What is it about humor that
appeals to so many yet eludes others? I was a serious child. Oldest of seven,
the one left in charge, the responsible one. That carried over into my adult
life. Until I met a certain guy with a wicked sense of humor. He could tease me
out of my seriousness and helped me find my own sense of humor. I was smart
enough to grab onto that guy, and we’ve been married for almost forty-six years. I’m
still too serious at times in real life, but I can let go in my writing.
While I love science fiction
movies, like Star Trek, Star Wars and Serenity (Firefly spinoff), romantic
comedy is my favorite type of movie. Romancing
the Stone, It’s Complicated, Something’s Gotta Give, Six Days, Seven Nights. Falling in love
is serious business, but without that spark of humor it came be maudlin.
Humor
comes in many forms. Give me wicked banter any day over slapstick. I never
understood the appeal of the Three Stooges. Maybe that’s a guy thing. I loved the
Saturday morning cartoon Rocky &
Bullwinkle because of the dialogue. Same with the Muppet Movie. When they were young, I took my children to see that
movie at an afternoon matinee. The best part was the dad behind me who, along
with the few other adults in the theater, couldn’t stop laughing at all the “good”
parts—like “gone with the Schwin.” I love that the writers of children’s movies
slip in the comedic touches for the adults.
I said I’m not fond of slapstick,
so how do you explain my love of the Stephanie Plum series? The physical comedy
is laugh out loud funny. Author Janet Evanovich knows how to take a situation,
twist it, turn it on its ear and make it hilarious. I should never read those
books in bed because the bed shakes from holding in my laughter—don’t want to
wake the Hubs with laughing out loud.
Life is serious. The news every
night keeps getting grimmer and more disturbing. Comedy is an antidote to life.
The value of humor is vastly underrated. In fact, rarely has a comedy won an
Oscar, with the exception of It Happened One Night (1934). In fact, it won 5 Oscars. Actors whose forte is their comedic timing rarely win Academy Awards. What do they
receive awards for? Their dramatic work.
Medical studies tell us that
laughter releases endorphins, nature’s natural pain killers. Laughter relaxes
the skeletal system, reduces stress, lowers the blood pressure and regulates
the heart rate. According to inspirational speaker Marilyn Meburg, your liver
needs laughter because it gets no exercise. The liver is the organ in your body
that gets rid of toxins. So, if you’re not laughing you’re neglecting your
liver.
Give your liver and the rest of
your body that antidote to “real life” and enjoy a good comedy.
Captain Marcus Viator's well-organized life is turned upside down by the free-spirited female from Earth. Problems with the starship prevent him from returning her to her home. Together, they discover treachery and true love.
What are your favorite comedy
books or movies?
This post first appeared on Christine Warner's blog on 9-26-2012. It has been tweaked and expanded for today.
14 comments:
I tend to be too serious too, Diane. Laughter always helps to fight the blues. In our current world, we really need it. I just bought Switched. Can't wait to read!
Diane, we must be twins separated at birth. lol. This could be my story, except I'm the oldest of four instead of seven. When I met OG, the first thing that attracted me was his sense of humor, and it's still going strong decades later. I love humor in books, and I'm a huge fan of Janet Evanovich. Her Stephanie Plum books were the inspiration for my female bodyguard series. My first two books were serious, but once I started adding humor, there was no going back.
I’ve said it before. Your writing does put me in mind of Evanovich. I’m like Brenda - way too serious. You’re so right, we do need humor in our lives. Especially now when there is so much drama in the world.
Diane, you reminded me that what we write can be different from who we are...yet your writing 'funny' makes sense...because you had to be serious all those years. I think we often write about what we wish we had..or had been. I love a good laugh! Recently a golf novel made me laugh out loud...several times...but maybe a non-golfer would not find it so funny. Here it is: Missing Links by Rick Reilly http://a.co/d/g8zfwi1
I'm with you on disliking slapstick. I don't see what is so funny about someone slipping on a banana peel. The funniest home videos don't tickle my funnybone for the most part. But I do have a fairly wild sense of irony and love a good laugh. Your blurb got me. I'm hooked!
My characters tend to think of that terrific comeback I always think of five minutes too late. At least I can make them funny in a timely manner. I'm fairly serious, focused, and organized. I think we have to be to get anything written. Oh, and for a comedy movie, how about When Harry Met Sally? An oldie but a goody!
Another one here who isn't a fan of slapstick. (Maybe it is a guy thing. My guys howl laughing at them.) And I also love the Stephanie Plum stories, although part of that for me is the Jersey "girl" connection. :-) I admit to having a sometimes goofy sense of humor, and I also enjoy the "adult" humor in the kids' cartoons. (Bugs Bunny comes to mind.) Not much is better than a good laugh, especially with friends and loved ones.
Brenda, I agree about needing to laugh at something these days. Thanks for buying my book. I hope you enjoy it.
LOL Alison. You might be right. Like Jessie in Switched, we could be twins separated before birth. Hubs makes me lighten up. As an only child, he doesn't get the sibling rivalry thing. But he makes me laugh at myself.
Janet Evanovich certainly influences my writing. I love laughing at Stephanie's antics. Thanks, Margo.
Rolynn, the fun of writing in 1st person POV (like in my Alex O'Hara mysteries) is having the character act/talk the way I wish I could. Jessie was my 1st attempt at deliberately writing crazy-silly. It was so liberating.
Thanks, Andrea. My fav is banter. I love some of the old movies that have such clever dialogue.
Jannine, you focused and organized? LOL I'm like you in thinking of the perfect comeback/response 5 minutes too late. Yet it just rolls off my MC's tongue.
Leah, I love laughing with friends & family. At gatherings, we'll reminisce about crazy things we did as kids and laugh. So freeing. I was addicted to Rocky & Bullwinkle because of the humor. Same with George of the Jungle--even though some of it is slapstick.
Post a Comment