The Guardian (USA)

Toasting not roasting: these comedians would surely mock Netflix’s hall of fame

- Brian Logan

How should we celebrate great comedians? Netflix’s latest exercise in live comedy is called The Hall: a new pantheon for legendary comics, launched onstage at the recent Netflix is a Joke festival in LA. That show now drops on TV, and finds four present-day comedians eulogising a quartet of dead geniuses: the first entries into this new hall of fame, into which acts will henceforth be inducted annually. It’s a worthwhile endeavour, at least if the aim, as creator/director Marty Callner has said, is acquaintin­g today’s audiences with yesterday’s greats. Whether the tone is quite right (is it comedy? Is it ancestor worship?), I’m not sure.

For the most part, we don’t really get comedy from the four comedianho­sts. Jon Stewart is first on, sermonisin­g about George Carlin – about his legendary “seven words you can’t say on TV” routine, about his quest to be “actualised as an artist”, about how “as a culture, we [still] miss his voice”. Later, Chelsea Handler hymns Joan Rivers, pausing after every statement she makes about Rivers’ pioneering genius so the audience can dutifully applaud.

Fair enough, you might say. Comedians aren’t respected enough. Comedies get overlooked at all the usual award ceremonies; famously, only a handful ever won best picture Oscar. And some of these hall-of-fame acts lived their lives feeling underappre­ciated. That’s clear from the clips screened here, which include Rivers lamenting her exclusion from comedy’s in-crowd, and Richard Pryor insisting that his comic brilliance – blazingly apparent from this footage – got insufficie­nt credit.

But, the question remains: can you have a reverent show about irreverenc­e? There’s something sanctimoni­ous about the atmosphere in The Hall that doesn’t quite square with all these paeans totaking the piss. There is the odd unintentio­nally funny moment, too, such as when the captions blare “Congratula­tions, Robin Williams!” and “Congratula­tions, George

Carlin!” for this would-be-prestigiou­s posthumous accolade. (Is that a thing? Can you congratula­te dead people?)

Peak Rivers or Pryor wouldn’t get through a minute of this without puncturing the piety in as blunt a manner as possible. As it is, the best moments come when the hosts deviate from the worshipful script: John Mulaney poo-poohing the idea that Williams’s comedy was driven by his personal demons (“fuck off with that shit!”), or Jeff Ross bringing some “roastmaste­r general” energy in a section rememberin­g the standups who have died in the last 12 months. That barbed section splits the difference between reverence and comedy more effectivel­y – but even it must play out to maudlin music, a plink-plonk piano that undercuts Ross’s efforts at boom-tish.

You’re thrown back, then, to the archive footage – not all of which has survived the ravages of time. But the best of it makes all this glorifying seem justified. I’m thinking of Williams’s cunnilingu­s dumbshow, gormless features rising and falling above the crook of his hairy arm; Carlin’s barnstormi­ng “religion is bullshit” routine; or (still breathtaki­ng, 40 years on) Pryor making antic black comedy out of his own heart attack.

With a soupcon of self-regard, Dave Chappelle links Pryor to today’s anxieties about what we are and aren’t allowed to say – and talks touchingly about his own relationsh­ip with the man he calls “the GOAT”. But based on this first edition, The Hall is a better platform for the inductees than those doing the inducting. Its live element is still reaching for the right tone of voice – whereas the acts being celebrated were (and in posterity, always will be) fully, and sometimes thrillingl­y, in command of theirs.

The Hall is on Netflix

Peak Rivers or Pryor wouldn’t get through a minute of this without puncturing the piety in as blunt a manner as possible

 ?? ?? Joan Rivers, Richard Pryor, Robin Williams and George Carlin are eulogised in The Hall. Composite: Getty
Joan Rivers, Richard Pryor, Robin Williams and George Carlin are eulogised in The Hall. Composite: Getty

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