Los Angeles Times

From darkness to the spotlight

Comic Chris Gethard is winning his struggle with depression; his HBO special helps.

- By Steven Zeitchik steve.zeitchik@latimes.com

NEW YORK — Chris Gethard realized early in life he wasn’t very happy.

As a teenager, he found himself with dark thoughts and a persistent gloominess that was disconnect­ed from what was happening around him. He responded to this by listening to so many mopey Morrissey songs he practicall­y could be the fifth member of the Smiths.

In his 20s, Gethard’s depression was so bad that when a car cut him off on a suburban New Jersey road, he didn’t hit the brakes, figuring this was the easiest way to end his life without bringing shame to his family.

“This way your parents don’t have to be the parents of the kid who killed himself,” Gethard says with what might be called morbid sensitivit­y. “They can be the parents of the kid who died in that car crash.”

Now 36, Gethard is faring better. That’s good for him, and it’s good for audiences, who reap the benefits of his honest, funny, melancholy (but never self-pitying) life story in his one-man show and HBO special, “Chris Gethard: Career Suicide.”

“It really isn’t a title that screams, ‘Come on in’ ” Gethard says wryly in an interview on a recent afternoon at a park near HBO’s midtown offices. Fueled by an endearingl­y low-key and confession­al style, “Career Suicide” played for a soldout few months at a popular downtown theater here, where it was shot for the HBO special.

For a full 90 minutes, Gethard talks about his lifelong battle with depression — its demons and ghosts, its heartbreak and even its humor — in a piece that defies both comedy norms and cultural taboos.

“It’s been an interestin­g experience doing the show,” Gethard says. “A very good one in a lot of ways. But also difficult. My ex-girlfriend came to see it and said that the reason she kept me at arm’s length after we broke up is that she thought, ‘One day I’d get a sad call about you.’ That was hard to hear.” He pauses. “The show has dredged a lot up.”

Gethard grew up in an Irish American family in New Jersey and now lives in Queens, fitting locales for a man whose temperamen­t feels more roadway diner than chic Manhattan club.

The comic has an unorthodox delivery — he speaks with a low-talker’s humility and tends to draw out vowels, a verbal device that suggests both incredulit­y and thoughtful­ness. His overall manner is that of Spalding Gray wrapped in both the droll charisma of Paul Rudd and the betterlife ethos of Oprah — though rarely with an easy sunniness or set of solutions. More often, Gethard just wants to deliver the off-kilter observatio­ns that have made his pain more bearable.

“This kid broke my brother’s shoulder,” he says in the show of his time in a suburban middle school. “Oddly enough that bully happens to be a little person. A dwarf broke my brother’s shoulder,” he repeats for emphasis. “My childhood may as well have been directed by David Lynch.”

Comedy nerds and insiders have long appreciate­d Gethard — an assist on the HBO show comes from Judd Apatow, who helped produce the work and gave him, Gethard says, both confidence and guidance — but “Career Suicide” marks a kind of profession­al apex for its performer after a series of wonderfull­y shaggy-dog appearance­s. He’s become a kind of next-generation standard-bearer of the 1990s alt-comedy movement.

Gethard, who cut his teeth at Upright Citizens Brigade, gained fame in digital circles for a set of online videos chroniclin­g a trip he made from Los Angeles to Tennessee’s Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival in 2012, setting off on foot and relying on the kindness and rides of strangers.

He’s appeared on “Broad City” and hosted “The Chris Gethard Show,” a long-running public-access free-for-all (later moved to Fusion and, soon, to TruTV).

Fans of last year’s Mike Birbiglia improv dramedy “Don’t Think Twice” will remember him as the soulful comic character dealing with a family tragedy.

“That movie changed my life,” Gethard says. “And I wasn’t sure it would. I remember saying to Mike, ‘Improv? People don’t even like watching improv, let alone movies about improv.’ ”

A streaming and pay-cable comedy boom has made room for singular people like Gethard, who now can find a far bigger audience. Optimism, however, may elude.

“It’s a very head-spinning time in comedy,” he says. “There’s a backstage now, and everyone’s getting paid. But because we’re comedians, we can’t enjoy it. We’re sitting in that backstage area saying, ‘Eighteen months from now it will be over. There will no fruit plate, and we’ll be fighting each other for $20.’ ”

More than any entertaine­r in recent memory, Gethard is candid not just in talking about depression but explaining its contours as a disease, which is at times triggered by environmen­tal factors.

It’s part of a larger life mission for Gethard.

“We’ve become a softer culture than we used to be, a more sensitive one,” he says. “Maybe we need to admit that doing that but remaining hard about this one thing doesn’t make much sense.”

With a happy marriage and humming career, Gethard says his depression is under control. But sadness still creeps in, reminding him why he created “Career Suicide” in the first place.

“One of the things I want to put out there is ‘Take a chance on messing up.’ We’re all in our heads, and no one wants to mess up, and no one thinks they’re qualified [to talk about depression]. At the end of the day, if we buy into that, no one will help each other. And that makes me furious.”

He pauses. “The message of this show is that I don’t know what the answer is. But I bet it’s out there.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? “IT REALLY ISN’T a title that screams, ‘Come on in’ ” Chris Gethard says of his 90-minute, one-man show, “Career Suicide.”
Photograph­s by Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times “IT REALLY ISN’T a title that screams, ‘Come on in’ ” Chris Gethard says of his 90-minute, one-man show, “Career Suicide.”
 ??  ?? THE COMEDIAN claims his turf, along with others, on a desk in the podcast studio where he hosts a show.
THE COMEDIAN claims his turf, along with others, on a desk in the podcast studio where he hosts a show.

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