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Remembering Richard Jeni

Almost on a daily basis, it’s becoming undeniable that comedy is going through another boom. Recognition of comedy as a legitimate art form from the powers that be in the world of performing arts has finally arrived. Just read any number of essays online about Louis CK’s series Louie if you need proof. While seeing folks like CK, Reggie Watts, Rory Scovel, Brent Weinbach, and more push the limits of comedy and being hilarious while doing it, stand-up from its previous boom in the 80’s and early 90’s seems to just have been tossed to the curb without any acknowledgment. Making fun of that era of comedy, with its obvious cadence, jokes every few seconds, and predictable structure has become a pastime for the comedians of today almost as if it’s an outdated way to make people laugh.

Still, there was a reason that the previous boom comedy happened. Just like now, comedians were hilarious and people watch, listened, and followed.

The perfect example of this dynamic between comedy then and now comes in the form of Richard Jeni’s The Beach Crowd. Compiled by the Richard Jeni Estate that survives him, The Beach Crowd is a patched together special of two weekends that Jeni did at the Comedy & Magic Club in Hermosa Beach, CA in 2002 and 2006. Even in the new millennium, Richard Jeni, who came to be one of the hottest comics working during the 80s (he was one of Johnny Carson’s favorite comedians), is unquestionably funny during a few club performances where he was just “tightening” some material.

If you’ve ever seen Jeni perform, and I highly suggest that you buy one of his numerous specials from Showtime and HBO as well as the The Beach Crowd, you’ll note that he follows in those conventions of cadence, delivering one joke after another, almost flawlessly, all while killing it. His writing was spot-on and was met by his impeccable performance chops. It’s the type of comedy where many people wonder how it looks so effortless, almost as if a sort of magic trick of words is being pulled on all watching. No matter the matter-of-fact appearance of Jeni, and how lo-fi the spliced-together clips look in the sparsely adorned DVD, Richard Jeni knew exactly what to do with a mic and mic stand in order to make a group of strangers laugh.

You can hear echoes of many jokes on The Beach Crowd in bits from such comedy trailblazers of today like Paul F. Tompkins as well as the aforementioned Louis CK, which is all the more reason why anybody who cares about comedy should watch Jeni working out an hour of material. The reason that the term “alternative comedy” exists is because several comics trying to find their way couldn’t find stage time in clubs and thus, went to bars, coffee shops, etc. and had less of an expectation to conform to traditional methods of stand-up. Just as that style/genre of comedy wasn’t invalid then, club/mainstream comedy isn’t any less invalid today. Richard Jeni serves as proof of that, and, had he lived on today, he would proved that wherever he went up. Whether it be the Comedy & Magic Club or the Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre, Jeni would assuredly make his comedy work.

That’s the distinction, regardless of the era, that makes a comedian one to be remembered. Watch The Beach Crowd and see what I’m talking about.

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Comments

  1. Sheldon L. says:

    Oh we miss you, Mr. Jeni. His “Jaws 4” bit has always been one of my all time favorites. Thanks Chris for this post. I look forward to ordering this some day.

  2. Luke Ski says:

    When I was in high school, I joined the forensics team so I could try to perform comedy in the category “Solo Humorous”, but found out that they would not allow you to perform your own material. Richard Jeni’s “The Boy From New York City” has just come out, so I transcribed and memorized his “Love Songs, nothing but love songs” routine and performed that my first year. It killed. In following years I did pieces by Larry Miller and George Carlin, but when RJ’s “Crazy From The Heat” special aired, I knew I had to do another piece of his. I chose his bit comparing his real life to the Brady Bunch, which I titled “Eat lunch twice”. It also killed, and I got a trophy that year for one of our meets. While that was happening, I started performing at open mics (accompanied by my parents) at comedy clubs performing my own material. Richard is one of mt all-time favorite comedians. I only got to see him perform live twice, and I never got to meet him. His passing deeply saddened me. It makes me really happy to see that there are people out there who appreciate him as much as I do.

  3. Claude Gaudette says:

    Richard Jeni wrote one of the greatest sentences in the history of the English language: “Lying is the vaseline that allows the turgid missile of romantic love to penetrate the tightly clenched orifice of the emotional defenses.” His bit about the movie Jaws 4: The Revenge (Well, look at you sitting there at 4 in the morning, with one sweat sock and a bag of shitty popcorn watching a movie about a shark that only kills one family out of an ocean full of perfectly edible people for no reason that we ever bothered to explain and we can’t pry you off the bed with a spatula because you think it’s bound to get better if you keep watching.). His TV ad for the office of Bernard Shapiro, attorney at law. The man and the woman literally putting their emotional cards on the table. (Him: “I can’t have an orgasm unless I’m on top.” Her: ” I can’t have an orgasm unless I’m on CRACK!” Him: “I have an imaginary friend named Bosco.” Her: “You know Bosco?”) All genius. The first time I remember seeing these bits there were times I was literally gasping for air. Richard Jeni, you are missed.

  4. Kevin A. says:

    thank you, thank you, THANK YOU for posting this. i have always loved comedy and stand up, and when i was at that age where i was starting to feel like comedy might be something i wanted to try and/or pursue, i saw one of his HBO specials and had that moment where you go, “i wanna do THAT!”
    he quickly became one of my favorites, but i feel like not a lot of people talk about him anymore; as someone who influenced them, or just in general. almost like people forgot about or have never heard of him (i’ve actually heard another comedian friend say, “who’s he?”). so again, thank you for posting this reminder of how great he was/is.

  5. Chad H says:

    I remember watching him host Caroline’s comedy hour back when I was younger. He was hilarious. RIP

  6. Jeff Bailey says:

    RIP Platypus Man. We miss you.

  7. Wow, I had no clue he had passed away. I wikipedia’d it and apparently it was suicide?

    What a shame, I always enjoyed him whenever I saw anything he did. It could be a bit cheesy, but in a way that made you smile.

    RIP, for sure.

    – Billy.