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[COMEDY] Margaret Cho's Interview   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #2420 of 15102 |
Margaret Cho June 18, 2002
http://www.giantrobot.com/transmissions/


Comedy concert movies haven't been huge at the box office since
the '80s when Eddie Murphy released Raw and Delirious. Maybe this is
because everyone just watches cable? Margaret Cho has been doing her
part to bring fans of comedy back to the movie theaters. Last year,
she released I'm the One that I Want, a cathartic monologue that
detailed her unsavory experiences with Hollywood racism and abuse of
various drugs. In the upcoming Notorious C.H.O., she examines her
favorite subject matters--her parents and the gay, lesbian, and
straight worlds--with equal parts wit and trash talk.

GR: Can you compare The Notorious C.H.O. to I'm The One That I Want?
Did you prepare for your latest concert film differently?
MC: The last show was really telling a story about racism in
Hollywood. This one is about anything and everything. It's a bunch
of jokes I get to tell consecutively.

GR: It was cool seeing your parents in the movie's intro. Did you
give them any tips or coaching before they were interviewed?
MC: No, but they were so funny. They came to the premiere last
Thursday. My dad stood up and everyone was clapping for him, and
then he pulled out of his jacket a big World Cup Korea
banner: "South Korea!" It was in San Francisco in a big gay and
lesbian film festival.

GR: So are you all full of Korean pride now?
MC: I was like all proud, and if anyone talks to me I'll turn around
and hold up a huge South Korean World Cup towel. It was a towel,
which is so awesome. My dad's so punk rock.

GR: Most people hate seeing pictures of themselves or hearing their
voices on answering machines. What goes through your mind when you
watch concert footage of yourself?
MC: I feel like I'm such a whiner and I'm so dissatisfied, but then
I have to watch it from a producer's standpoint also. So it's weird.
There are a couple of conflicting views, but it's hard for me to
watch it because I feel stupid. I want to be critical, then I
say, "Oh, I guess it's okay."

GR: Since cutting back on substance abuse, is it harder to find
things in your life that are funny or material for jokes?
MC: Things are less funny, but also things are disproportionately
more funny. Like something will strike me as so hilarious, but
something that's supposed to be funny won't make me laugh at all.
When I did drugs, especially hallucinogenics, everything was funny.
That's why I liked doing stuff like acid. You just laugh
uncontrollably.

GR: So is there more quality control now?
MC: I guess so. I guess I'm just not as sensitive to things.

GR: Do you think friends and family members act differently or are
extra-careful around you for fear of becoming joke material?
MC: No, I donąt think so. Nobody really gives a shit. Plus it almost
never makes it in the way they think it would.

GR: Do people try to be extra outrageous to get into your material?
MC: I think that might happen. People always say, "Oh, I bet I'm
going to end up in your act." Why? Why do they say that?

GR: When was the last time you faced a really tough audience?
MC: When I was writing this show in Edinburgh, Scotland. I was there
for the Fringe Festival a year ago. It was really hard. Nobody knew
who I was and I was starting over there. People were really shocked
and it was really hard.

GR: Do you think they just didn't understand your American accent?
MC: No, I think it was more like they just don't have the same view
of women or see the same kind of issues as they relate to
minorities. It was hard, but it was good in the end. It made me
really look for what was good in the material. It made me really
work hard on the show.

GR: After all the jokes, there's an empowering message at the end of
The Notorious C.H.O. What is the relationship between being humorous
and making a point?
MC: It comes out of a lot of the political speaking I was doing, and
wanting to unite the political side of my career with the
entertainment side, and feeling like I could do both. After I've
spoken and told jokes for an hour and a half, I've earned a few
minutes where I can say whatever I like. Sometime my messages really
help people. Sometimes, they just go, "Oh, what's that supposed to
mean?" Then I tell another joke and it's over so it really doesn't
matter. But I feel like it's important for people to hear it--
especially young people who are struggling with identity. It really
helps.

GR: So you're kind of like the Public Enemy of stand-up or something.
MC: Yeah, I love Public Enemy! And Billy Bragg. He's great.

GR: You perform at a lot of rallies and stuff. Do they just call you
up?
MC: It usually happens where I feel close to the organization and it
just works out in a good way. I don't do things as often as I'd like
to because I get really busy, so I have to be really selective about
what I'm doing.

GR: A lot of your older material is about how fucked up things were.
Are you happier now?
MC: Yeah, I think I am. I was happy then, too, sometimes, but I'm
super-happy now. I'm adult now. I'm all grown up and my life is
really different. I live in Glendale and everything's all good. It's
just a slow jam.

GR: What's different about being grown up?
MC: I go to bed early, as opposed to not going to bed at all. I have
a calmness about things. There's not such an urgency to do things or
get there. I just don't care. I'm more patient now. If something's
present and I want it, I can wait for it. I have kind of a quietness
that I never had. I'm really satisfied. I've done it all and nothing
is that interesting.

GR: But there must be something left to do...
MC: Maybe have kids. That's the one thing. I had a kid who had a
baby last Monday and she's so beautiful. That seems to be the great
adventure. Who knows? We'll seeŠ It's kind of a big deal.





Tue Sep 9, 2003 6:37 am

madchinaman
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Margaret Cho June 18, 2002 http://www.giantrobot.com/transmissions/ Comedy concert movies haven't been huge at the box office since the '80s when Eddie Murphy...
madchinaman
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Sep 9, 2003
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