically, they're true statements. The idea is funny but it just sits there. There's no punch to it. What each one needs is a more graphic image. More of a funny picture for the listener to create in his or her own mind. So I tried to create some funnier images: 1) maybe the officer ran away 2) maybe he got in the car and just gave me the license so he could get out 3) maybe he got in the car and something terrible happened to him. That last is the one I want. I want to create a mysterious image of this poor man who had to give me the driver's test. I rewrote the gag as follows: "I got my driver's license by default. They never found the officer who gave me the test."
Again, I want a runnier imageforwhy I have never learned to park. This gag says that some officer always pulls me over, but that's not graphic enough. It doesn't tell a funny enough story or create a funny image. So I envisioned other reasons why I couldn't learn to park: 1) I never learned how to stop the car 2) I don't need to park because I'm always involved in an accident 3) there's never enough left of the car I drive to park That's the one. Every time I take a car out for a spirt I totally destroy it. There's never anything left to park. The rewritten joke now reads: "I don't know if I can park a car or not. I've never had a car last that long."
WORKOUT 16D
'Add Some Lilt"
Sometimes your references are helped with a bit of raz,z,le'daz,z,le, fancy footwork. In basketball it's called "dribbling behind the back." It's just a bit of showboating that might amuse your audience. That's what this workout will utilize.
141
Chapter Seventeen
There are ways of expressing an opposing point of view. For example, you might preface a line by saying, "There are some people who think differently; they say. . ." and then continue with their point of view. So you can do jokes from both sides of the argument, but listeners should have a fairly good idea of where you stand. They should also have a clear idea of who you areor at least who your stage persona is. If, for example, your stage persona is supercilious, your monologue should be. If your stage character is pompous, your dialogue should be stilted. Some comedians can be very witty, speaking with fancy vocabularies and precise enunciation. Will Rogers, though, used "ain't" as much as any other word, and spoke with his Oklahoma drawl. It sounded natural from him. It wouldn't from Peter Ustinov. W. C. Fields loved overblown oratory He might call someone a "contemptible scoundrel." Rodney Dangerfield might call the same person a "lousy bum." Whoopi Goldberg in her comedy act, does many characters. They all speak differently, yet each one is consistent. If she's doing a Valley Girl, all of the speech sounds like a Valley Girl. If she's doing a street tough, she sounds menacing and uses street language. Consistency. As a writer, you have to determine who is going to speak your words. Discover that speech pattern and stick with it. The words you use must sound as if they're coming from the speaker. A monologue is obliged to be interesting. To get people to listen, you have to make them want to listen. \ou have to keep them listening, too. Monotony can kill the fun of a comedy routine. %u may have heard that some people are so naturally funny that they could be amusing reading the phone book. Well, they can't. Not unless they're doing some thing else to make it interesting. In your writing, avoid the "phone book" or "laundry list" syndrome. Keep the conversation lively, energetic. Keep the listeners listening. It should go without sayingbut we'll say it anywaythat a comedy monologue should be comedic. It has to generate laughs. There's something the danger as a writer and as a performer that you get so caught up in what you're saying that you forget to be funny Guard against it. I listened to a routine of Whoopi Goldberg's in which she is a street tough visiting the attic where Anne Frank lived. It's a touching monologue. Whoopi has the audience near tears when she admits that the character is crying. Then her character says, 'And I'm not the crying type. I'd as soon cut your throat as look at you." Even in this poignant moment, Whoopi remembers to get laughs. The following exercises will help you develop some of the skills you'll need to compose good, funny monologues.
= WORKOUT 17A =
"Plant Your Premise"
When you converse with an audience in monologue form, it's essential that they know what you're talking about, "fou have to establish a premise, define it, and offer your point of view. And you must do all that as economically as possible. It's a good idea to establish the frame of reference with jokes wherever possible. That's what you'll be doing here.
= WORKOUT 17B =
'Add a Different Handle'
A monologue, since it is talking about one subject, can become repetitive. The writer has to guard against that by varying the form. In other words you can do the same type of jokes or gags on the same topic, but you need to change the phrasing. This workout will be practice in writing jokes about the same idea, but varying them to keep the audience interested.
"I broke my arm once and we saved a lot of money. The doctor said I could use my shirt as a cast."
* * * * *
"Mom starched things that people normally don't starchlike socks." "The dog used to chew on my sock but only because she thought it was a bone."
* * * * *
"Here's how fanatical she was. Mom even put starch in our bath water. True. I had rigor mortis when I was seven years old."
"Ybu may eventually drop some individual gags and add others, but as is, this makes a solid small 8' to 10'joke piece of a monologue. You see how the addition of an introductory phrase seems to change the structure of the joke? It varies the pattern enough so that the formula is not readily detectable. Notice, too, that if you set up the premise well you can eliminate introductory phrases. "That's why I became a stand'up comedian" doesn't mention starch at all. It's implied from the previous lines. So add some variety to your monologues by toying with the wording of them. Keep it varied. Have some fun with this workout.
= WORKOUT 17C =
"Putting Your Duc\s in a Row"
In this workout you'll practice putting an entire monologue together using your skills from Workout 17A and 17B. \bu'll set up the premise of each subtopic and vary the phrasing to keep the monologue lively 'Vbu'll also work on establishing a point of view and maintaining it.
WORKOUT 17D
"Fixing the Finest"
Those of us who aspire to comedy careers are lucky We have the greatest teachers in the world available to us on television, in clubs, and on records. This workout helps us take advantage of the teaching of the masters.
The head nurse of this department was known as the "Mr. T of RNs."
* * * * *
She had a black belt in nursing. * * * * If I ever need a heart transplant, I want to get one from one of the folks who work in Cardiac Rehab. I want to get one that hasn't been used before.
* * * * *
We used to ride the stationary bike for a full half hour. This one guy was screaming and hollering.. . . still they made him ride that thing for the full time. When he was done, they found out what the problem was. The seat had fallen off his bicycle. * * * * It took his mind off his heart problem. Following is the same monologue as I would rewrite it for my own style of presentation: I just got out of the hospital. I had everything I needed when I checked in Money, my insurance forms, and the clean underwear that my mother always told me to wear in case I went to the hospital. * * * * There were three things my mother always told me: Be a good boy, say my prayers each night, and always wear clean underwear in case I have to go to the hospital.
* * * * *
But you know something? I almost wish I hadn't. I'm dying to know what they do with people in the hospital who don't have clean underwear. * * * * . . . this would have been my chance to find out. * * * * . . . well, maybe next time. * * * * I had heart surgery. In fact, the doctor who did my surgery is at this banquet tonight. I was pleased to see him until I glanced over at him during the meal and saw that his wife was cutting his meat for him.
* * * * * * * * * *
But the surgery was the easy partfor me anyway, if not for my doctor. After that they made me go to Cardiac Rehabilitation classes three times a week. That was tough. At this time in my life, it's difficult for me to do anything three times a week.
* * * * *
The people in that department are tough. I had this one nurse who was known as the "Mr. T of RNs."
* * *
* *
* *
* *
Yeah, she has a black belt in nursing. I'll tell you how tough they are: If I ever need a heart transplant, I'm going to get one from one of the people who work in Cardiac Rehab. I want to get one that hasn't been used yet.
* * * * *
We used to ride the stationary bike for a full half hour. This one guy was screaming and hollering.. . . still they made him ride. He screamed, he yelled. It didn't matter. They still made him ride that thing for the full time. When he was done, they found out what the problem was. The seat had fallen off his bicycle.
* * * * *
It took his mind off his heart problem, I'll tell you that.
Chapter Eighteen
suddenly you're into a discussion of how slow the mails are. It's painless, it's neat, and it helps your comedy feel effortless. Just as we felt our teacher knew everything about everything, so the audience feels you can be funny about any topic that happens to pop up. And you can beit's just that you, the comic, control what "happens to pop up." Another consideration that helps transitions blend into the conversation is the routining of the monologue. By the routining, I mean the positions of the topics or the subtopics. They should be in logical order. If they're not, they're disturbing to the listeners. Often without even knowing why, the audience is distracted if the flow is illogical. The logic can take many forms. It might be chronological. For instance, if you're talking about your new dog, you might start with spotting her in the pet shop window, making the purchase, bringing her home, recalling how she behaved that first night in new surroundings, and how she has misbehaved ever since. Sometimes the logic is hierarchical. If you're doing a roast of a group of fellow workers, you might begin with the lowest in rank and work your way up to the highest. Sometimes the order is determined by protocol. I once wrote a command perfor' mance show for a comic entertaining in a foreign country. I put the strongest material up front, but the comedian vetoed that order. Unfortunately, our funniest stuff was also our most incisive. The comedian correctly decided that we couldn't open with material that was the most critical of our host country. We could do that material only after we had first established a friendly sense of fun. So routining is practically a seat-of-the'pants operation. You can use it in almost any orderprovided it is logical. I once watched a well'known comic do a nightclub act that was totally disjointed. He talked about his marriage, then about his travels to the west coast, then about his marriage, then about his medical problems, then about his marriage, then about his troubles with insurance companies, then about his marriage. It confused the au' dience, and it offended them. They felt that very little preparation had gone into his act. Jokes seemed to have been grabbed from a file drawer and thrown together. They were good jokes, but they weren't strung together in a believable flow. Even the smoothest blends will be disruptive if they blend the wrong material. It's like weaving an invisible seam into carpeting only to discover that you've put different colors together. No seam will be invisible when you put a green rug next to a red one. In Chapter Seventeen you got some practice in putting a monologue together. It should already be in logical order, but now you'll get some practice in blending topics and subtopics and making sure that the routine flows and feels relaxed.
= WORKOUT 18A =
"Column AColumn B"
A good transition joke takes ideas from two separate topics or subtopics. This workout is good practice for writing transition jokes because it gets you searching for similar and different characteristics in two separate ideas.
1. I put together "Food" and "Floor" for this gag: "I make biscuits that are so bad you can't eat them. But it's not a total waste. I did tile my bathroom floor with them." 2. I used "Ring" and "Boat" to write this joke: "My wife wanted a diamond ring for our 25th wedding anniversary and I wanted a boat. So we compromised. We bought the ring, but I get to scrape the barnacles off it whenever it needs it."
= WORKOUT 18B =
"From Topic to Topic"
This exercise is even more practical than the last one. That was good practice in creating transition lines. It showed you how you could extract elements from two separate categories and write them into one joke, bringing the divergent elements together. In this workout, you do the same thing with actual topics.
HERE'S W H A T Y O U D O F O R THIS W O R K O U T
1. Collect ten headlines from your daily newspaper. They can come from any part of the paperthe front page, the entertainment section, the sports pages, even the obituaries. They can be major headlines, but they don't have to be. 2. Arrange them in an order that you think will provide a logical, conversational flow. 3. Write transition lines that will take you smoothly through all ten of your topics. Assume that you have all the jokes you need on each topic, but you are now writing lines that will blend smoothly from one routine to the next.
HERE'S W H A T T H I S W O R K O U T WILL D O F O R Y O U
This is excellent practice in routining a monologue. You have to arrange your topics in a logical progressionone that will feel natural to the listeners. Of course, you may want to change the order as you write the transition lines. If you come up with a great line that combines elements three and five, you may find it expedient to relocate element four. That's fineprovided it doesn't disrupt the logic of the monologue.
H E R E A R E SOME EXAMPLES
For these examples, let me manufacture five generic topics that might appear in any day's newspaper. 1) Our President has economic meetings with Japanese businessmen. 2) A young actor, call him Daryl Goodface, is arrested for fighting with a news photographer who harassed him outside a Hollywood restaurant.
* * * * *
3) A 7'2" college basketball player from State University signed a professional contract for several millions of dollars.
* * * * *
4) A Washington politician, Senator John Doe, is involved in an alleged scandal with a showgirl.
* * * * *
5) Scientists announce that fertilizer may be used eventually as a cure for male pattern baldness.
I've decided to arrange them in the following order: 1) The President and Japan first. Why? Because it's the biggest story of the bunch.
* * * * *
2) Next I'll go to Senator Doe's woes. It seems logical to keep the two political stories together.
* * * * *
3) Following that I'll put the routine about the actor, Daryl Goodface. That way we blend from scandal to scandal.
* * * * *
4) My fourth bit will be about the basketball player getting an exorbitant sum. No reason except that the next story is so whimsical compared to the others that it should be last.
* * * * * * * * * *
5) The fertilizer being used for baldness. It seems separate from the other stories. Here are the transition lines I might write for these five different elements: (Start with a few jo\es about the President and the Japanese economy Ending with . . .) " . . . Having all that money is not always a blessing for a government. They have to figure out what to spend it on. Of course, we all know what Senator Doe would spend it on."
* * * * *
(Then the few jo\es on Senator John Doe and his problems, followed by . . .) "No matter how bad things may seem for Senator John Doe, they could be worse. He could have been taking a picture of Daryl Goodface at the time."
* * * * *
(Then the jo\es about Daryl the actor and his legal problems. That would end . . .) "Goodface can afford to pay the fine, though. Actors are the richest people in the world. I mean for people who aren't 7'foot'2 and graduates of State Univer' sity."
* * * * *
(Then we do the jo\es about this topic, ending with . . .) "This kid's agent says he's worth twice as much, but we all know that what agents say is the world's latest cure for baldness."
* * * * *
A W O R D BEFORE Y O U S T A R T
The order of these gags was arbitrary, remember. It was at the discretion of the writer. The order must be logical, but there is more than one form of logic. For instance, we
could have gone from the economic meeting with the Japanese to the basketball player signing. Both of them have to do with money That's fine. However, the blend line would have to be changed. It might now read: "It's hard to imagine how Japan could get so wealthy, especially since none of them can dunk a basketball." These lines may not be the strongest in your monologue. They don't necessarily have to be. They are designed to keep the logic flowing. Certainly, you should make them as powerful as possible, but the real strength of your monologue is in the comedy of your routines. These transitions jokes get you into your routines, and those routines should lead to the climactic jokes. Have fun with this workout, and give it a lot of thought and effort. It can help your writing tremendously
= WORKOUT 18C =
"From Subtopic to Subtopic"
This workout is practice in blending from subtopic to subtopic. These are more closely related than major topics are, but they're also a little more delicate. The blend has to be somewhat more subtle.
With that order established, these are the transition lines that I wrote: {a to b) "That dog has me wrapped around its littlefinger.It can get anything out of me it wants. It's exactly the way children are foroh, let's say, the first 30 to 35 years." (b to c) 'Tfou know, my children woke me up every couple of hours their first night at home, too. I didn't get mad at them, but I get mad at the dog. Of course, my children weren't chewing the couch apart at the time." (c to d) 'All the thing did all night was whine and wet. I couldn't decide which end of it I hated more." (d toe) "I couldn't figure how so much liquid could come from such a little puppy The next day she showed me. She ate $82 worth of dog food." (etof) "She eats more than she's worth, she wets, she has accidents, but I love hen I think I love anything around the house that has more bad habits than me."
= WORKOUT 18D =
"Smoothing Out the Monologue"
This workout will give you a practical, hands'on application of the transition. In this you will judge for yourself where a better transition is needed, what kind is required, and how to write one.
Chapter J^ineteen
who are in there. One person at table A may be wearing a brightlycolored plaid jacket, another at table B may be wearing a tuxedo, and so on. However, not all of these people are important to your story. So when you tell about meeting someone at a restaurant, you wouldn't and shouldn't describe every person you pass while getting to your table. They're not essential. We do, however, want to know everything about the person you're meet' ingor at least, everything about the person that's important to the story It's easier for you to know which elements of your story and its ambience are essential and which are not if you have a well'defined statement of your premise. The second element of a good premise is interest, You are telling a story; therefore, you want people to listen. To be a good story'teller, you have to make the audience want to listen. You have to get them so involved in your story that they can't put the book down, leave the theatre, or turn off the T V until they find out how everything "turns out." An intriguing plot accomplishes that. One thing that makes a story interesting is unexpected complications. A good plot is a well'Stated goal with obstacles to its attainment, and the solutions to those obstacles are found along the way. Hollywood supposedly likes happy endings, but you need plenty of frustration en route in order to have something to be really happy about at the end. It's those problems and the response to them that keeps the audience intrigued. The third element is credibility. Your plot should be believable. That doesn't mean you can't write science fiction where the circumstances might be far from our present knowledge of reality It doesn't mean you can't write comedies where the action is zany and silly. It doesn't mean you can't create dream sequences where time and space become confused and abstract. It simply means that each of the elements of your story must fit within a certain range of believability. Why? Because that sup' ports your premise. In Bac\ to the Future, Michael J. Fox journeys back in time and influences the life of his own parents. I'm not sure I believe that would ever happen, but I did believe that it might happen, and it was told in such a way as to support that premise. If however, parts of your story are totally unbelievable within their own context, you destroy the whole thing. It's like pulling one card out of a house of cards. The entire structure crumbles. The film, The Exorcist, had several things in it that were unbelievablethe young girl's head spun around; she spoke in different languages and voices; she could change the temperature of the room at will. Nevertheless, these events were consistent with the story that was being told. It was about a phenomenon that stretched the imagina' tion, therefore, the elements of the story could stretch the imagination. On the other hand, if you're telling a normal, everyday story and you have two people get on a bus in New York and get off the bus two hours later in Madrid, you have a serious credibility gap. You can only get away with it if it's consistent with your story and you "explain it logically"even if the logic is only your logic. I can recommend two worthwhile books that might help you with plotting: How to Write Plots That Sell by F. A. Rockwell (Contemporary Books, 1975). Screenplay: The Foundations of Screenwriting by Syd Field (Dell, 1984).
= WORKOUT 19A =
"Story in a J^utshell"
This workout gives you practice in defining a plot premise.
= WORKOUT 19B =
"Platonic Plagiarizing'
This workout is practice in "paralleling." That means to "copycat" a basic plot idea using a different setting. Plots are used over and over again. For example, West Side Story was an updated musical version of Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet. The classic film, The Hustler, was about a young up'and'coming pool player who wanted to challenge and dethrone the reigning champ, Minnesota Fats. Put guns in their hands instead of pool cues and you have the plot of countless westernsthe young gunsiinger wanting to shoot it out with the legend. The same premise has been repeated with basketball players, track stars, poker players, almost every type of competitor. I'm sure you can think of other examples, too. Jaws was similar to Moby Dic\. Some even claim that Gunga Din and Front Page are twin stories.
Laura's name. It's for $378.16a considerable amount. Jerry wants to know why it's in Laura's name only. 'N.ext scene: At the office Rob tells Buddy and Sally about Laura's "secret." It bothers him that it is secret. They try to comfort him and explain it away, but only make matters worse. However, through their talk they discover that tomorrow is Rob's birthday That's it! She's been saving for a gift. He agrees. She must be going to buy him the projector that he wants. However, she's $47 dollars short. Laura comes in. She's been shopping and decides to stop in just to say hello. Buddy and Sally leave them alone. Rob finds an excuse to give her $47 for her shopping. He even throws in an extra ten so she can buy the leather case, too. J^lext scene: When Rob gets home from work that evening he's like a kid waiting for his new toy He sneaks looks all over the house, trying to find the package. Laura tells him to relax; his birthday isn't until tomorrow. He continues to look anyway. Finally, Laura says, "If you're going to be this childish, I'll give you your gift tonight." She goes to get it and Rob starts preparing to plug it in and try it out. He gets out an extension cord and plugs it in. Jerry comes in to borrow the "old" projector. Rob gives it to him as a gift. Jerry leaves. Laura comes in with her gift. It's a sports shirt. 7v(ext scene: In the office the following day, Buddy and Sally surprise Rob with a birthday gift. It's a movie screen to go with his new projector. Rob tells them he got a sports shirt. Rob can't work because he keeps worrying about what the "secret" bankbook is for. He determines to confront Laura that evening and get to the bottom of this deception. J<[ext scene: That night in the Petrie bedroom, Laura tries to go to sleep as Rob paces. Finally, he pulls out the hidden bankbook and asks Laura what it's all about. She says she just wanted some money of her own. He wants to know why. She confesses that she was saving up to buy him a really nice presentyears from now. She wants to buy him a sports car. Her mother saved and bought her Dad a fully furnished den on their 25th wedding anniversary. She wanted to do the same, but now Rob has ruined the surprise. Rob is satisfied that she wasn't hiding anything from him and loves her all the more for thinking of him. They hug and all ends -well. PARALLEL PLOT OUTLINE Using that same premise of suspected deception and thinking that it was for oneself, I devised this parallel plot for the sitcom Cheers: First scene: The gang is in the bar discussing Boston's city-wide "Ugliest Bartender Contest." It's a charity fund'raiser sponsored by a local television station. People
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donate money as their way of voting for their favorite bartender. It's called the "Ugliest Bartender Contest," but it's really a popularity event. The money goes to a good cause, and the winning bartender gets an all-expenses-paid trip to Bermuda for two. Sam, Cheers' entrant, has been running very close to first for the entire event. The folks are trying to guesstimate how much money is in the jar. Finally, they make a bet and count the cash. It comes to $186. They put the money back in the jar and settle their bet. Rebecca comes out and takes the jar. Later she comes into the bar, calls the headquarters of the contest, and tells them she will personally deliver today's tally that totalled $115. She leaves with the cash. 7*{ext scene: The regular patrons are discussing what just happened. Carla thinks Rebecca's a thief Others feel she just miscounted. Sam thinks she is jealous and doesn't want him to have the trip. Finally, they devise a plan to see if this will happen again the next night. They determine that Carla will see how much money Rebecca has in her purse when she comes in. They will tally all the money put into the jar. Then they will see how much she leaves with at the end of the night and what she reports to headquarters. l^ext scene: We see the cloak'and'dagger activity of the patrons trying to distract Rebecca so Carla can get to her purse. Eventually, they get their input and discover that again Rebecca is short. When she's leaving Sam mentions that he's been falling behind. She says, "Well, it's not over till it's over." At another bar meeting Sam is now sure he has the solution. She's not stealing; she's holding back. She's delaying the suspense. Tomorrow, the final night, Sam will be the glorious come'fronvbehind winner ?iext scene: At the bar, several deliveries are made to Rebecca. They are all boxes from expensive clothing stores. Now everyone is convinced she's a thief except Sam. He's still positive that he will be the last'ininute victor They all watch the final announcement on T V and Sam finishes second, behind some bartender from a bar across town. T^ext scene: In Rebecca's office, which is loaded down with empty boxes from expensive clothing stores, Sam confronts Rebecca. They know they made more than she was reporting. She confesses. She took money from the Cheers' jar and put it into this other bar's earnings. It all went to the same charity, anyway, and she didn't keep a cent. Sam wants to know why. She confesses she did it for him. She knew that his ego, even for a publicity stunt, couldn't stand being the "Ugliest Bartender." She did it to keep him from being hurt. He's genuinely touched. They might even hug. Then there's someone calling for Rebecca. She grabs her luggage. She's going off to Bermuda with the winner of the contest.
Here are several other recognizable plots and how I might change them to generate new stories: THE GUNFIGHTER PLOT A youngster is trained by a legendary gunfighter. The kid practises until he feels he's the fastest gun in the west. The only way to prove that, though, is to challenge his mentor to a shoot-out. He uses every trick he can to outmaneuver his teacher. He makes sure the older gunfighter has had some drinks before issuing the challenge; he arranges the duel so that the sun is to his back and in the eyes of the legendary gunslinger.
* * * * *
One variation on this might be a young, comedy club comic who idolizes a legendary performer, such as Johnny Carson. The youngster copies the Johnny Carson style, perhaps even writes for Carson's T V show and then has some success on his own. He can't rest until he knocks Carson off the air. He tries every sort of underhanded trick he can think of to discredit Carson, including character assassination, blackmail, whatever Along the way, he loses the friendship of some of the people who helped make him an up-and-coming comedy star. Does he knock his idol off the air? I don't know yet. That will come as the outline unfolds. THE HIGH N O O N PLOT The gunfighter, a former killer, vowed to the woman he loved that he would never again carry a gun. Then he's challenged and he has to face his antagonist or be known as a coward. He decides that he must face the challenge even if it means losing the woman he loves. * * * * This might be updated to be the story of a kid who used to belong to gangs. He became a hoodlum and served time in prison, but abandoned that life and reformed when he fell in love. Now the police come to him and ask him to go undercoverto become a hoodlum again. They convince him he has to do this to save other youngsters from a way of life that will destroy them. It would only be a one-time operation, but it might cost him the woman he loves.
= WORKOUT 19C =
"What Would Happen Jiextl"
Many stories fall apart because the characters do things that no one would ever do. They become either totally unbelievable or completely ridiculous. Within reason life has a certain predictability to it. There may be a range of reactions to certain stimuli, but one of those variations is usually present. For instance, if a person wins the Wimbledon championship, that player will jump for joy, throw the racket, fall to the ground in joy, jump the net, or show some other kind of pleasurable reaction. "You don't know what the player will do, but you can expect some show of emotion. If the player takes out a cigarette and lights up, that would be a shock. It would make the headlines of every sports page in the world, if not the front page. If you were to write that into a screenplay without a reason far it, you'd have a major glitch in your writing. This flaw is especially common in comedy writing because we try to set up our punchlines. We try to force jokes into the situation, and to get the jokes in we have to get joke setups in. Sometimes, though, the setups, although they blend beautifully into the comedy punch, don't coincide with the action. We force the action to take an unnatural turn to accommodate our comedy. This workout will help get you thinking along logical believable lines.
Let's say someone is watching a scary television show. He begins crying and saying, "I'm frightened. I don't know what to do. This show could scar me for life." Well, that may be true, but all he has to do is turn the set off That solves the problem. Then there are stories that have plot points that are supposed to generate suspense and intrigue, while all they do is confuse the audience. The viewers say, "Why don't they just. . ."
= WORKOUT 19D =
"What's the Worst Thing That Could Happen Kext?"
Complications add interest to a plot. In the previous workout, you followed a logical sequence. Logic and consistency, though, are not enough to rivet a reader or a viewer There must be some suspense. There has to be jeopardy. In this workout you'll practise introducing that element into your story. I call it the "What's the Worst Thing that Could Happen Next?" workout.
OR 3) I call downstairs and they have the solution. They will send someone up with an extra set of cuff links immediately. I'm roaming around the room in my underwear and just open the door when I hear the knock. The person they sent up is a female. She's embarrassed and just drops the cuff links on the bureau. I didn't look at her when I admitted hen Now I notice as she's going out the door that it's a woman and now I'm embarrassed. I chase after her to explain, but she's running down the hotel corridor I turn to go back to my room and the door has swung shut, locking me in the hallway in only my skivvies.
= WORKOUT 19E =
"Plus and Minus"
In this workout you'll get a chance to develop the plot further. In Workout 19D, you practised complicating the situation. Now you'll have to solve the complication and then complicate that solution; solve the next problem and create a frustration from that. In other words, your plot will continue to roller coaster. "Vbu'U go from a plus situation to a minus situation and continue on that waypositive, negative, positive, negativeuntil the final resolution of the plot. Many comedy films are built solely on this structure. The National Lampoon Vacation films starring Chevy Chase were. \bu can probably think of many others. Even a highly dramatic and suspenseful film like Fatal Attraction was constructed mostly on this basis. This workout is good practice in learning to complicate and resolve each segment of your plot. Let's call it the ( + ) and ( ) workout.
( + ) Rebecca learns about the job loss before she tells off the boss and forfeits her job. () She now plays the weak-willed employee and sheepishly says to the boss all the sycophantic things that he would want said to him. ( + ) She turns to leave, but then realizes that she has been lily-livered. She determines that she will not leave the office a coward. She will say what she came to say. She turns and tells the boss off ( - ) After her tirade we know that she will be fired. ( + ) But no! The boss admires her for having the courage to stand up to him. He offers her the position of Vice-President in charge of all corporate marketing. She starts Monday. She's thrilled. ( - ) The FBI come into the office and arrest the boss for insider stock trading. They handcuff him and lead him away before he can notify anyone that Rebecca has been promoted. In the end, she neither loses her Cheers job, nor is she promoted. Like all sitcoms, it ends exactly as it started.
Chapter Twenty
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me, though. He handed me the manuscript and said, "Read Jim's line on page 3." Jim was the star of the show. I read the line. He said, "Now keep turning the pages until you come to Jim's next line." By the time I stopped flipping pages I was on page 11. Sentencing the star to eight pages on stage doing nothing but "catching flies," might be a practical flaw. (It was.) But it's also an artistic error to leave any performer on stage with nothing to say or do. I, the writer, had violated that form. Solutions were possible. I could give Jim stage business, or add dialogue, or devise a way to get him offstage until I needed him again eight pages later. The artistic structure is not a list of regulations. "You can't find an artistic code written down somewhere the way you might find a building code. It's more a "seat' of-the-pants" set of regulations that you learn by study, observation, and experience. It exists in television, screenplays, stage plays, and novels. The rules are real, but they are flexible. "You can experiment with them. Going back to architecture, for example, aesthetic tastes may change. Art deco may be in one year and old-fashioned the next. The engineering rules won't change that much, though. Gravity will always have the same pull on your structure regardless of what year you design it. The practical structure is more rigid in writing, too. A sitcom begins on the hour and ends at the half-hour. "Vou have to leave time for commercials whether the artist in you agrees or not. On television, commercial spacing often determines the form of the show. Does that T V show have a short opening, a commercial, a long first and second act separated by commercials, and then a short closing segment? Does it have three acts of relatively equal length with commercials between? "You can learn that by watching the show and observing. A stage play is limited by the number of sets you can get in place on stage. A film can jump from location to location. A television show may have limited sets because it's shot on tape before a live audience. Another show may be able to have chase scenes because it's done on film with no audience. Even novels have practical limitations because paper costs money. A publishing company might not want a 480-page illustrated children's book. It might not want a novel that only has enough action to fill 82 pages. No agent can sell your screenplay if it will only generate a film that runs 26 minutes. \bu, as a writer, have to channel your talents to suit the arena you're writing for. %u need to study novels, joke books, films, variety shows, sitcomswhatever medium you want to write for. Each one of them has rules and guidelines, both artistic and practical. The workouts in this chapter give you some guidelines for studying and analyzing many forms.
WORKOUT 20A
"Stop, Loo\, and Listen"
Each medium you want to write for has its own particular set of unwritten rules. You can absorb these by observation and experimentation. "Vfou watch and analyze, then you write. The more you write, the more you learn what works and what doesn't. This workout will offer you a practical way to study certain writing arenas and learn from your studies.
= WORKOUT 20B =
"Outline Tour Story"
In the previous workout, you studied the creativity of other writers and the structure of forms in various writing arenas. In this workout, you'll get the chance to write a plot outline of your own.
develop many of your writing skills. By following the form you studied in the previous workout, you'll be writing to practical guidelines. In developing a story that you would like to write, you'll surely be exercising your creative and artistic talents.
Chapter TwentyOne
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= WORKOUT 21A =
"Read and Write"
This workout is practice in using research to generate inspiration. The idea is that the more you know about a topic, the more chance you'll have of finding something interesting to write about.
2. Assume that you or a client of yours is going to speak at these places, 'fou are to find as much as you can about each place you select, and then write three opening jokes that would be apropos for that place and the people who live there.
The Chamber of Commerce is a possible source, but you have to be sure that the facts they supply are known by the general population. Sometimes their information can be too esoteric. If there are colleges in the area, the sports information office is helpful, as are students who work on the school paper. Also, check an atlas to find out exactly where the place is and what it's near, an almanac to find out some general information about it, and an encyclopedia for the same reason. The generalized information might prompt you to remember something about the area that you knew but had forgotten. For instance, on a recent show that I wrote for, I read some background informa' tion on the locale and discovered that it had been a hiding place for pirates. That opened up a whole new area of joke writing for me. I had known it was a favorite port of pirates, but somehow just neglected to include that in my writing. This reading jogged my memory "We also investigated personal friends, "vvfe'dfindout if somebody had a friend who knew a friend who had a relative in the particular place. If they did, we'd call. But you'll invent your own ways of gathering information and using that informa' tion to write sharp, incisive, funny material. Have fun with this workout.
= WORKOUT 21B =
"Write and Write"
This workout will help you get to the keyboard when the writing muse is out to lunch. It can help to cure "writer's block."
= WORKOUT 21C =
"Meet Your Quota"
This workout is practice in generating productive time. It's great preparation for meeting some of the "impossible" deadlines that all writers face sooner or later
SSs
WORKOUT 21D
"Flying On Instruments"
As a professional writer, you'll often get writing assignments that aren't too thrilling. They may be things you either don't know anything about or don't care anything aboutfrequently, both. However, you have to finish the assignment. As one writer said about his assignments for a comedian client, "I can turn in great material or I can turn in terrible material. I can't turn in no material." This workout is practice in researching and writing about topics that you probably know little about. They will be topics that come at you from the blind side. ^Xfe've designed the workout so that you can't know in advance what you'll be writing about.
Chapter TwentyTwo
= WORKOUT 22A =
"Des\ Spot"
Johnny Carson introduces some new forms of comedy on his show. The humor in his monologues is sharp and entertaining, but the form is traditional. There's nothing wrong with that. He does try different things in his "desk spots," though. The desk spot is the routine he does from his desk after the monologue. It might be captioning photographs, or "The Great Camac," or coming up with new titles for old books. It might be anything, in fact. Sometimes these pieces work and sometimes they don't. That's the risk of innovation. In this workout, we're going to ease into a creative form by asking you to design one for a traditional piece.
HERE'S W H A T Y O U D O F O R T H I S W O R K O U T
1. Come up with a clever premise that might be used as a Johnny Carson "desk spot." 2. Once you formulate the premise, write at least five jokes as examples.
HERE'S W H A T T H I S W O R K O U T WILL D O F O R Y O U
"You're developing a new form of comedynot simply writing jokes or situation comedy premises. \bu're actually inventing a new idea. Since that is the premise of this workout, it would be bending the rules to simply rewrite a "desk spot" that Johnny Carson has already presented. For instance, it would be wrong for the purposes of this workout to just write new jokes for the "Great Camac" routine.
H E R E A R E S O M E EXAMPLES
One idea that I might invent would be to take some black and white photographs or drawings and do some doctoring of them with a red ink pen. For example: I can see a picture of some swashbucklers. One of them has the red ink running down his leg. The caption might read: "Excuse me, Captain, but I think you should be more careful when you're putting your sword into your scabbard." Another might be a picture of a gentleman whose eyes are colored bright red. The captain could say: "I take it sir that's the first Bo Derek movie you've ever seen?" Tfou get the idea. Another idea would be to doctor some classical pictures, inserting celebrities into the scene. For example:
The classic painting 'American Gothic" (That's the one with the grim'looking couple standing side by side in front of their farmhouse. The husband holds a pitchfork.) with Tammy Bakker looking over the wife's shoulder saying: "Can I borrow that pitchfork? I have to adjust my eyelashes."
* * * * *
Or "Washington Crossing the Delaware" with Don Rickles in the boat, saying: "Sit down, George. Ym're not the President yet." I recently saw another good example of innovative comedy that is selling well. It's a book called The 72 Roughest Holes in Golf. It is a collection of photos of various places, that have been altered to become golf holes. For example, the authors doc tored a Mt. Rushmore photograph to show the tees on top of George Washington's head and the green atop Teddy Roosevelt. They provided appropriate copy, also, giving a little background about this particular golf hole. The book is funny, clever, and inventive.
= WORKOUT 22B =
"Comedy Parlor Game"
In this workout you'll try to have some fun having some fun.
= WORKOUT 22C =
"Do It Yourself'
This is the ultimate challenge to creativity. And a fitting last workout for this book.
PARTING WORDS
Someone once said there were only three ways to learn to write. They were to write, to write, and to write. If you've gotten to this point in the book and faithfully done all or most of the workouts, you've written, written, written. Like it or not, you're a better writer than when you started. However, you're not done with this book. The workouts here will be valuable to you for as long as you want to be an excellent writer. From time to time, some of your skills will require touch'up work, fine tuning. Go back and redo those workouts that will help. If the workouts are organized in a way so that the examples are exhausted the first time you do them, create or research new examples. That's an exercise not only in writing, but in creativity. These workouts are the product of one author's imagination. Devise some of your own to improve different facets to your writing skills. To learn to write you have to write, write, write; to be a good writer, you have to keep writing, keep writing, keep writing. Henry David Thoreau said, "I put a piece of paper under my pillow, and when I could not sleep I wrote in the dark."
INDEX
Adjectives, 115 Aesthetics, 175 Allen, Gracie, 14 Allen, Steve, 97 Allen, Woody, 16, 23, 42, 108, 160 Analyzation, 73-74 Answer Game, 188 Associations, 44-49, 74-83; form, 77 Autobiographical sketch, 111, 115 Back to the Future, 161 Barr, Roseanne, 66 Benny, Jack, 18, 20, 55, 67 Blocks, writers, 181 Brecht, Bertolt, 16 Brenner, David, 67, 101 Building jokes, 123-126 Bull Durham, 162 Captioning, 20-22, 35-41 Carlin, George, 66, 67 Carol Burnett Show, The, 160 Carson, Johnny, 12, 18, 66, 85, 92, 119, 186 Carter, Jack, 42 Cartoons, 20-22, 38-39 Celebrity caricatures, 49 Cheers, 160, 164-165, 182-183 Chunks, breaking premise into, 84 Churchill, Winston, 111 Cliches, 34, 56; getting away from, 183 Comebacks, 131 Comedy Word Game, 188 Complications, plot, 182 Comparison formula, 98 Conjecture, 92 Cosby, Bill, 14, 18, 66, 148 Creativity, 185-189 Credibility, 161, 167 Dangerfield, Rodney, 13, 22, 142-143 Davis, Sammy, 49 Deadlines, 178, 182 Definitions, 30-31, 98; fictitious, 32 Desk, spots, 186-187 Dic\ V< Dyke Shorn The, 163-164 Diller, Phyllis, 13, 54 Dissimilar associations, 46-47 Distortion, 100-107 Dreesen, Tom, 142 Economy, 109-111,115 Editing, 115; see Rewriting Enthusiasm, generating, 179 Exaggeration, 72, 100-107 Excellence, 9 Exorcist, The, 161 Fatal Attraction, 182 Fay, Frank, 18 Fear, 181 Fields, W C , 51, 110-111, 143 Formulas, joke, 92, 97-99 Friars' roasts, 142 Front Page, The, 163 Fry, Christopher, 16 Fuller, Richard, 174 Future, extending joke into, 107 Gallagher, 67 Games, inventing, 188 Goldberg, Whoopi, 143, 148 Goldwyn, Samuel, 29 Great Carnac, The, 186, 188 Gunfighter plot, 166 Gunga Din, 163 Handle, adding a different, 145-146 Headlines, following, 66 Hiding the joke element, 50, 133, 136-137 High l^pon plot, 166 Hope, Bob, 12, 18-19, 66, 97, 98, 109, 151 How to learn to write, 189 Hubbard, Elbert, 16 Hustler, The, 163 Ideas, abstract, exaggerating, 102, 106; jokes as interrelationship of two, 42-43 Idioms, 34 Imagery, using, 50-55 Images, bizarre, 13, 14 Imagination, training the, 38-41 Improvisation, 123 Inconsistency, 147 Inspiration, 9; generating, 179 Introductory phrases, 115 Jackson, Glenda, 17 Jaws, 163 Jokes, favorite, 11-13, 18-19; spoken, 112; switching, 116-117; written, 113 Jokes, building, 123-126; rewriting, 114, 116-122, 132-141; writing, 35, 84-86, 91-99 Kauffmann, Max, 16 Klein, Robert, 66 Kovacs, Ernie, 185 Language, nuances of, 25-29 Laugh-In, 185 Leno, Jay, 12, 66 Levant, Oscar, 33 Logic, 16, 132, 167-169 Longworth, Alice Roosevelt, 16 Malapropisms, 27-29 Mann, Thomas, 16
192
INDEX
Marc, Monsieur, 17 Marginal notes, 134-135 Martin, Steve, 142 Marx, Groucho, 58 Mason, Jackie, 13, 148 Meanings, hidden, 25, 58-59, 60-62 Mencken, H.L., 16 Misdirection, 13, 14, 57-59 Misuse of words, 27-32 Moby Dick, 13, 54-55 Moby Dic\, 163 Monologues, 142-159 National Lampoon Vacation films, 182 Newspaper, writing from, 183 Non sequiturs, 49, 117, 142 Novels, 175-177 Observations, 65-72 One-liners, 15, 35 Opening jokes, 144 Paralleling a joke, 117, 120, 122, 163-166 Photographs, captioning, 36-37 Pizzazz, adding, 133 Play, stage, limitations, 175-177 Plotting a story, 160-173, 177 Point of view, 142 Potchkey, 123-126 Practical considerations, 174-175 Premise, monologue, 144, 162 Productivity, 178-184 Pryor, Richard, 18 Punchline, 14, 50-51, 110-111; switching, 117, 119, 122; toppers for, 128 Puns, 33 Quotations, 15-17; into jokes, 98 Recordings, working with, 148 Relationships of ideas, 42-49 Research, 179, 183; workouts, 11, 15, 18, 20, 67 Rewriting jokes, 114-122, 132-141 Rhythm, 51, 115 Rivers, Joan, 14, 142 Rodo*, 162 Rogers, Will, 12, 42, 129, 143 Romeo and Juliet, 163 Scenes, captioning, 40-41 Science fiction writing for humorists, 107 Screenplay, practical considerations, 175-177 Segovia, Andres, 23 Setup, 109-110; switching, 117, 122 Shortcut to joke writing, 84-85 Similar associations, 44-45, 56 Sitcom writing, 160, 172-173, 175-176 Smothers, Tom, 14 Sound-alike words, 27-28
Speech pattern, 143 Speed exercise, 87-88 Spontaneity, 132 Stand-up comedy, basis of, 142; also see Monologues Story structure, 174-175 Straight-line, manufacturing the, 92; switching the, 118 Strategy, 9 Structure: of joke, 108-111; of story, 174-177 "Stupid" humor, 28 Style, developing your own, 22; studying, 18 Subtopics, 84-90 Surprise, 51, 59, 109, 136-137 Suspense, 170 Swifties, Tom, 63-64 Switching, 116-117 Symbols, 52-53 "Take my wifeplease," 114 Thoreau, Henry David, 189 Time, creating more, 182 Topical jokes, 12 Topics and subtopics, blending, see Transitions Toppers, 127-131 Transitions, 151-159 Trivial Comedy, 188 T V variety shows, structure, 175-177 Twain, Mark, 16, 17 Underdog, 131 Universality, 65 Updating, 73 Ustinov, Peter, 143 Variety, adding, 145-146 Verbal presentation, 112 Visualization, 20 Vocabulary, exploring, 30 "Volare," 26 Warner, Jack, 17 West, Mae, 16 West Side Story, 163 Westerns, 163 "What if?", 95 "What's the worst thing that could happen next?", 170-171 Williams, Robin, 14, 97, 142 Words, facility with, 23 Wright, Stephen, 14 Writer's block, 181 Written jokes, 113 "You know it's time to . . . . when," 71 Young, Tracy, 17 Youngman, Henny, 13, 42, 114, 142, 151 Zaniness, adding, 95-96