Roman wrote:Does "shock humor" date badly? Well, there was no one in the 1930s whose humor was more shocking than Groucho Marx and yet his humor holds up pretty well today. Is there anyone who would argue that Richard Pryor's frequently crude humor is more dated than the clean gentle comedies of the early 1960s like Father Knows Best?
To me, there's a difference between "shock" humor and "surprise" humor. There's a line (now often censored, ironically) in "Hooray for Captain Spaulding" of: "[Chorus] He is the only white man / Who's covered every acre / [Groucho] I think I'll try and make her / [Chorus] Hooray hooray hooray." For the uninitiated, this was an inference that Groucho was going to try to "make" (i.e., jump) Margaret Dumont. Or take a line from the same scene of, "We took some photos of the native girls, but they weren't developed." Remember that this was 1930, and the nation was still warm from the Roaring 20s. So the crowd surely wasn't innocent about sex. But the lines themselves are CLEVER besides being somewhat shocking.
If the average audience member is laughing out of discomfort at something because they're shocked and rattled by it, then it's "shock humor" in my book. But if they're laughing in pleasure because something has
surprised them, then that's something different. Hearkening back to Rusty Warren, she would tell jokes or make comments that might make the audience put their hands to their mouths in a collective, "Oh my gosh, I don't believe she SAID that!" But are they genuinely ill at ease over what they have heard? I don't think so. Same for Groucho.
To bring this back to Jack, Stace Tackaberry (John's son) told me that his father had a really bawdy sense of humor and would have been very at home writing for today's audience and sensibilities. And Jack himself could write some fantastically blue humor in private letters (one long story about a trip to the Mayo Clinic almost got me thrown out of a library's reading room for laughing too hard). But interestingly enough (as someone else pointed out about the Indian mohel joke), the humor was always directed at Jack. So one wonders what Jack with his writers would do with the added "freedoms" today.