Saturday, October 8, 2016

Interview with “The Nation’s Misleading Expert,” By Harry Freedman Pt. 2


                                   Harry
Tell me about your first comedy show. What was that like?

                                   Harry
I was 26 and living in South Florida where I was working various jobs including managing editor for a humor magazine, reporting for a weekly Miami Beach newspaper, and copywriting. There was no real comedy scene then, so I started watching some local comedians who worked the bars. Then I saw an ad for a new comedy club at a hotel in Hollywood Florida. I passed the audition and the first night I was on last in front of an audience of 250 people and blew the room the away.

                                   Harry
Wow. How’d you do that?

                                   Harry
The audience watched 7 comedians hit and miss all night. I was so nervous I literally went onstage shaking.

                                   Harry
How is that a good thing?
                                   Harry
Everyone started laughing as soon as they saw me. I didn’t try to hide my nerves and I caught them off guard by having material that went with my character.

                                   Harry
What character is that?

                                   Harry
I created a character called Meekoman, which is the opposite of a Macho Man. I had jokes to match:  “From now on, everywhere there’s a macho man, there’s going to be a meekoman…at a safe distance.” I even opened my jacket to reveal an actual Meekoman T-shirt, which wasn’t for sale, but all you had to do was “just go up to any Meekoman and rip it off his back, he won’t fight you.”

                                   Harry
Very clever.

                                   Harry
Thanks. I had a magical first show. As I started getting laughs, the audience saw that I a plan. So I started getting more confidence and my delivery became more powerful, but in a vulnerable way. I ended up getting 5 ovations in 12 minutes.

                                   Harry
That’s incredible. What happened after that?

                                   Harry
The next 3 months I had good nights and bad nights. Then I entered a talent contest at a bar and found the magic again. Even better - I won $50.

                                   Harry
What then?
                                   Harry
Well, I basically spent the next 5 years performing as many nights as I could, everywhere I could. I also moved back to NY.

                                   Harry
What kept you going?

                                   Harry
First, there’s nothing like getting a laugh from a crowd with your own material. And 2 things helped me early in my career. Joan Rivers caught my act at a small comedy club across the street from where she was performing in the big room. She invited me to her dressing room before her next 2 shows and dispensed advice about show business and complimented me on my act. It was an almost out of body experience.
                                   Harry
And the second?
             Harry
About the same time, a then unknown, but well respected Jerry Seinfeld came up to me and said, “You’re a very good writer,” and added, “I don’t say that to everyone.”  Those 2 things helped me get through some of the ups and downs that every young comic has, because comedy can be very tough in the beginning.

                 Harry
How so?

                 Harry
Well, one time I got booked to do 4 college gigs in 5 days around the country. The first day, we took 3 planes over 15 hours, had 10 minutes to shower, no food, and performed for several thousand-college kids at a stadium. Somehow, our adrenaline took over and we all had terrific shows. That was a great learning experience, because I discovered I could go into a strange situation completely exhausted and still knock it out of the park.   
                            
                                   Harry
Well, that doesn’t sound so bad.
                            
                                   Harry
Yeah, well when we got back, we all learned another lesson. The booking agent took 6 months to pay and only then after several lawsuits. Unfortunately, the lower levels of the comedy business are very much like boxing. You don’t need a license to be an agent.
                            
                                   Harry
I’m curious, who are some of the comics you’ve worked with?

                                   Harry
I spent many years in New York City at clubs like Catch A Rising Star, The Improv, Carolines, The Comedy Cellar, and The Comic Strip. Bill Maher used to put me up at Catch when he was one of their emcees, and between NY and the road, I’ve shared the stage with Louis CK, Jerry Seinfeld, Eddie Murphy, Drew Carey, Tim Allen, Andrew Dice Clay, Paul Reiser, Dennis Leary, Daryl Hammond, Joy Behar, and many more. I also became good friends with Ray Romano and Richard Jeni. I still open for Ray sometimes and used to open for Richard Jeni before his passing.

Harry Freedman is a corporate put-on comedian, emcee, Fake Toaster, and creates hilarious onsite corporate video interview shorts.

He also creates “The Ultimate Tribute Video” (This is your life movie - as produced by a professional comedian) for Honorariums and special occasions. 

Website: www.Hfreedman.com

Agent Friendly Corporate Comedy Website:                   www. Harryfreedman.net
The Ultimate Tribute Video: https://youtu.be/yOP7cofTyqM