has been described as a blue comic by his peers. Blue comedy is comedy that is
off-colour,
risqué,
indecent, or
profane, largely about sex. It often contains
profanity or sexual imagery that may shock and offend some audience members. "Working blue" refers to the act of using swear words and discussing things that people would not discuss in "polite society". A "blue comedian" or "blue comic" is a
comedian who usually performs risqué routines layered with curse words. There is a common belief that comedian
Max Miller (1894–1963) coined the phrase, after his stage act which involved telling jokes from either a white book or a blue book, chosen by audience preference (the blue book contained ribald jokes). This is not so, as the
Oxford English Dictionary contains earlier references to the use of blue to mean ribald: 1890
Sporting Times 25 Jan. 1/1 "Shifter wondered whether the damsel knew any novel blue stories." and 1900
Bulletin (Sydney) 20 Oct. 12/4 "Let someone propose to celebrate
Chaucer by publicly reading some of his bluest productions unexpurgated. The reader would probably be locked up." Private events at show business clubs such as the
Masquers often showed this blue side of otherwise clean-cut comedians; a recording survives of one Masquers roast from the 1950s with
Jack Benny,
George Jessel,
George Burns, and
Art Linkletter all using highly risqué material and obscenities. Many comedians who are normally
family-friendly might choose to work blue when off-camera or in an adult-oriented environment;
Bob Saget exemplified this
dichotomy.
Bill Cosby's 1969 record album
8:15 12:15 records both his family-friendly evening standup comedy show, and his blue midnight show, which included a joke about impregnating his wife "right through the old midnight trampoline" (her
diaphragm) and other sexual references. Some comedians build their careers on blue comedy. Among the best known of these are
Redd Foxx,
Lawanda Page, and the team of Leroy and Skillet, all of whom later performed on the family-friendly television show
Sanford and Son. Page, Leroy, and Skillet specialised in a particular
African American form of blue spoken word recitation called
signifying or toasting.
Dave Attell has also been described by his peers as one of the greatest modern-day blue comics. On
talk radio in the United States and elsewhere, blue comedy is a staple of the
shock jock's repertoire. The use of blue comedy over American radio airwaves is severely restricted due to decency regulations; the
Federal Communications Commission can levy fines against radio stations that air obscene content. == Blue literature ==