Front cover image for I'm dying up here : heartbreak and high times in stand-up comedy's golden era

I'm dying up here : heartbreak and high times in stand-up comedy's golden era

In the mid-1970s, Jay Leno, David Letterman, Andy Kaufman, Richard Lewis, Robin Williams, Elayne Boosler, Tom Dreesen, and several hundred other shameless showoffs and incorrigible cutups from across the country migrated en masse to Los Angeles, the new home of Johnny Carson's Tonight Show. There, in a late-night world of sex, drugs, dreams and laughter, they created an artistic community unlike any before or since. It was Comedy Camelot--but it couldn't last. William Knoedelseder was then a cub reporter covering the burgeoning local comedy scene for the Los Angeles Times. He was there when the comedians--not paid by the clubs where they performed--tried to change the system and incidentally tore apart their own close-knit community. Here he tells the story of that golden age, of the strike that ended it, and of how those days still resonate in the lives of those who were there.--From publisher description
eBook, English, ©2009
PublicAffairs, New York, ©2009
History
1 online resource (x, 280 pages, 12 unnumbered pages of plates) : illustrations
9780786746187, 9781586483173, 9781586488963, 9781282460768, 9786612460760, 0786746181, 158648317X, 1586488961, 1282460765, 6612460768
436280408
Prologue: A true comic
Blood brothers
The hippest room
Mitzi's store
Tom, Dave, and George
All about Budd
Six minutes, twenty-two laughs
The boys' club
Guns, drugs, and Westwood
Comedy university
Richard's baroness, Steve's movie
The funniest year ever
Roommates
The New Year's resolution
- Drugs and theft
Order, please
Diary of a young comic
The gauntlet
Comedians for compensation
Choosing up sides
Fire!
The vote
All on the line
Dave's big night
The union forever?
Jay's big flop
"My name is Steve Lubetkin"
A standing ovation
Epilogue: the prisoner of memory
English