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When Tom Hanks became a stand-up comedian for one night only ...

When Tom Hanks became a standup comedian for one night only
Despite his affable disposition, Tom Hanks was never a particularly shy performer, and he has always enjoyed the limelight.
Tom Hanks - 2016

(Credits: Far Out / Dick Thomas Johnson)

Thu 7 November 2024 17:00, UK

Despite his affable disposition, Tom Hanks was never a particularly shy performer. At age 14, the soon-to-be legendary actor would write a very frank and very forward letter to Oscar award-winning director George Roy Hill, proclaiming himself to be a star in the making. “My looks are not stunning,” penned the teen, “I am not built like a Greek God, and I can’t even grow a moustache, but I figure if people will pay to see certain films … they will pay to see me.”

It’s the kind of self-assurance that would see Hanks not only become one of his generation’s most vocational actors, picking up job after job, year after year, but would allow him the ease with which to glide on to set, work hard and glide back off like water off a duck’s back. In the world of Hollywood, confidence pays, and Hanks is one of the richest in the business. 

However, despite being gifted under the spotlight, there are a few areas which any performer knows are no-go areas. A theatre actor may have a good swing at being a film star, and their musical performances may even pitch them at being a pop star, but very few actors turn their attention towards the pitfalls and prat-falls of stand-up comedy.

Steve Martin, perhaps the finest stand-up comedian of all time, begins his memoir: “I did stand-up comedy for eighteen years. Ten of those years were spent learning, four years were spent refining, and four were spent in wild success.” In short, the message is clear, cracking jokes is no cakewalk. Nevertheless, Hanks has such natural charm that you—and certainly he—can imagine that he couldn’t possibly fail. Charisma, after all, can turn the most tired one-liner into a rib-tickler. 

Of course, Hanks didn’t just decide to become a comedian; he was pushed into the spectacle by a movie. In 1988, the man, lovingly known as Tim Honks among fans, starred in the box office flop, which was loved by the Safdie brothers, Punchline. The film sees Hanks and Sally Fields star in the story of a “medical school dropout and a housewife trying to make it as stand-up comedians. They become friends and help each other out at a New York City comedy club.”

Never one to under prepare for his role, Hanks decided that the best way to portray a stand-up hitting the New York City comedy club scene was simply to practice as a stand-up hitting the New York City comedy club scene. So, was he any good? Well, in the audience at one of his sets was the hopeful stand-up Adam Sandler, who told Hanks, “You were good. You came up right away and comedians would be mad that you were calm and cool on stage. You were being yourself.”

In the dog-eat-dog world of comedy clubs, annoying other stand-ups is just about the finest seal of approval you can ask for. However, Hanks accepts that it was pretty much one of the hardest roles of his entire career. “Comedy is hard,” he explained, “Because you know instantaneously whether your soup is good food.”

And speaking of food, that is largely the subject of his own recorded stand-up clip. Under the guidance of Barry Sobel, Hanks took to the Comic Strip stage and rattled off his rather dated take on a stereotyped service incident. However, his timing and enthusiasm are certainly apparent. While he wasn’t a huge star at the time, there was no doubt that people in attendance were hoping to see the actor flop, and they were seemingly happily disappointed.

However, not every night went as swimmingly. He wrote a five-minute set for the Comedy Store in Los Angeles and recalled: “It was pure flop sweat time, an embarrassment. That material lasted one minute 40 seconds, and it had no theme.” Ultimately, he honed his craft, and after a month, he was able to hit the stage without “sweating like a pig”.

Fortunately for him, the filmed clip below seems to catch him in his refining phase. 

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