Vancouver Sun

Apatow finds pleasure in ‘joy of funny’

- JAKE COYLE

NEW YORK — The comedy education of Judd Apatow began with unusual access to great comic minds, which he pried for straightfo­rward instructio­n: How do you tell a joke?

Growing up on Long Island as a comedy nerd before there was such a thing (or many others like him), Apatow managed to land interviews with the likes of Jerry Seinfeld, Jay Leno and Steve Allen, most of whom turned up expecting something other than a 15-year-old kid with a high school radio show.

It was a foundation­al beginning for what became a career that has done a lot to define comedy in the past 20 years, from The Larry Sanders Show to Freaks and Geeks, from The Cable Guy to The 40-Year-Old Virgin.

In a new book, Sick in the Head: Conversati­ons About Life and Comedy, Apatow, 47, returns to those high school interviews (he kept the tapes) to publish them, as well as add new, more recent talks with many others (Louis C.K., Jon Stewart, Chris Rock). Proceeds go to the Dave Eggers charity 826, which provides free tutoring and literacy programs to kids.

The conversati­ons centre on comedy — where it comes from, how it works — but grow into more expansive and intimate reflection­s on life from some of the sharpest, most thoughtful minds around.

The intervenin­g decades reveal less about Apatow’s muchimprov­ed standing than his continuing comedy-nerd curiosity and his ongoing pleasure in what Stewart calls “the joy of the funny.”

Here are excerpts from a recent interview with Apatow:

On his first time performing standup

The first time I did standup, I said to the audience: “Hey, I don’t know how to respond to hecklers so I’d like you to heckle me so I can learn how to do it.” And then the whole crowd started cursing me out. I used to have a tape of it and on the tape you could hear my friend, Kevin Weltmann, screaming at people to shut up because they wouldn’t stop cursing me out. So they would curse for a while, then I would take a long pause and say, “See, I don’t know what to say. I gotta think of something to say.”

On his first paying gig

Rosanne (Barr) gave me the job that changed my life the most because she was the first person to pay me well. That was the day I realized I could afford valet parking. I always say money doesn’t really change much in life once you can pay for valet parking.

On working with comics

For me to sit in a restaurant talking to Steve Martin, it feels very otherworld­ly. I always wanted to be part of those groups of comedians, like Second City. I wasn’t able to join Saturday Night Live or Second City, but in my own way, I was able to create my own groups of funny people that worked together a lot. That was always the dream. It wasn’t for me to be successful, it was really for me to collaborat­e with people I respected. I just loved comedy people and I wanted to be around them.

 ?? RICHARD SHOTWELL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Judd Apatow says Roseanne Barr gave him the job that changed his life, paying him well enough that he could afford valet parking.
RICHARD SHOTWELL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Judd Apatow says Roseanne Barr gave him the job that changed his life, paying him well enough that he could afford valet parking.

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