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OTT effect: Onscreen space warming up to cool stand-up comic portrayals

Saw actors Saqib Saleem, Shweta Basu Prasad, Maanvi Gagroo, and Swara Bhaskar portray stand-up comics onscreen? Looks like this trend is here to stay.

Published on: Dec 17, 2020 01:10 PM IST
Hindustan Times | By , New Delhi
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Gone are the days when every other actor was portraying a journalist onscreen. Think Kareena Kapoor Khan, Rani Mukerji, Sonakshi Sinha and the likes. Cut to 2020, a host of web shows/films are showing the life and struggles of being a stand-up comedian. For instance, web film Comedy Couple sees actors Saqib Saleem and Shweta Basu Prasad portray a loving comedy duo on the stage. Web series Bhaag Beanie Bhaag has Swara Bhasker portray the struggles of becoming a comic, the series Four More Shots Please has actor Maanvi Gagroo don the role of a stand-up comic, and web TV series Hasmukh has Vir Das portray a small-town comic. So, has it suddenly become cool to play a comedian on stage? Actors portraying a comic on screen say it’s enactment of onscreen portrayal vis-a-vis real life.

A number of web shows/films are showcasing the life and struggles of stand-up comedians of late. This includes Comedy Couple, Bhaag Beanie Bhaag, and Four More Shots Please.
A number of web shows/films are showcasing the life and struggles of stand-up comedians of late. This includes Comedy Couple, Bhaag Beanie Bhaag, and Four More Shots Please.

“Stand-up comedy is an up and coming profession which carries an innate cool vibe,” says Nachiket Samant, director of the film Comedy Couple, adding, “Movies sometimes serve the purpose of documenting the times we live in. As such, we are seeing a lot of movies and series set in and around the world of stand-up comedy. Stand-up comics are also standing up as a powerful voice, socially and politically, which adds to the whole coolness factor. While making Comedy Couple, I had the opportunity to interact with a few actual comics, and the challenges they face in their line of work are similar to any other. It was a lot of fun shooting the stand-up sequences, but the more we interacted with real comics, I felt there’s so much more we could have shown and told with respect to the world of stand-up comedy. It will be cool to watch something, movie, series, whatever, that goes beyond using stand-up comics just as a cool front, and showcase the real lives of comics like Gully Boy (2019) did for rappers, I suppose.”

Actor Maanvi Gagroo in a scene from S2 of Four More Shots Please.

For Nupur Asthana, director of second season of Four More Shots Please, the advent of comedy clubs in the country and stand-up comics creating a huge fan followings for themselves is what became “quite intriguing to see what actually goes into a stand-up performance”. Asthana adds, “Maanvi’s character Siddhi ends up trying out stand-up comedy as a possible profession after a chance encounter with a comic she meets at the bar. Her comedy became about making her life stories a cathartic experience, and overcoming things or events or people that had made her feel lonely or rejected or angry. So she spoke about beauty, weight, expectations from parents, men and by joking about them and herself, she found confidence and self assurance.”

Off screen, popular comic Amit Tandon says showing the idea of a protagonist as a stand-up comic is a great way to “show a rebel, [in] a hero or heroine” but he hasn’t liked the quality of stand-up as such. He opines, “Live stand-up comedy has suddenly started getting recognition and people are eager to know what they have to say, and look at it as a profession. When you’re a showing your protagonist as a stand-up comedian, you also give him or her a voice, to vent out their frustrations, which is fairly interesting according to me. Maybe that’s one reason they [makers] use it as a trope! Stand-up comedy as a profession is looked at being associated with freedom; when you want to express and be free, that’s when you become a stand-up comedian. Althought, I haven’t really liked the comedy they have done in most of the shows. It’s not at par with what stand-up comedians would do.”

Author tweets @Nainaarora8

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Naina Arora

Naina Arora writes on City, Art and Culture of Gurugram, for the daily Entertainment & Lifestyle supplement, HT City

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