Elect to Laugh
Will Durst
Will Durst |
Soon after I first arrived in the Bay Area in late 1978, my
newly wed spouse and I started checking out the bountiful comedy club scene
that existed in San Francisco at venues like The Other Café, The Holy City Zoo,
and Cobb’s Comedy Club. One of our
favorite stand-ups soon became Will Durst, and almost forty years later this
outrageously funny comedian is still going strong. Self-described as a “political comedian,” he
adds, “I aspire to be a satirist; but if you say that, people think you have
goat legs.”
Will Durst now brings to The Marsh (San Francisco’s prime
spot for original, solo acts) Elect to
Laugh, a blend of scripted theater and ad-lib stand-up comedy. The show is well-timed and well-named for
this year’s increasingly bizarre presidential election. So bizarre is this particular cycle that Mr.
Durst gets to employ more than ever his signature phrase: “You can’t make this
stuff up.” And The Marsh is a perfect
place for him to plop from now until Election Night 2016 (as is his plan, at
least). “You are my target audience,” he
claims. “You are people who read, or you
know someone who reads.”
Dressed in a suit (Does anyone wear a suit anymore?) and
armed with an overhead projector (“I like it ... It’s warm to touch and has the
soft, reassuring hum of the fan”), Mr. Durst plunges with aplomb into both
parties and all politicians, present and from the past forty years. With a voice that is gravelly and eyes that
sparkle with devilishness, he rattles off things we have all for the most part heard
and read in the past few months of ongoing primaries; but when pitched in rapid
succession with his looks of incredulity, they are fabulously funny. And while he is certainly looking for laughs
galore, he chuckles admitting, “I don’t care how you respond ... I just love
writing this shit.”
HIs first order of business is to run through anecdotes and
memories of presidents from Ford (whose appointment coincided with his debut as
a comic in 1974) to Obama, slamming everyone along the way with glee. He also cannot pass up one of the past VPs, Dan
Quayle, whose “biggest fear was that Bush would die and the next president
would not keep his as VP.” His stories
include some self-aggrandizement as he namedrops a number of politicians he has
met along the way, including Bubba himself (aka Bill Clinton).
Once he begins going through all seventeen Republican and
half dozen or so Democrat candidates who hoped in January 2016 to still be in
play in May, the show, while still hilarious in many spots, bogs down a bit as
pictures of each (mostly unattractive, of course) go up on the overhead
screen. His jabs hit a lot of marks that
match the hissing and soft boo’s in the audience as certain pictures are shown,
including when he says of Senator Cruz, “I doubt he wins the majority of voices
in his head.”
Of the voting public, Will Durst has a few, choice words
along the way, too. Referring to one
campaign with a slogan of sixteen syllables, he notes, “To the American public,
that is not a slogan ... it is a pamphlet.”
And he gets a lot of audience nods in this San Francisco setting when he
admits, “I don’t know which is scarier: One of the people who will be our
president or the American people who will decide.”
As one might imagine, the most time is spent on one Donald
Trump, given that there is so much material (and so much hair) for fodder. But he confesses up front that focusing on
Trump is not all that easy: “How can you
parody a parody?”
And in the end, who is Will Durst’s ideal president? How about a combination of “Jimmy Carter’s
policies on John Wayne’s horse and with Ronald Reagan’s hair”?
Overall, Elect to
Laugh looks and feels much more like political, stand-up comedy than
theatre since its script of sorts will likely change week to week as more
unintended blunders and blistering accusations and counter-accusations are made
by those still in the running (and those commenting on them). Will Durst is a master comic and highly
enjoyable; but with this this particular election, it is somewhat predictable
what he is going to mimic and mock.
After all, daily feeds on Facebook and Twitter or five minutes on Fox
News are actually almost as entertaining ... or as sad.
Rating: 3 E
Elect to Laugh is
currently scheduled to run through July 26, Tuesdays at 8 p.m., at The Marsh,
at The Marsh, San Francisco, main
stage, 1062 Valencia Street. Tickets are
available at http://themarsh.org or by calling 415-282-3055 Monday – Friday, 1 – 4 p.m.
Photo by Junior Hansen Jr.
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