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50 Years Later, We Still Can't Laugh About Lenny Bruce

鈥淪atire is tragedy plus time,鈥 the late comedian . 鈥淵ou give it enough time, the public, the reviewers will allow you to satirize it. Which is rather ridiculous, when you think about it.鈥

Lenny Bruce died 50 years ago today.

Tragedy, plus time.

If Bruce鈥檚 calculus is correct鈥攖hat we can look back and laugh once sufficient time has passed鈥攚hat is happening today suggests that we as a society are not quite there yet when it comes to Lenny Bruce and those like him. His story, of a unique voice forever silent after years of censorship, is still too raw and relevant. While the First Amendment and now protect the content of Bruce鈥檚 controversial jokes, the future of free speech in comedy is still under threat in America.

A tumultuous life and career

Lenny Bruce for his comedic prowess in his twenties when, after an honorable discharge from the Navy (in part for dressing in drag), he began testing the waters of the standup circuit.

But it wasn鈥檛 until the 50s that Bruce seemed to find his true voice: one that garnered notoriety from crowds who laughed at his sometimes dirty鈥攁nd frequently dead-on鈥攋okes.

The New York Times Bruce鈥檚 career as a 鈥渂iting, sardonic, introspective free-form patter that often was a form of shock therapy for his listeners鈥:

There were those who listened to Lenny Bruce's series of staccato jokes on religion, motherhood, politics and the law, carefully embellished with scatology, who agreed with one estimate that he was "the most radically relevant of all contemporary social satirists."

[...]

His humor on the stage rarely evoked a comfortable belly laugh. It required concentration, and then often produced a wry smile and perhaps a fighting gleam in the eye. There were also spells of total confusion as Mr. Bruce rambled in a stream-of- consciousness fashion.

Whether the jokes hit or not, the punchline to Bruce鈥檚 career was always controversy.

With increased fame for his 鈥溾 came increased attention from authorities. Lenny was obscene, they said. His words were dangerous.

It began a downward spiral for Bruce, punctuated with arrests and banishments from clubs鈥攁nd even entire countries. These run-ins with the law seemed to affect Bruce鈥檚 health, already declining from a lifestyle marked by .

The height of Bruce鈥檚 scrutiny came in 1964 when he was for an allegedly 鈥渙bscene鈥 performance at Greenwich Village鈥檚 Caf茅 Au Go Go nightclub. Lenny鈥檚 gigs dried up, and his drug abuse and mental health both got worse.

When Bruce died of a drug overdose on August 3, 1966, his fans mourned the loss of a once-promising comic, of a life cut short, and of jokes left untold.

Lenny鈥檚 legacy

Today, comedians aren鈥檛 getting arrested for obscenity, but is stifling laughs in comedy clubs and around campuses nationwide.

The 果冻传媒app官方-supported documentary Can We Take a Joke? explores this phenomenon by analyzing the careers of comedians like Bruce who suffered, in one way or another, for their expression.

While we collectively recognize that Bruce appeared to have paid the ultimate price for his craft鈥攁nd that it may not have had to be that way鈥攃omedians today still don鈥檛 feel totally free to say what they want.

At what price does that come for us as a society?

While half of a century may have passed, the tragedy that defined Lenny Bruce still, in some way, remains.

That, to be sure, is no laughing matter.

This blog post is part of 果冻传媒app官方's campaign to defend comedy and free speech on campus. To help this campaign and to learn more about the 果冻传媒app官方-supported documentary Can We Take a Joke?, visit thefire.org/can-we-take-a-joke-new/.

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