Elayne Boosler (born August 18, 1952)[1] is an American comedian, writer, and actress.
She was one of the few women working in stand-up comedy in the 1970s and 80s, and she broke ground by adopting an observational style that included frank discussions about her life as a single woman, as well as political commentary.[2][3][4][5][6] Her 1985, self-produced comedy special Party of One was the first hour-long comedy special by a female comedian to appear on a cable television network.[7][8]
Comedian Richard Lewis told The New York Times in 1984: "She is the Jackie Robinson of my generation. She is the strongest female working. She broke the mold for most female comics."[9]Rolling Stone referred to her as "The First Lady of Stand-Up" in 1988[10] and included Boosler in their list of the "50 Best Stand-Up Comics of All Time" in 2017.[11] In 2018, CNN included Boosler in their list of "Groundbreaking women in American comedy"[12] and critic Jason Zinoman of The New York Times referred to Boosler as "The Comedy Master Who Hasn’t Gotten Her Due."[3]
Early life
Born into a Jewish family and raised in Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn, Boosler was the youngest child of seven with six older brothers.[13][14] Her father was a Russian acrobat who later worked in the tool and die industry.[4][14] Her mother was a Romanian ballerina.[4] Boosler took singing lessons as a child as well as dance classes with the Joffrey Ballet for several years.[14]
Her first exposure to stand-up comedy was during her family's frequent travels to Las Vegas in her early teens.[14] She was too young to be allowed on the gambling floor of the hotel, so she often watched the comics performing at the lounge.[14] It was this experience that first generated her interest in stand-up comedy.[14]
Boosler started performing stand-up comedy at The Improv in New York City in 1973.[7][17] She had been working at the club as a singing waitress, whose job was to sing between the comedic performances.[7] On a night when one of the scheduled comedians failed to show up, Boosler took to the stage to try some comedy and spent an hour telling jokes.[7][17] Afterward, Andy Kaufman suggested that she quit her singing job and try comedy instead.[17]
Boosler became a regular performer at the Comedy Store, a male-dominated environment, where most female performers were relegated to a secondary stage in the upstairs corner of the club called the Belly Room.[13][21] Boosler refused to perform in the Belly Room and performed instead on the club's main stage.[21] Other comedians performing regularly at the Comedy Store that time included Freddie Prinze, Jay Leno, Richard Lewis, Richard Belzer, Jimmie Walker and Ed Bluestone.[6]
Like her male peers, Boosler's comedy was of a more observational and frank style.[3] Her comedic material drew upon her own life, including her experiences as a single woman, and also featured topical and political elements.[3] Boosler also became known for her rapid-fire delivery.[12][18] Her performance style set her apart from the more self-deprecating humor of female stand-up predecessors such as Joan Rivers and Phyllis Diller, whose jokes often revolved around being a wife and mother.[2][10][19] Boosler preferred to distance herself from the "female comedian" label by declining to be interviewed for articles specifically about women in comedy and by avoiding female-centric comedy showcases.[7][9][19]
Boosler struggled to find funding for her first comedy special and was told that no one would watch a woman perform comedy on television.[7] In the end she personally financed Party Of One, which was shot in 1985 and which aired on Showtime in 1986, making Boosler the first woman to have an hour-long comedy special on a cable network.[11] After the success of Party Of One, Showtime signed-on for her subsequent specials Broadway Baby, Top Tomata and Live Nude Girls.[3][11] Boosler appeared on Larry King Live the following year.[23]
She wrote, directed, and acted in two half-hour movies for Cinemax: Comedy From Here, a drama that was broadcast in 1986 as part of the channel's Cinemax Comedy Experiment series, and The Call, a 1989 comedy in which Boosler's character awakens to find herself transformed into a cockroach.[30][33]
Boosler has written for other performers, such as her work on Rodney Dangerfield's 1986 comedy special It Ain’t Easy Being Me.[22] She also wrote comedic material for Barbra Streisand that the singer used during her banter between songs.[39]
Boosler has written several pieces published in high-profile publications: She wrote a tribute to Andy Kaufman for Esquire in 1984.[40] In 2003, she wrote an opinion piece about comic strips for the Los Angeles Times in reaction to statements made by comic strip artist Berkeley Breathed in an earlier LA Times article.[41] In 2018, Boosler wrote for Time about her experience of performing for the White House Correspondents' Dinner and the reaction to Michelle Wolf's performance at the event that year,[42] as well as a piece for CNN about trying to excuse offensive behavior by claiming it was a "joke".[43] She has also written pieces for George, USA Today and The New York Times[44] and was a frequent contributor to The Huffington Post between 2011 and 2017.[45]
In 2013 she premiered Rescue – A True Story, a musical performance featuring narration that was written by Boosler and that she read aloud to music composed by Carol Worthey and performed by the Glendale Philharmonic Orchestra of Glendale, Arizona.[46] The performance features the story of a dog's rescue.[46]
Boosler is a supporter of the Women's Reproductive Rights Assistance Project, an organization that raises money for women who are unable to pay for either emergency contraception or a safe and legal abortion.[48]
Boosler began working in animal rescue in 1996,[37] first by volunteering at Boxer Rescue of Los Angeles, eventually joining its board of directors and raised the down payment needed for them to buy a rescue kennel.[citation needed] In 2001, she founded her own nonprofit organization, Tails of Joy, devoted to animal rescue and advocacy.[37][49]
Personal life
Boosler lived with comedian and actor Robin Williams from 1977 to 1978.[27] In the 2012 book We Killed: The Rise of Women in American Comedy, Williams said of Boosler:
It was amazing to see a woman stand-up, girl stand-up, and a beautiful one at the time—just gorgeous, sexy and yet still pretty gutsy. And her jokes were sort of veiled–it seemed kind of 'Oh gosh, oh golly'—but at the same time, her jokes were really tough. As Letterman would say, she's funny like a guy. Being tough, but yet at the same time being beautiful and sexy, and at the same time not using that as a ploy. She would be up there just performing, telling jokes. Like she talked about the right to life and two fisherman who'll throw the fish back, but they're for the death penalty. Tough stuff but said really sweetly.[17]
Boosler lived with Andy Kaufman for three years and remained close friends with him until his death in 1984.[7] She wrote an article for Esquire in Kaufman's memory, and dedicated her 1986 Showtime special Party of One to him.[3][40]
In the early 2000s, Boosler married Bill Siddons, a music industry executive and former manager of The Doors.[39][50]
^"On This Date". The Tribune. San Luis Obispo, California, United States. August 18, 2020. p. 2A. Retrieved March 23, 2022 – via Newspapers.com. Elayne Boosler is 68.
^ abKohen, Yael (2012). "I Am Woman". We Killed: The Rise of Women in American Comedy. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. p. 117. ISBN9781466828117. When Boosler emerged at the New York Improv in 1973, she was the first female stand-up to make waves since Joan Rivers and the first to evoke the women's lib attitude of the time. (Lily Tomlin, remember, was not a joke-teller.) Boosler set the tone for the women of the decade, and by the end of the 1970s, female comics were descending on the comedy clubs, pushing the limits of what women could confront onstage with their acts. And while no woman would achieve real success until the 1980s, when stand-up comedy exploded, the women of the 1970s indisputably broke new ground. They unshackled themselves from the old-school comedy conventions of Diller and Rivers (self-deprecation, husband jokes) and began the process of multiplying and amplifying the female voice--even if the glass ceiling they faced was harder to crack than the one faced by their sketch and sitcom peers.
^Rosenthal, David N. (February 13, 1979). "A New Funny Girl". The Palm Beach Post. West Palm Beach, Florida, United States. The Associated Press. p. B3. Retrieved March 23, 2022 – via Newspapers.com. Eventually, she left New York and took up a professional residence at the Comedy Store in Los Angeles, a breeding ground for young comedians, but at that time, few comediennes.
^ abcMicco, Lisa (April 4, 1996). "Leader of the pack". New Castle News. New Castle, Pennsylvania, United States. p. 9. Retrieved March 23, 2022 – via Newspaperarchive.com. By the early 1970s, Boosler became a standout as the first young, single comedienne making the rounds at clubs -- ventures dominated by male comics. Guided by Kaufman, whom she dated for three years, Boosler was the only female in a group of budding comedians -- Freddie Prinze, Jay Leno, Richard Lewis, Richard Belzer, Jimmie Walker and Ed Bluestone.
^ abcRosenthal, David N. (February 13, 1979). "A New Funny Girl". The Palm Beach Post. West Palm Beach, Florida, United States. The Associated Press. p. B3. Retrieved March 23, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
^ abcdefgJacobson, Mark (March 22, 1976). "Funny Girl: New, Hot, Hip". New York. Vol. 9, no. 12. New York, New York, United States: New York Media. p. 32. Retrieved March 23, 2022 – via Google Books.
^Starr, Michael (March 1, 1991). "The head of the comedy class". Herald News. Woodland Park, New Jersey, United States. p. C6. Retrieved March 23, 2022 – via Newspapers.com. Standup comedy was something she "fell into backwards," Boosler said, after spending two years at the University of South Florida. "I was just waiting to turn 18 so I could move to Manhattan and be a waitress," she said.
^ abcdKohen, Yael (2012). "I Am Woman". We Killed: The Rise of Women in American Comedy. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. p. 117. ISBN9781466828117.
^ abLiddick, Betty (August 7, 1977). "Women in Comedy: No Laughing Matter". Los Angeles Times. Los Angeles, California, United States. p. V1. Retrieved March 23, 2022 – via Newspapers.com. Elayne Boosler is hot--white lightning streaking across the stage--a blaze of white teeth and shiny tan, blonde curls bouncing, the jokes coming pow-pow-pow...Elayne Boosler is the stand-up comedian club owners and other comedians predict will make it big. She plays local clubs, does opening acts for singers. She seems to combine the best of the old and new schools of comedy--fast one-liners with a feminist consciousness.
^ abWilshire, Carol (July 21, 1985). "Boosler 'a single woman talking about life'". The Sacramento Bee. Sacramento, California, United States. Encore 6. Retrieved March 23, 2022 – via Newspapers.com. Certainly having David Letterman on your side is nice," [Boosler] admitted, "Every time he guest-hosted, he put up a big battle to get me on . . . Finally, he said, look, 'I'm exhausted, I'm getting my own show. You'll be on that.'
^"Soundstage 9PM". The Daily Advertiser. Lafayette, Louisiana, United States. July 31, 1984. p. 20. Retrieved March 23, 2022 – via Newspapers.com. Andy Kaufman, the much-loved "Latka" of TAXI, spoofs a particular late night talk show with his own creation, "The Andy Kaufman Show." Elayne Boosler joins in the zany antics -- a hilarious performance!
^White, Ray (January 19, 1982). "Comic a tested laugh maker on the comedy club circuit". The Orlando Sentinel. Orlando, Florida, United States. KNT News Service. p. B2. Retrieved March 23, 2022 – via Newspapers.com. Today, she is a veteran of six appearances on "The Tonight Show" and regular appearances on "The Merv Griffin Show," and she has appeared on a somewhat regular basis on "Hollywood Squares."
^Prescott, Jean (December 30, 1992). "Comic Elayne Boosler to ring in New Year's with own TV special". The Janesville Gazette. Janesville, Wisconsin, United States. Knight Ridder Tribune. p. 2C. Retrieved March 23, 2022 – via Newspaperarchive.com. "Elayne Boosler's Midnight Hour" will follow the classic variety-show format, quite a departure from the one-woman comedy specials Boosler's done for Showtime. And it will originate live from the stage of New York's Town Hall.
^Hopkins, Tom (January 29, 1999). "Elayne Boosler plays it straight". Dayton Daily News. Dayton, Ohio, United States. p. 14. Retrieved March 23, 2022 – via Newspapers.com. She was a Hollywood Squares regular for two years, appears often on ABC's Politically Incorrect and films comedic vignettes for NBC's Today show.
^Janofsky, Michael (August 31, 2003). "Political Points: The 2004 Campaign". New York Times. New York City, New York, United States. ProQuest2229863432. Retrieved March 23, 2022 – via ProQuest. Say what you will about the Rev. Al Sharpton's chances to win the Democratic presidential nomination, he continues to be a hit with debate crowds, as he was after arriving late to a recent forum. Bad luck for Mr. Sharpton that the moderator was Elayne Boosler, a comedian who refused to let him slide quietly into his seat. She guessed -- aloud -- that he did the man thing by refusing to ask for directions.
^Lee, Luaine (October 15, 2004). "Boosler parlays standup into game-show gig". The Journal News. Hamilton, Ohio. Knight Ridder Tribune. p. D3. Retrieved March 23, 2022 – via Newspapers.com. A tireless animal activist, Boosler is married to music manager Bill Siddons, who once managed the Doors. About wedded bliss she shares her quirky point of view, "I never wanted to be married and still wouldn't be if he didn't insist. I'm much happier not being married. He said 'If I'm going to do this we have to be married. I don't want you to break up with me when I'm 90.