Comedy
From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia
Revision as of 13:55, 15 April 2009 Jahsonic (Talk | contribs) ← Previous diff |
Revision as of 14:21, 19 April 2009 Jahsonic (Talk | contribs) Next diff → |
||
Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
While hard to pin down, it can safely be said that most good comedy, as with a good [[joke]], contains within it variations on the elements of surprise, incongruity, conflict, and the effect of opposite expectations. The audience becomes a part of the experience, if it is to be successful. Sometimes, it is the fulfillment of the expectation which is part of the experience, such as the long "take" of a Jack Benny, resolved, [[paradox]]ically, when the expected happens. Comedy is a serious business, and one only knows it when one sees it or hears it. | While hard to pin down, it can safely be said that most good comedy, as with a good [[joke]], contains within it variations on the elements of surprise, incongruity, conflict, and the effect of opposite expectations. The audience becomes a part of the experience, if it is to be successful. Sometimes, it is the fulfillment of the expectation which is part of the experience, such as the long "take" of a Jack Benny, resolved, [[paradox]]ically, when the expected happens. Comedy is a serious business, and one only knows it when one sees it or hears it. | ||
+ | ==Forms of comedy== | ||
+ | :''[[comedy genres]]'' | ||
+ | * [[Pun]] | ||
+ | * [[Fantasy]] | ||
+ | * [[Observational humor|Observational]] | ||
+ | * [[Irony]] | ||
+ | * [[Satire]] | ||
+ | ** [[Parody]] | ||
+ | ** [[Political satire]] | ||
+ | ** [[Black comedy]] | ||
+ | * [[Slapstick]] | ||
+ | * [[Deadpan]] | ||
+ | * [[Tragicomedy]] | ||
+ | |||
==Performing arts== | ==Performing arts== | ||
===History=== | ===History=== |
Revision as of 14:21, 19 April 2009
Related e |
Featured: |
Comedy has a classical meaning (comical theatre) and a popular one (the use of humour with an intent to provoke laughter in general). In the theater, its Western origins are in ancient Greece, like tragedy, a genre characterised by a grave fall from grace by a protagonist having high social standing. Comedy, by contrast, portrays a conflict between a young hero and an older authority, a confrontation described by Northrop Frye as a struggle between a "society of youth" and a "society of the old". A more recent development is to regard this struggle as a mere pretext for disguise, a comical device centered on uncertainties regarding the meaning of social identity. The basis of comedy would then be a plot mechanism conceived to engender misunderstandings either about a hero's identity or about social being in general.
Returning to the popular term comedy, it is known to be difficult to describe. Humor being subjective, one may or may not find something humorous because it is either too offensive or not offensive enough. Comedy is judged according to a person’s taste. Some enjoy cerebral fare such as irony or black comedy; others may prefer scatological humor (e.g. the "fart joke") or slapstick. A common gender stereotype that plays on this convention is that men love the comedy of The Three Stooges, while women do not.
While hard to pin down, it can safely be said that most good comedy, as with a good joke, contains within it variations on the elements of surprise, incongruity, conflict, and the effect of opposite expectations. The audience becomes a part of the experience, if it is to be successful. Sometimes, it is the fulfillment of the expectation which is part of the experience, such as the long "take" of a Jack Benny, resolved, paradoxically, when the expected happens. Comedy is a serious business, and one only knows it when one sees it or hears it.
Contents |
Forms of comedy
Performing arts
History
- Ancient Greek comedy, as practiced by Aristophanes and Menander
- Ancient Roman comedy, as practiced by Plautus and Terence
- Burlesque, from Music hall and Vaudeville to Performance art
- Citizen comedy, as practiced by Thomas Dekker, Thomas Middleton and Ben Jonson
- Clowns such as Richard Tarlton, William Kempe, Yukko the Clown and Robert Armin
- Comedy of humours, as practiced by Ben Jonson and George Chapman
- Comedy of intrigue, as practiced by Niccolò Machiavelli and Lope de Vega
- Comedy of manners, as practiced by Molière, William Wycherley and William Congreve
- Comedy of menace, as practiced by David Campton and Harold Pinter
- comédie larmoyante or 'tearful comedy', as practiced by Pierre-Claude Nivelle de La Chaussée and Louis-Sébastien Mercier
- Commedia dell'arte, as practiced in the twentieth-century by Dario Fo, Vsevolod Meyerhold and Jacques Copeau
- Farce, from Georges Feydeau to Joe Orton and Alan Ayckbourn
- Jester
- Laughing comedy, as practiced by Oliver Goldsmith and Richard Brinsley Sheridan
- Restoration comedy, as practiced by George Etherege, Aphra Behn and John Vanbrugh
- Sentimental comedy, as practiced by Colley Cibber and Richard Steele
- Shakespearean comedy, as practiced by William Shakespeare
- Stand-up comedy
- Dadaist and Surrealist performance, usually in cabaret form
- Theatre of the Absurd, used by some critics to describe Samuel Beckett, Harold Pinter, Jean Genet and Eugène Ionesco
- Sketch comedy
Opera
Improvisational comedy
Clowns
Stand-up comedy
Stand-up comedy is a mode of comic performance in which the performer addresses the audience directly, with the absence of the theatrical "fourth wall", and usually speaks in his own person (rather than as a dramatic character).
- Comedian
- Musical comedy
- Comedy albums
- Comedy club
- Stand-up comedy
Jokes
See also