Alternative comedy had a number of influences. It was a reaction against the mainstream stand-up of the day which took place in
working men's clubs, and was characterised by unoriginal gags often containing elements of
sexism and
racism. Positive influences include American
'sick' comedians of the 1950s and 1960s, like
Mort Sahl and
Lenny Bruce; the 1960s comedian
John Paul Joans, who had been influenced by Bruce; the
punk scene of the late 1970s; poets like
John Cooper Clarke; and less conventional earlier comedians like
Billy Connolly and
John Dowie.
Comedy Store The beginning of alternative comedy is commonly associated with the opening of the
Comedy Store club in London on 19 May 1979, initially a weekly
gong show-style comedy night in a room above a strip club in
Soho. The official history of the club credits comedian and author
Tony Allen Alternative comedy came to describe an approach to
stand-up comedy that was neither racist nor sexist, defining itself against more traditional comedians playing the Northern working men's clubs who often relied on jokes targeting women and minorities in a form of comedy "civil war". (This divide was not absolute, with some performers from that circuit performing at the Comedy Store from its opening in May 1979.) What developed from these clashes was, in
Arthur Smith's words, "comedy's version of punk".
Alexei Sayle, the Comedy Store's first
MC, provided angry character comedy satirising the left.
Arnold Brown, an older stand-up comic noted for his quick-witted,
observational style, was revered by several alternative comedians, and would become a regular fixture at The Comedy Store. Fellow MC Tony Allen broke the taboos of personal and sexual politics, while
Keith Allen confronted audiences in a fearless series of "put-ons" and was a big influence on the early
cabaret scene that was about to emerge. As these newer comics grew in confidence, Tony Allen and Alexei Sayle founded
Alternative Cabaret, with other Comedy Store regulars. Their aim was to establish several alternative comedy clubs in London in addition to their flagship venue at the
Elgin, Ladbroke Grove, from August 1979. Its core members were Jim Barclay,
Andy De La Tour, and
Pauline Melville, stand-ups who shared a background in radical fringe theatre. The pair also brought alternative stand-up to the
Edinburgh Festival for the first time in August 1980 with "Late Night Alternative" at the Heriot-Watt Theatre. Returning with a full show in 1981, "Alternative Cabaret" was the critical comedy hit of that year. in London's weekly Entertainment Guide,
Time Out, listing "Alternative Cabaret" as its main show. Their tours established the idea of running comedy shows in small venues around London, and sowed the seeds of the network of pub-based gigs that grew in the capital and across the UK throughout the 1980s. Other organisations, comics, and entrepreneurs—including Maria Kempinska's
Jongleurs and Roland and Clare Muldoon's CAST/New Variety—added more regular venues, bringing the number of gigs per week from 24 in 1983 to 69 by 1987.
The Comic Strip Meanwhile, another group of comics left the Comedy Store with
Peter Richardson to form
The Comic Strip and run their own "Comedy Cabaret" shows at the Boulevard Theatre, Walkers Court, Soho in October 1980. The Comic Strip, featuring double acts and sketch comedy, consisted of
Manchester University and
Royal Central School graduates
Ade Edmondson,
Rik Mayall,
Nigel Planer,
Dawn French, and
Jennifer Saunders, who began to aim their talents at television. As
The Comic Strip Presents, the group made over 40 television films for both
Channel 4 and
BBC.
Ben Elton, who had by then become the Comedy Store's next MC, was invited by Rik Mayall to join him as co-writer of BBC2's TV hit sitcom
The Young Ones. It was then as MC of Channel 4's new comedy show
Saturday Live that Elton found fame as a performer in his own right. As author William Cook noted, "After
The Young Ones made him Alternative Comedy's hidden voice,
Saturday Live (Channel 4) made him its most visible face."
Contemporary alternative comedy in the United Kingdom Alternative comedy has enjoyed a resurgence in the UK since about 2010, with
Stewart Lee promoting the liberal, progressive values of the 1980s alternative comedy scene through his writing, live shows featuring veteran alternative comedians including
Alexei Sayle and
Norman Lovett, as well as a
Comedy Central TV series showcasing a great variety of alternative acts,
The Alternative Comedy Experience. Younger acts have banded together into groups dedicated to alternative comedy, including
The Alternative Comedy Memorial Society and
The Weirdos Collective. ==United States==