COMICS TAKE SIDES IN RIFT OVER ANNE FRANK JOKES


November 11, 2003

 

by: David Finnigan, Forward Correspondent


LOS ANGELES — For the past two years, the Comedy Central-sponsored "Sit 'n' Spin" nights have provided a supportive setting for local comedy writers to try out new material on an audience of their peers...

... The humor is usually profane and often sexually explicit, and the writers who gather twice a month at Hollywood's Hudson Guild Theatre are like family.

Or at least they were, until one brought up Anne Frank. Now some in the once tight-knit circle of comedy writers are no longer on speaking terms.

The friendly atmosphere was shattered September 29 when Jon Hayman, a Jewish former "Seinfeld" writer, did a routine in which he pretended to be Anne Frank reading a typical teenage girl's summer camp diary entries — only the camp in this instance was Auschwitz. Hayman's routine had Frank — who actually died in Bergen Belsen — innocently wondering why the Dachau and Auschwitz softball teams wore the same uniforms, referring to the pulling of gold teeth as a camp arts and crafts activity and offering lewd descriptions of sexual encounters with historical figures such as Jackie Kennedy, John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King, Jr.

“I was a little freaked out by Hayman's piece", said Jill Soloway, one of Sit 'n' Spin's two producers. "It was something that was begging for the groans."

But one first-time attendee went further. Annie Korzen, a comic actress who had a recurring role on "Seinfeld," heckled Hayman, calling him an "abomination."

Soloway, a supervising producer on the HBO series "Six Feet Under," responded by offering Korzen a slot at the October 16 Sit 'n' Spin — much to the dismay of many of the show's regulars. She and Korzen both received ugly e-mails, including physical threats to Korzen if she dared perform.

Korzen performed her rebuttal routine without incident - with the protection of heightened security. Korzen called Hayman's routine an example of "the contempt that some Jewish men have for Jewish women."

One comedy writer, however, was determined not to let Korzen have the last word. Ron Zimmerman, who has been a producer on the WB's family drama "Seventh Heaven," took the stage and read from Holocaust revisionist literature, asking why Korzen was not heckling. He then read from Hayman's original routine, prompting Korzen's husband to storm out.

The Hudson Guild Theatre's management — not Soloway or her co-producer — cut his set short, announcing the show's end and cuing the house band.

Zimmerman was livid as the audience left; he launched into a profanity-laced tirade: "Imbeciles! Get out!... And I won't leave the stage until you're all gone! The last Jewish man standing, that's what I am!"

Some of the comedy writers are still upset by what they see as the intrusion of prudishness into their oasis for ribald humor.

Korzen, whose one-woman show, "Yenta Unplugged," tours worldwide, said that her mostly male detractors likely view her as "the mommy who said 'no.' I think the response has been very much like children having temper tantrums."

Things have since cooled down — sort of. At the next Sit 'n' Spin nobody stormed out in anger, nobody was cut off and nobody heckled — with the exception of one person who mocked Korzen by interrupting a friend's bit about McDonald's McGriddles, accusing the performer of committing an "abomination" against the breakfast food.

THE FORWARD LETTERS DECEMBER 5, 2003

FRANK ROUTINE TASTELESS


Dear Editor(s),

I like comedy and satire as much if not more than the next guy. I also understand that satire sometimes encompasses poking fun at and ridiculing things that we hold dear. But comedian Jon Hayman’s ridicule of Anne Frank most definitely crossed a line that deserves not to be crossed. (“Comics Take Sides in Rift Over Anne Frank Jokes,” November 21).

Is Hayman really so desperate for material that he has to ridicule Anne Frank -or all Jewish women for that matter? Fellow comic Ron Zimmerman was not much better in his response to Hayman’s routine.

I applaud Annie Korzen for being so brave as to stand up to industry leaders, potentially risking her own career to defend the honor of the Jewish people. My children could look to Ms. Korzen as a role model and to Hayman as an example of what not to do. In fact, I can't help compare the selfless actions of Annie Korzen akin to the bravery of Queen Esther. Perhaps we should thank the producers of "Sit 'n' Spin" for providing us with an update of the Purim story. Is it a coincidence that the villain here, ready to degrade the Jewish people, is named Hayman?

Sincerely,

Robert Young


 

Related Pages:


 
November 11, 2003 COMICS TAKE SIDES IN RIFT OVER ANNE FRANK JOKES
February 15, 2001 Yenta Power's Strength Celebrated
February 16, 1998 UNPLUGGING STEREOTYPES - The Los Angeles Jewish Journal
March 06, 1999 I'M NOT AN ABRASIVE JEWISH WOMAN - JUST A YENTA
The Australian Jewish News
June 20, 1998 THE GOOD YENTA - The Jerusalem Report
   
 
YENTA UNPLUGGED

Bookings: Recent and Upcoming

Ask Annie or drop a note

Leave Address for mailing list

   

Email this page

Credits Privacy    
   
     
Design MGF International Inc. New York