ArtView December 2013 | Page 5

demands, is hive-mind thinking usually found in Narrative comedy goes hand-in-hand with rigid hierarchies such as large corporations or tragedy. The two masks, one of which is laughing government bodies. It has no place in comedy, for and the other crying, make up Drama. Tragedy three reasons. It operates within strict parameters needs a little bit of levity, and comedy needs to be (though those restrictions are more flexible and about something important. temporary than adherents would admit). Second, it Important topics are the meat and potatoes of robs any narrative of surprise and therefore narrative comedy. Whether it's a one-liner joke or a laughter. Finally, and most importantly, political complete comic movie's story, if it’s successful correctness is boring, boring, boring. you'll find at the heart of it something that is dark, even bleak. People who insist that some topics are beyond ridicule are either ignorant or small-minded. Everyone has topics that are dear to their hearts. Sometimes we will laugh at everything but one particular topic, a topic close to our hearts. Usually that topic resonates with something that has happened in our own lives. You could select what can and can’t be joked about but that would be cherry-picking humour, choosing what others may or may not find amusing. It’d be a doomed enterprise. People will laugh at things, even though we may not see the joke. The fact is, things that make us laugh are mostly terrible things. Men (and women, but mostly men) slip on banana peels and, depending on our own experiences, we can laugh at it or cry. Laughing is, ironically, a more mature response The trick for comedians and writers is to create comedy that causes the audience to feel surprised and yet at the same time to reveal something to the to fear and sorrow than weeping. That’s comedy. That's life. Deal with it. audience that they’ll recognise as truth. Many things, even dark and frightening things, are based upon truths, often uncomfortable truths. Tim Ferguson is author of ‘Carry A Big Stick’ (published by Hachette)