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Me and my Edinburgh show

Two comedians and a playwright on their preparations for this year's Edinburgh Fringe

July 29, 2019 11:25
Rachel Creeger


Rachel Creeger 

Although it might not be every parent’s dream for their child, a stand-up comedian’s job is in many ways the ultimate Yiddishe trade. Writing comedy attracts those exact Type A personalities who make excellent doctors, lawyers and accountants.

The process follows a traditional yeshivah style formula of taking an idea apart, breaking it into questions, wondering if key principles would change if you looked back through biblical history or had Beryl say that line rather than Golda.

People imagine that comics walk out on stage and spontaneously deliver anecdotes but like all good rabbis we spend hours honing, analysing and rewriting until each word has intention, exploring every pause to wring the most out of a concept for your amusement.

Constructing a solo hour is a laborious course of trial and error. It’s essential to say the words aloud to strangers to get a sense of whether your material works. An entire day’s writing may yield a handful of embryonic jokelets worth testing, via an often excruciating first performance.

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