mag

Heeb Issue #9 : Features

Cut-up Artist

Photo by Naomi Harris Text by Rob Feld
(excerpted from original article)
Though talented and sexy, with great timing, a singular writing voice and a solid presence in comedy for many years now—a true comic’s comic—just what to do with Sarah Silverman has been an unanswered question for the entertainment industry, and perhaps even Silverman herself. Her comedy bona fides are blue chip all the way, appearing in There’s Something About Mary, School of Rock, Seinfeld, Futurama, The Larry Sanders Show, Mr. Show, Greg the Bunny and Saturday Night Live (where she was also a writer), to name a few. Nevertheless, her stints were frequently supporting or guest roles, short lived, or on shows destined for cult classicdom, too smart or niche to find a large audience.

With her new comedy concert film, Jesus is Magic, perhaps all that will change, but for someone as clearly talented and unique as she is, her fans wonder why she hasn’t yet broken out in a more mainstream way. To begin with, her comedy can ruffle a few feathers—_Jesus is Magic_ closes with a three microphone rendition of “Amazing Grace” in which Silverman “sings” from every orifice. Plus, she’s Jewish—not in an Alicia Silverstone or Sarah Michelle Gellar way, but in a good old Ashkenazi-won’t-play-well-in-Dubuque kind of way—alright for “quirky best friend,” but less so for a female lead.

Another strike against Silverman is how sexual and scatological her comedy can be. American audiences want their comedic actresses like Drew Barrymore and Cameron Diaz: kooky and vulnerable, sexy but in a naive and unthreatening way that, at most, coyly hints at their own desires. That is not Silverman. What is Silverman is her willingness to invert the popular tropes of womanhood, talking unabashedly about sex, then turning the joke around on both herself and the audience. (“I was licking jelly off of my boyfriend’s penis and all of a sudden…all of a sudden it hit me…Oh my God! I’m turning into my mother!”)

America’s blond, girl-next-door would never get away with that joke. It’s part of what’s kept her at the fringe up to this point—the Jewish girl next door who isn’t quite like you. In the end, her humor might occupy a liminal, in-between space that mainstream America might never truly appreciate. If that’s the case, then it will be America’s loss.

For more information on Jesus is Magic, check out www.jesusismagicthemovie.com

 

comments

submit a comment
melissamartone says,

02.13.10 at 10:02 am

What a hottie . Thanks for the article Rob !

melissamartone says,

02.13.10 at 10:02 am

What a hottie . Thanks for the article Rob !

logo_icons2_129 Facebook MySpace YouTube Twitter RSS Feed

this issue

urban kvetch

Urban Kvetch

The Dalai Lama
That’s right, you smirking little bastard—you were listed as treyf opposite Dolly Parton
(read more)

jewdar

Jewdar

Chai-klops:
By the time you read this someone out there will be the proud owner of a piece of Jewish
(read more)

horascopes

Horascopes

Aries (March 21-April 19) Starting in early October, every lawyer in New York whose name ends in a (read more)

features

Cut-up Artist

Short of dumping Jimmy Kimmel, there’s nothing that comedienne Sarah Silverman could do to make us happier than gracing the cover of our first Sex Issue. Rob Feld talks to the star of the must-see feature film Jesus is Magic. (read more)

Bigmouth Strikes Again: An Oral Report

The Jewish woman’s mouth has been an object of fascination in the American mind: from Sophie Tucker to Bette Midler. Nowadays, that fascination has taken a surprising turn. Rachel Shukert searches for answers in a story that is sure to make you want to gag. (read more)

Fetish Party

In the 1990s, Naomi Wolf brought sexiness to the feminist project, arguing that a woman’s desire to be beautiful was keeping her down. In this interview with Ilana Arazie, she deconstructs the Jewish desire for communal purity. (read more)

In a Biblical Sense

With its adultery, exhibitionism, debauchery and prostitution, not to mention all that “begetting,” nothing renders the poetry of desire quite like the Hebrew Bible. And here, collected for the first time, are its 10 sexiest scenes, illustrated by Gideon Kendall. Your Hebrew school homework was never quite like this. (read more)

Between Us

Nancy Schwartzman went to Jerusalem in 2000 to make a film about the Millennium and was raped. But when she returned to America, she realized her ordeal was just beginning. Heeb’s senior editor tells a true story of hope, adversity and restoration. (read more)

the whole megillah

All The Corey Details

Summary (read more)

purchase a copy

go to the shop

Quantcast