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In one person by john irving
In one person by john irving











in one person by john irving

Mulaney made the word “ parasocial” go mainstream.įor comics, being in the news like this can be tricky terrain, both a problem and an opportunity. Judging by the reaction online, not to mention the texts on my phone, people had feelings about this - lots of them. I didn’t grasp this shift until, in a short period of time, he checked into rehab, got a very public divorce, and had a child with the actress Olivia Munn.

in one person by john irving

He has performed versions of this material throughout the last two years, and this special arrives on Netflix so meticulously honed that the polish doesn’t even show.Īt some point in the last decade, John Mulaney stopped being merely a very successful comedian and transformed into something larger in the culture: the boyish sweetheart in a scene full of creeps, the wife guy who doesn’t need children to be happy, the aspirational theater kid. Mulaney’s comedy, however, has become spikier, pricklier, sometimes slower while remaining as funny as ever, like he’s a pitcher who learned to mix up speeds. That first shot tips us off to a theme: You can be invisible in front of a crowd. One is tempted to say this is his most personal work, but that isn’t quite right. It’s a striking image setting up a series of bristling comic vignettes that dig into Mulaney’s drug addiction, intervention by friends and stint in rehab. Shot from behind, we see his perspective: a hazy mass of people underneath chandeliers in between an ominous series of statues inside the Symphony Hall in Boston. It retreats to reveal Mulaney, 40, in a maroon suit, before circling to give us a picture of the commanding power of stardom.

in one person by john irving

Then in a glamorous, swirling shot orchestrated by the theater director Alex Timbers, the camera gives the comic what he needs.

in one person by john irving

“And I’ve realized that I’ll be fine as long as I get constant attention.” “In the past couple years, I’ve done a lot of work on myself,” says one of the most distinctive voices in comedy, as a black screen transitions into an empty backdrop of a stage. In his new special, “Baby J,” we hear John Mulaney before we see him.













In one person by john irving