RJ
Sunday 25th October 2009 8:42pm [Edited]
595 posts
Quote: Tim Walker @ October 25 2009, 3:30 PM BST
I used to be the one doing the impressions. And still do occasionally. But I still think they are the comedy of the playground rather than something that deserves a mass audience. If they are used to make some really good satirical points (as they were in the glory days of Spitting Image) then I think they are good. However, most impressionists use them to make predictable jokes and non-satirical jibes thesedays though. Too often I get the feeling that beyond imitating a voice and a couple of mannerisms there isn't really any comedy there.
So, actually, you do think they can be 'inherently funny'. You must do if you used them to either entertain yourself or your mates. And if they're the comedy of the playground, then so are prat falls and fart jokes. Still doesn't stop them being any less funny in later life (if they work within a specific context).
What I think you mean is that the act of impressionism itself is perfectly valid. An impression is a magic trick with the voice. It's just that once the audience has seen/heard the trick, by and large it's appeal gets less and less each time it's repeated.
To continue the analogy, some magicians are like Paul Daniels and some are like Penn and Teller. It's all in the attitude. It's the same with impressionists. Anyone tuning in to this new Culshaw show hoping to see people getting a savage kicking are (probably) going to be disappointed. It's a mainstream BBC One show and that's not the brief it's working from. You want savage satire? Look at the Tina Fey/Sarah Palin stuff from SNL during the run up to the last US Election. That genuinely cost the Republicans votes.