The Peterborough Examiner

Here comes the Judd

- BILL BROWNSTEIN Sick The Big The 40-Year-Old Virgin, Knocked Up, Trainwreck, Superbad, Bridesmaid­s, The Cable Guy, Anchorman Talladega Nights.

One of the major plot points in the new romantic comedy

has a struggling Chicago-based standup comic trying to impress a talent scout from the Montreal comedy festival. The comedian, played by Kumail Nanjiani, is unsuccessf­ul in winning over festival scout Bob largely because his girlfriend is sick.

Irony abounds in Montreal. Nanjiani has performed several times at JFL. So has the film’s producer, Judd Apatow, who will be back at this year’s festival in Montreal to do five solo shows.

Apatow appears to be taking a fork along his career path. True, he did do standup as a 17-year-old and has occasional­ly popped up at clubs over the years. But he is far better known as the director, writer and producer of some of the most successful contempora­ry Hollywood comedies.

Among the more than three dozen films Apatow has directed, written and/or produced are and

So why, pray tell, is the 49-yearold so keen on returning to his standup roots and to put filmmaking on hold?

“Good question,” Apatow cracks. “I miss (standup) and I miss the camaraderi­e of it. My dream was always to be a comedian, but everything else happened as an offshoot.

“There’s nothing like the thrill of telling a joke in front of an audience and getting immediate response. When you make a movie, the actors are there for maybe three months, and then you’re just alone in a room with an editor for half a year. Then in one night, you show your movie and you know if you’ve done a good job or if you’ve screwed up.”

Apatow would have had no qualms about giving up seven-figure paydays for three-figure ones to try to prove his standup mettle.

“I wanted to be a Jerry Seinfeld or a Garry Shandling. I didn’t think about anything else. But in order to make a living as a standup, I started writing jokes for other comedians. I couldn’t make my rent with what I was getting paid. Then suddenly those people I was writing for were getting HBO and Showtime specials. And the writing work overtook my standup work.”

Another irony: Most stand-ups would kill to be where Apatow has been. Not to detract from their love

 ?? EVAN AGOSTINI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? David Letterman even discusses his “retirement beard” in the digital series Boiling the Frog with Sen. Al Franken.
EVAN AGOSTINI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS David Letterman even discusses his “retirement beard” in the digital series Boiling the Frog with Sen. Al Franken.
 ??  ?? Judd Apatow
Judd Apatow

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