ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

Whitney
 Cummings Talks

By David J. Spatz
Add Comment Add Comment | Comments: 0 | Posted May. 9, 2012

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Two years ago, the mere
 suggestion that she would simultaneously be executive producing network sitcoms — and starring in one of them — would have probably gotten a bigger laugh than any of Whitney Cummings’ stand-up material.


Heck, two years ago Cummings was just trying to figure out how to survive her Atlantic City debut. “I came in and did some gig in a restaurant where there was no stage and I kept bumping into people,” she tells AC Weekly, either selectively or subconsciously blocking out most of the memory “It was a very weird gig,” she says.


What a difference two years — and shows like Whitney on NBC and 2 Broke Girls on CBS — makes. Were it not for those two series, and some well-timed appearances doing her coarse stand-up on everything from The Tonight Show to Comedy Central’s roast of Donald Trump, Cummings might still be looking at a one-night-stand-up gig in a restaurant. Instead, she’s headlining Friday, May 11, in the 2,100-seat Tropicana Showroom, which will essentially be her true Boardwalk debut.


“I’m excited to be doing it right this time,” she says with a laugh.


Cummings may still be four months shy of her 30th birthday, but she’s already packed a lot of experience into her relatively short time on the comedy circuit and in television. 


In between communications and film courses at the University of Pennsylvania, where she graduated in just three years, Cummings hit the comedy clubs on open mic nights. She quickly grew addicted to performing in front of a live audience and began to develop the two things important to the success of any comedian: material and a following.


She was topical and observational, two traits she picked up from her early comedy inspirations, who included Bill Cosby and Paul Reiser. But then she discovered the founding fathers of the contemporary shock-comedy movement: Lenny Bruce, Richard Pryor and George Carlin.


“Oh, man, the trifecta,” she says with a sigh during a phone call from her New York office. Cummings says she didn’t really recognize the genius of Bruce, Pryor and Carlin until well after she was a working stand-up and began studying their performances. When she heard how they pushed the envelope, Cummings began second-guessing herself.


“When I discovered them, I thought, ‘Oh, I can’t do this.’ I mean, you have to bare your soul,” she recalls. “There’s so much emotion in this, there’s vulnerability. They intimidated me so much.”


But she began melding the street language of comedy’s holy trinity with the topical subjects she liked to riff on, and Cummings’ signature performing style began to emerge.


In the big picture, she isn’t sure how helpful her Ivy League degree has been to her success in comedy. She doesn’t regret the college experience, and says being at such a prestigious school did have its advantages.


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