Jack Handey

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Jack Handey
Born (1949-02-25) February 25, 1949 (age 75)
Surreal humor
  • one-liners
  • deadpan
  • SpouseMarta Chavez
    Websitedeepthoughtsbyjackhandey.com

    Jack Handey (born February 25, 1949) is an American

    one-liner jokes, as well as his "Fuzzy Memories" and "My Big Thick Novel" shorts, and for his deadpan delivery.[1] Although many assume otherwise,[2][3] Handey is a real person, not a pen name
    or character.

    Career

    Handey's earliest writing job was for a newspaper, the San Antonio Express-News. He lost the job after writing an article that, in his words, "offended local car dealerships".[3] His first comic writing was with comedian Steve Martin. According to Martin, Handey got a job writing for Saturday Night Live (SNL) after Martin introduced him to the show's creator, Lorne Michaels.[4] For several years, Handey worked on other television projects: the Canadian sketch series Bizarre in 1980, the 1980 Steve Martin television special Comedy Is Not Pretty!, and Lorne Michaels' short-lived sketch show on NBC called The New Show in 1984. Handey returned to Saturday Night Live in 1985 as a writer.[2]

    Deep Thoughts

    Handey's "deep thoughts" were first published in an untitled essay in Omni magazine in November 1983.[5] In April 1984, National Lampoon published a piece titled "Deep Thoughts". Additional Deep Thoughts appeared in the October and November 1984 editions, as well as in the short-lived Army Man comedy magazine, while more appeared in 1988 in The Santa Fe New Mexican newspaper. The one-liners were to become Handey's signature work, notable for their concise humor and outlandish hypothetical situations. For example:

    • If trees could scream, would we be so cavalier about cutting them down? We might, if they screamed all the time, for no good reason.[6]
    • The crows seemed to be calling his name, thought Caw.[7]

    Handey's work next showed up in the Michael Nesmith-produced TV series Television Parts in the format which later became famous on Saturday Night Live (though in Television Parts, Nesmith provided the narration). Some of these segments appeared in the compilation video of that program, Doctor Duck's Super Secret All-Purpose Sauce.

    Between 1989 and 1990, Deep Thoughts were shown during commercial breaks on

    The Comedy Channel
    with Handey's narration.

    Between 1991 and 1998, Saturday Night Live included Deep Thoughts on the show as an interstitial segment (between sketches). Introduced by

    easy listening music played while the screen showed soothing pastoral scenes, much like a New Age
    relaxation video. Handey then read the Deep Thought as the text to it scrolled across the screen. They became an enduring feature of SNL, which often had multiple Thoughts in each episode, and made Handey a well-known name.

    Other SNL work

    Other Handey creations that appeared on SNL include the Unfrozen Caveman Lawyer,[2] "Fuzzy Memories" which depicted reenactments of a twisted childhood memory and aired in the late 1990s, and the short-lived "My Big Thick Novel", which were spoken excerpts from a very long book in the style of "Deep Thoughts" and which aired during SNL's 2001–03 seasons.

    Handey is also credited with creating

    Toonces the Driving Cat, the cat who could drive a car, although not very well.[8] The recurring skit originated in 1989 with Steve Martin and Victoria Jackson as the crash-prone kitten's owners. In 1992 NBC aired a half-hour Toonces special. Handey, who lived with a real cat by the same name, once said he could not remember exactly how he dreamed up the premise. He said, "It was just one of those free association ideas you write down and look at later and think, 'Maybe.'"[8]

    Further writing

    In early April 2008, Handey published his first collection of magazine humor pieces, What I'd Say to the Martians and Other Veiled Threats. Associated Press critic Jake Coyle wrote, "With absurdist musings such as these, Handey has established himself as the strangest of birds: a famous comedian whose platform is not the stage or screen, but the page."[4] Handey subsequently became a regular contributor to The New Yorker Shouts and Murmurs section.[9]

    On July 16, 2013, Handey's first novel, The Stench of Honolulu, was released by publisher Grand Central.[10]

    Personal life

    Handey was born in

    San Antonio, Texas, in 1949.[11] He graduated from Eastwood High School in El Paso, Texas, where he was the editor of the school newspaper, Sabre.[12]

    Handey and his wife, Marta Chavez Handey,[6] live in Santa Fe, New Mexico.[13] Previously, the Handeys had lived in the Chelsea neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City.[3]

    Bibliography

    Books

    Essays and reporting

    ———————

    Notes
    1. ^ Online version is titled "How the neighborhood has changed, by Jack Handey".
    2. ^ Title in the online table of contents is "Coming up with torture ideas is harder than you think".

    Television writing

    References

    1. ^ Mclaren, Leah (August 9, 2013). "Jack Handey deploys drone strikes in the war against clichés". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved November 3, 2015.
    2. ^ .
    3. ^ a b c Handey, Jack (January 2002). Deep Thoughts about Me: Questions I Am Often Asked (and My Answers)", Texas Monthly.
    4. ^ a b Coyle, Jake (April 12, 2008). "Jack Handey's Thoughts Get Deeper". USA Today. AP. Retrieved September 1, 2015.
    5. ^ "Omni Magazine Archive". Internet Archive. Retrieved December 10, 2021.
    6. ^ .
    7. .
    8. ^ a b Carman, John (February 14, 1992). "We Paws for This Message", San Francisco Chronicle.
    9. ^ "Contributors: Jack Handey". The New Yorker. Retrieved September 1, 2015.
    10. ^ "The Stench of Honolulu". Kirkus Reviews. July 5, 2013. Retrieved September 1, 2015.
    11. .
    12. ^ Handey, Jack (January 1, 2002). "Deep Thoughts About Me". Texas Monthly. Retrieved April 5, 2022.
    13. ^ "Biography" Deep Thoughts by Jack Handey website. Accessed June 6, 2008. Archived May 23, 2007, at the Wayback Machine

    External links