LizzieMaine
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One of the points Henley discusses that I do agree with is his view that men, in general, tend to prefer aggressive comedy -- material that usually features some one individual as the specific butt of the joke -- whereas women tend to prefer humor dealing with the general absurdity of a particular situation or circumstance. There are certainly exceptions to this -- Joan Davis, to name a figure of Henley's time, was a very aggressive, broad comic as were Patsy Kelly and Martha Raye, and a bit later, Lucille Ball. If there's a difference between what they did and what similar male "top banana" comics did it's that the women had to make *themselves* the butt of the gag for it to work, whereas a male comic doing similar material would attack a straight-man or a stooge.
This is one reason, I submit, why Jack Benny stood out as such a transgressive figure in the comedy of the Era -- he was a man performing comedy in the style of a woman, and his rather effeminate stage persona only underlined this departure from the aggressive male-coded approach. By doing this, he diverted audience expectations in a fundamental way every time he walked onto a stage -- and as Henley argues, that diversion is the essence of comedy: lead the audience to expect one thing -- and then switch it.
Henley also observes that women enjoy seeing the tables turned on men -- not so much specific individuals, but men as a class, and material in which stereotypical male behavior leads to table-turning he believes women find particularly enjoyable. This theory would explain one reason why "Dopey Dad" sitcoms like "The Life Of Riley" and "Blondie" became so popular in the 1940s, and why the same themes are still popular today -- women have always made up the majority of listeners/viewers for such programs.
In general, though, I think women have a more subtle sense of humor than men, and tend to appreciate the type of situational and verbal humor that the more joke-oriented men tend to find dull. There's a reason why "Vic and Sade," the most subtly-humorous radio program of the entire Era, aired almost exclusively amidst the daytime soap operas, and had a fanbase that was overwhelmingly female.
This is one reason, I submit, why Jack Benny stood out as such a transgressive figure in the comedy of the Era -- he was a man performing comedy in the style of a woman, and his rather effeminate stage persona only underlined this departure from the aggressive male-coded approach. By doing this, he diverted audience expectations in a fundamental way every time he walked onto a stage -- and as Henley argues, that diversion is the essence of comedy: lead the audience to expect one thing -- and then switch it.
Henley also observes that women enjoy seeing the tables turned on men -- not so much specific individuals, but men as a class, and material in which stereotypical male behavior leads to table-turning he believes women find particularly enjoyable. This theory would explain one reason why "Dopey Dad" sitcoms like "The Life Of Riley" and "Blondie" became so popular in the 1940s, and why the same themes are still popular today -- women have always made up the majority of listeners/viewers for such programs.
In general, though, I think women have a more subtle sense of humor than men, and tend to appreciate the type of situational and verbal humor that the more joke-oriented men tend to find dull. There's a reason why "Vic and Sade," the most subtly-humorous radio program of the entire Era, aired almost exclusively amidst the daytime soap operas, and had a fanbase that was overwhelmingly female.