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Two Jews go into a comedy club, one old, one young...

Lee Levitt asks comedians at this year's Edinburgh Fringe if Jewish humour has changed

August 17, 2017 10:44
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ByLee Levitt, Lee Levitt

4 min read

As the Edinburgh Fringe celebrates 70 years, it’s a good time to look at how Jewish comedy has changed. Is there a generation gap in humour? Or do the themes of mothers, food and the neurosis generated by a history of persecution work for all ages?

Ivor Dembina, 66, features a mixture of vintage and original material in his show Old Jewish Jokes. All British Jewish comedians face “the same problem and that’s the Jewish audience,” he says. “It’s very conservative, very unwilling to listen to anything that is going to challenge what I think is their fear-based view of what it means to be a Jew in Britain today. And fear and comedy cannot exist in the same room.

“A young comedian who happens to be Jewish isn’t making a big story about it because the first place they go, the Jewish community, there isn’t that connection. Israelis, culturally, are very open, they all do jokes about the Holocaust, it’s everyday stuff. Here, the audience sits with a rod up its arse.”

In the 1970s, he says the Irish Catholic comedian Dave Allen showed the way for comedians from minority communities. “He did that brilliantly and found a way of opening that up to speak truthfully about quite a repressive community. That’s difficult if you’re a Jew, because there’s no support: if you open up, you’re not wanted. That’s a very infertile ground for a new comedian to emerge from.”