How to write comedy - Jodie Houlston-Lau

409,482 views ・ 2021-11-16

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:06
A World War II veteran processes the devastation he’s witnessed
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from the confines of an intergalactic zoo.
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As an estranged parent and child meet at a fraught family reunion,
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a little girl mumbles, “How do you do?” from behind a dirty curtain.
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After the death of his best friend,
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a lonely king travels to the end of the world in search for answers and...
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walks into a bar.
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It may seem counterintuitive, but comedy is often key to a serious story.
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As a writer, you need your audience to experience a range of emotions,
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no matter what your genre.
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Whether you want to evoke fear, grief, or excitement,
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when people are exposed to one emotion for too long,
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they become desensitized to it.
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Comic relief is a tried-and-true way of creating the varied emotional texture
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a compelling story needs.
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01:00
So how can you create this effect in your own stories?
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Whether you use characters, situations, language, or any combination of the three,
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timing and contrast are crucial.
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01:11
Take the “Epic of Gilgamesh.”
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01:14
This ancient Mesopotamian tale is possibly the oldest known work of literature,
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and yet the story remains compelling today.
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01:21
As King Gilgamesh approaches the end of the world,
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he walks into a bar.
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We think we’re reaching the climax of his story—
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only to have our expectations subverted.
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That brief respite allows the tension to build even higher
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to a later, true climax.
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It both relieves and creates tension.
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This lesson also applies to modern stories:
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by briefly lightening the mood,
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you can build tension in your stories exactly when it’s needed.
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The moment at the bar doesn’t just amplify the audience’s emotional response—
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it also complicates it.
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The wise bartender questions the purpose of Gilgamesh’s quest—
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setting the stage for the final, more nuanced resolution.
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You can use comic relief not only to create contrast with graver moments,
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but to comment on them.
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Sidekicks are one of the most common and direct ways to do this:
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they can supply sneakily perceptive commentary on the main action,
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often while simultaneously serving as blundering, hapless punchlines.
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Kurt Vonnegut’s “Slaughterhouse-Five” takes a different approach:
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the story continuously alternates between horrific war scenes
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and wacky science fiction moments.
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These scenes provide comic relief,
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but also open a dialogue about what’s usually unspeakable,
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highlighting the arbitrary nature of human suffering
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in a way that makes it more impactful.
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Arundhati Roy’s “The God of Small Things”
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takes yet another approach to comic relief.
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The narrative style draws upon the perspective of children
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to infuse a tragic story with poignant humor.
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When the adults funnel decades of tensions over race, class, and family dynamics
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into their expectations for their children’s behavior,
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you can’t help but chuckle with recognition when,
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at the moment she’s expected to put on a perfect performance of politeness,
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7-year-old Rahel “[ravels] herself like a sausage into the dirty airport curtain
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and [won’t] unravel.”
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At the same time, you know her failure to behave will only add to the tension.
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Afterward, she thinks, “the play had gone bad.
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Like Pickle in a monsoon.”
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This punchline underscores the reality of the situation:
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the reunion is so forced and formal,
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Rahel feels like her family are actors in a play,
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and she feels powerless in the storm of what’s happening.
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To make the most of comic relief, think not only about what moment in your story
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would most benefit from a splash of contrasting emotion,
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but also: what message you’d like to convey that you can’t say directly?
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Which of your readers’ assumptions would you like to call into question?
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