The Laugh-Makers

Stand-Up Comedy as Art, Business, and Life-Style

By Robert A. Stebbins
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Hardcover : 9780773507357, 176 pages, February 1990
Ebook (PDF) : 9780773562325, 176 pages, February 1990

Description

Stebbins begins with a history of stand-up comedy, giving vital background about the industry as it emerged and flourished in the United States and subsequently developed into a popular form of entertainment in Canada. He deals with the nature of comic performance in comedy rooms - cabarets designed specifically for stand-up comedy - and examines the career of the comic: how people become interested in comedy, how they progress as amateurs, how they survive on the road and how, sometimes, they become headliners and later writers for film and television. He also discusses the business of comedy: booking agents, comedy chains such as Yuk-Yuk's, room managers, and the comics themselves as entrepreneurs. As the first comprehensive study of a growing phenomenon, The Laugh-Makers will interest sociologists of humour and sociologists of occupations and will contribute to our understanding of Canadian popular culture.

Reviews

"Stand-up comedy is a new occupation; and this book is, so far as I know, the only contribution to the field! It is also a useful contribution to the sociology of occupations." Anthony Synnott, Department of Sociology, Concordia University. "There is nothing else so meticulously researched in Canada, nor, probably, anywhere else ... the documentation is so good and so unique ... [This] book has the unusual potential of being both an academic book and a popular one." I. Davies, Department of Sociology, York University.