SALON TALKS

Can comedy save us in the "post-truth" era?

Salon talks to "The Girl in the Show" author Anna Fields about how women shaped modern humor

By Mary Elizabeth Williams

Senior Writer

Published August 15, 2017 6:45PM (EDT)

In her fascinating, comprehensive new book "The Girl in the Show: Three Generations of Comedy, Culture, & Feminism," author Anna Fields reveals the audacious women who shaped modern comedy — and the obstacles they overcame just to get a place on the stage to make audiences laugh. Culled from both exhaustive research and interviews with luminaries like Abbi Jacobson and  Molly Shannon, it's a tribute to the power of women standing up.

Fields spoke recently with Salon about comedy and the "girls" in the rooms where it happened.

On the presumed masculinity of humor:

We do think of men when we think of comedy, and we do think of maleness when we think of a comedian. So many of the women I interviewed talked to me about how they have to "trick the audience into thinking they're men" in order for the audience to feel comfortable laughing at them but also loving them.

It's so fascinating — what is a comedian supposed to look like?

On how gender fluidity is changing comedy:

What is to be a female comedian? What is it to be a male comedian? What if you are a comedian of either, both, or no gender? What does that mean in terms of how you present yourself to the audience, what you are allowed to joke about, and whether your audience will feel comfortable joking with you about that thing?

On the political power of laughter

I've always asked myself if, given that we live in an era in which so many of our leaders are abdicating their role as truth tellers, if comedians, by telling us the truth, become our new national leaders?

Watch the video for more of our conversation about women and comedy.


By Mary Elizabeth Williams

Mary Elizabeth Williams is a senior writer for Salon and author of "A Series of Catastrophes & Miracles."

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