Page 130 - Katherine Ryan press pack
P. 130
husband who has some dependency issues. She dealt with it in a
really healthy way; instead of it imploding, she got a lot of exercise
and made herself feel better. I just think there’s something in that for
me: this theme of when men get revenge, Liam Neeson will ring you
up and say he’ll come and destroy you, or in Machete, they’ll climb
the building using their intestines as a rope. When women get
revenge, what do we do? What’s a revenge body? We just shrink?
What kind of revenge is that? I think there’s something really funny
in that. I like to combine a few different things: I like to talk about
culture, but not so that I can be gossipy about the Kardashians; it’s
because it always flags up a greater theme for me, an important
social observation, and then I see if I can make it make it funny and
have a laugh.
BROWN: Do you feel that, as a comedian, you have a social
responsibility to talk about these things? Can you be an apolitical
comedian?
RYAN: I think you could be, and I know many comedians who don’t
talk politics at all. I applaud them for that; I think it’s a really smart
way to be. A lot of people want escapism when they go to see
comedy—they don’t want to hear about important issues. I’m not
really the kind of comedian that can do that. I try not to focus on it
too much—I would never be described as a hugely political
woman—but the fact of the matter is, just me being a female,
immigrant, stand-up comedian, single-mother … that is political. We
still live in a world where a woman with a voice is a political gesture.
I’m dealt with differently than male comedians are dealt with by
people on Twitter and probably a lot of the media. We’ve not
completely escaped from that. I do feel like I have a responsibility to