“The Significance of Comic Irreverence”
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document in english
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date published 09/10/2007
 
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section Summary
 
 
Irreverence in comedy has been at the forefront of recent comedic performances. In one television show, ‘The Office’, depicts supervisor David Brent, performed by Ricky Gervais, as an irreverent ‘funny man’. In one episode, while orienting a new employee around the office, he listens to his phone messages, and after the last one, pretends to pick up the phone and throw it out of the window - all in effort for a laugh. The new employee looks on, not even feigning a laugh. But the audience does, because of the irony at work. Brent is a self-proclaimed ‘comedian’ – a person who lightens up the typically drab idea of ‘work.’ However, nobody in the office finds his irreverent humour funny – he is less comedic, and more annoyingly loathsome. The audience laughs at the awkward situation between someone trying too hard for a laugh and not receiving it. The audience and the employees laugh more at Brent than with him. Well, the employees laugh behind his back. However, the irreverent comedic episodes elucidate the character of David Brent. The episodes depict a person concerned with assuming a comic role rather than that of a supervisor who runs a productive office. Irreverence has a point to make. Furthermore, the irreverence of David Brent makes the audience laugh before they cry at the threat of the Wernham Slough office being closed. They suddenly stop and want Brent to put aside his obsession with acting the fool, but it is a character fault Brent will never overcome. ‘The Office’ is a modern example of what Shakespeare utilized in his varied body of work – in tragedy, historic or comic plays. For there are numerous instances of Shakespeare’s application of comedic irreverence, and like ‘The Office,’ Shakespeare used it for an intended significance toward the total effect of the play. For such tragedies as Romeo and Juliet, one might conclude that the comic irreverence of the Nurse in Scene two, Act five seems out of place. However, upon further investigation the comic episode proves integral to the tragic plot of the play: the comic episode allows the audience to laugh before they start to cry, and that the Nurse’s character is revealed as one comprised of vanity –inherent vanity in her speech, and vanity in her thoughts about love, which in a later scene proves detrimental to Juliet.
 
 
section Table of Contents
 
  1. Irreverence in comedy has been at the forefront of recent comedic performances.
  2. ‘Irreverence' is such a strong word; it evokes bad connotations, and just looking at the word, one would skim over it because, well, it is irreverent.
  3. So then, what is it about Act two, Scene five that makes the audience laugh?
  4. Second, the Nurse is a minimal character; Shakespeare didn't even provide her with a proper name, simply, ‘the Nurse.?
  5. In Act three, Scene five, after Capulet argues with Juliet over the arranged marriage with County Paris, Juliet is in despair and desperately in need of a sympathetic heart.
  6. Watch David Brent's funny, irreverent humour, but keep in mind, there is still something of importance inside the irreverence.
 
 
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