6 Standouts of Stand-up Comedy Come to DVD
BOB NEWHART BUTTON-DOWN CONCERT
Before he became the Jimmy Stewart--like gentleman of sitcom, Newhart was a stand-up sensation. His 1960 LP, The Button-Down Mind of Bob Newhart, went to No. 1 and won a Grammy for Album of the Year. The old bits, in which he would play one side of an increasingly strained conversation, still had their gentle, exasperated wit when he did them, word for word, in a 1992 Showtime special. "I know some of you know these routines by heart," he told his audience, "but it throws me off to watch your lips move along with mine as I'm doing them."
RICHARD PRYOR LIVE IN CONCERT Newhart may have been able to assume the role of a put-upon driving instructor, but Pryor's eerie impersonations spanned many species. In this 1979 concert, he inhabits a deer, two squirrel monkeys, several dog breeds and a car tire, plus all varieties of black and white humans. Compulsively confessional, he talks of his cop encounters, his heart attack and his father's death in bed, if you know what we mean. It's a priceless evening with the all-time stand-up shaman.
RON WHITE YOU CAN'T FIX STUPID He's a genial Texas version of the devil. Dressed in black, holding a cigar and a glass of scotch, flashing a wicked smile that makes him look like Gary Busey's smarter brother, White is the bad boy of Blue Collar TV. In this short (41 min.) set, he makes the usual public issues of private parts, honeymoon tiffs and a persistent fan who cornered White and wouldn't shut up ("He raped my ear"). The material is just O.K., but the salesmanship is expert. He's a natural-born charmer with just a soupçon of Satan.
WANDA SYKES SICK & TIRED Well, she's sick of men who can't satisfy her. Also, NASA and racist dolphins. But Sykes, a former writer for Chris Rock (whom she sounds a bit like) and the star of two short-lived TV shows, has more than enough energy and tart comic logic for this stand-up soirée. She doesn't just rail at the White House's fumbling of military and financial issues; she's got helpful hints, like putting working moms in charge of the defense budget ("There's a sale on bombs at Target"). Of the newer comics with DVDs, Sykes is the finest shaper of routines, and her stiletto is the sharpest.
SARAH SILVERMAN JESUS IS MAGIC Dark, svelte and sexy, she strides onstage and, with a Valley Girl's perky naiveté, utters one social faux pas after another. "The best time to have a baby," she says, "is when you're a black teenager." Then she makes some apologetic qualifier that gets her pretty mouth into even bigger trouble. Of course, this Sarah Silverman is a stage persona, a one-shtick pony that could grate if not for her zazz and nervy aplomb. "I don't care if you think I'm racist," her alter egotist says defiantly. "I just want you to think I'm thin."
LEWIS BLACK RED, WHITE & SCREWED
- 1
- 2
- NEXT PAGE »
Most Popular »
- Watch: Dan Savage Leaves Stephen Speechless on 'Colbert Report'
- Androgynous Model Andrej Pejic Pushes the Fashion World's Limits
- 'Anonymous' Knocks CIA Site Offline
- Why American Kids Are Brats
- Desperately Seeking Susan Powell: A Best Friend's Quest
- World Press Photo Awards Announced
- Kate Middleton's Amazing Fashion Evolution
- Icelanders Avoid Inbreeding Through Online Incest Database
- 10 Things We (Still) Kinda Hate About The Phantom Menace
- Mired in the Sticky Politics of Health and Faith, Obama Shifts on Contraception
- The Upside Of Being An Introvert (And Why Extroverts Are Overrated)
- Why Is Your Boss Moving to Brazil?
- Jailed Polygamist Warren Jeffs Prepares His Flock for Doomsday
- Tokyo: 10 Things to Do
- DEA: Mexican Gov. Got Millions in Drug Cash
- Harvard's Hoops Star Is Asian. Why's That a Problem?
- Friends With Benefits
- Study: Children of Lesbians May Do Better Than Their Peers
- Desperately Seeking Susan Powell: A Best Friend's Quest
- Full Transcript of Obama's Speech




