Become a Member
Life

Interview: Joan Rivers

Slow down? You’re joking

October 29, 2010 09:06
Joan Rivers

By

Anonymous,

Anonymous

5 min read

Joan Rivers stands on-stage in a concert hall in the wilds of Wisconsin, regaling a packed audience with her trademark brand of edgy humour. Suddenly a man complains in a loud voice about a gag she has made on the subject of deafness. He announces he is walking out. Rivers, visibly shaken, subjects him to a volley of invective as he leaves the auditorium.

This encounter — a scene from an award-winning documentary about Rivers which will have its British premiere at this year’s UK Jewish Film Festival — prompts two questions. Why is a veteran performer so riled by a single heckler that she is prepared to suspend her show in order to engage in a (literally) stand-up row? And why did the then 75-year-old grandmother need to trek halfway across the American continent for a one-nighter in the middle of nowhere?

Rivers, on the line from her home in New York, addresses the second question first. “I need to do it,” she says “This job is my joy and my passion. I can also use the money. I live very well but I support a lot of relatives.”

The film, called Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work, focuses on her almost pathological inability to turn down an offer of work and her anxiety when dates are thin on the ground. “I’ll show you fear,” she says in the film’s opening sequence, brandishing an empty page of her calendar — “that’s fear”.

To get more from Life, click here to sign up for our free Life newsletter.