HomeLast Man Standing: Mort Sahl and the Birth of Modern Comedy
Skip to product information
1 of 1

Last Man Standing: Mort Sahl and the Birth of Modern Comedy

hardcoverMay 2, 2017
Regular price $44.97 USD
Regular price Sale price $44.97 USD
Sale Sold out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Secure Checkout
Quality Guaranteed
New In Stock
ISBN-13: 9781496809285 ISBN-10: 1496809289
Publisher
University Press of Mississippi
Binding
hardcover
Published
May 2, 2017
Weight
1.8 lbs
Dimensions
24.80×3.80×16.50 cm

About this book

Last Man Standing: Mort Sahl and the Birth of Modern Comedy by Curtis, James. hardcover edition. ISBN: 9781496809285.

A Times Literary Supplement 2017 Book of the Year On December 22, 1953, Mort Sahl took the stage at San Franciscos hungry i and changed comedy forever. Before him, standup was about everything but hard news and politics. In his wake, a new generation of smart comics emerged--Shelley Berman, Mike Nichols and Elaine May, Lenny Bruce, Bob Newhart, Dick Gregory, Woody Allen, and the Smothers Brothers, among others. He opened up jazz-inflected satire to a loose network of clubs, cut the first modern comedy album, and appeared on the cover of Time surrounded by caricatures of some of his frequent targets such as Dwight Eisenhower, Richard Nixon, Adlai Stevenson, and John F. Kennedy. Through the extraordinary details of Sahls life, author James Curtis deftly illustrates why Sahl was dubbed by Steve Allen as "the only real political philosopher we have in modern comedy." Sahl came on the scene the same year Eisenhower and Nixon entered the White House, the year Playboy first hit the nations newsstands. Clad in an open collar and pullover sweater, he adopted the persona of a graduate student ruminating on current events. "It was like nothing Id ever seen," said Woody Allen, "and Ive never seen anything like it after." Sahl was billed, variously, as the Nations Conscience, Americas Only Working Philosopher, and, most tellingly, the Next President of the United States. Yet he was also a satirist so savage the editors of Time once dubbed him "Will Rogers with fangs." Here, for the first time, is the whole story of Mort Sahl, Americas iconoclastic father of modern standup comedy. Written with Sahls full cooperation and the participation of many of his friends and contemporaries, it delves deeply into the influences that shaped him, the heady times in which he soared, and the depths to which he fell during the turbulent sixties when he took on the Warren Commission and nearly paid for it with his career.