Comedy
This page needs some cleaning up to be presentable. This needs to be turned into a category. Or maybe two categories: Category:Comedy and Category:Humor. |
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This page needs some cleaning up to be presentable. The people listed under "Examples of works in the Comedy genre" need to be moved to a more appropriat page - people are not works. Names to Know in Comedy might be appropriate. |
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"Ever since prehistoric times, wise men have tried to understand what exactly makes people laugh. That's why they were called wise men. All the other prehistoric people were out puncturing each other with spears, and the wise men were back in the cave saying:
'How about: Here's my wife, please take her right now. No. How about: Would you like to take something? My wife is available. No. How about ...'"
Describe Comedy here.
You don't want much, do you?
Comedy is an elusive and fast-moving target to define. There's an entire field for trying to discover "Humor Theory", trying to find out what makes funny tick. General public consensus is that humor comes from the unexpected, but this theory is still flawed and doesn't explain everything. One thing's for sure: comedy is funny.
Comedy, as something primarily happy, is directly opposed to Tragedy, but not so much Drama, and can never be perfectly combined with Horror. And has been since the day it was conceived as a term, albeit not like we know today; comedy was something with a happy ending, i.e. Dante's Divine Comedy, Tragedy was a something that had a sad ending. Propelled off of Rule of Funny, comedy infects all art forms. Its hobbies include satires, parodies, pastiches, playing for laughs, snarking, irony, and hiding snickerdoodles in its knickerbockers.
A really long list of influential comedians can be found at Names to Know in Comedy.
A really, really long list of Comedy Tropes can be found at Comedy Tropes. Go figure.
Film
- The Marx Brothers
- Charlie Chaplin was arguably the first major film comedian.
- Mel Brooks
- Airplane!!
- Caddyshack
- Kind Hearts and Coronets
Literature
- P. G. Wodehouse
- Douglas Adams
- Terry Pratchett
- Mark Twain; first "American" humorist.
- Along the same lines, Ambrose Bierce, writer of The Devil's Dictionary.
- William Shakespeare - Master of English tragedy though he was, he also wrote a lot of ridiculously funny (and often extremely dirty) comedies.
- The Canterbury Tales
Live-Action TV
- Monty Python's Flying Circus turned comedy on its head with surrealism.
- Saturday Night Live took all the comedy that came before it, and threw it into a blender, creating the foundation for modern humor. It does this once a decade.
- Abbott and Costello
- The Daily Show and The Colbert Report
- Seinfeld puts Jerry Seinfeld on this list twice.
- Kath and Kim
- Kids in The Hall
- SCTV
- Mr. Show
- Arrested Development
Music
Comic Books
New Media
Newspaper Comics
- Garfield doesn't have the highest laugh quotient around, but it is a comedy, and is a big name.
- On a larger scale, most newspaper comics are either comedies (FoxTrot, Pearls Before Swine), dramas (most superhero strips, Rex Morgan MD) or something of both (Calvin and Hobbes, For Better or For Worse). Quality may vary wildly.
Stand Up Comedy
- Richard Pryor brought racial comedy into the mix.
- George Carlin derived most of his humor through cynicism.
- Lenny Bruce was a sort of proto-Carlin, using edgy comedy that upset Moral Guardians.
- Jerry Seinfeld is often attributed with inventing Observational Comedy.
- Eddie Izzard is similarly attributed with kick-starting Absurdist humor.
- Robin Williams
- Bill Hicks