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Mort Sahl

Mort Sahl
Mort Sahl -1.jpg
Sahl in 1960
Birth name Morton Lyon Sahl
Born (1927-05-11) May 11, 1927 (age 89)
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Medium Stand-up, television
Nationality American
Alma mater University of Southern California
Years active 1953–present
Genres political satire, Improvisational comedy
Subject(s) American politics, American culture
Spouse
  • Sue Babior (m. 1955; div. 1958)
  • China Lee (m. 1967; div. 1991)
  • Kenslea Sahl (m. 1997)
Website Mort Sahl website

Morton Lyon "Mort" Sahl (born May 11, 1927) is a Canadian-born American comedian and social satirist, considered by filmmaker Robert B. Weide to be the first modern stand-up comedian since Will Rogers, a humorist in the early 20th century. Sahl pioneered a style of social satire which pokes fun at political and current event topics using improvised monologues and only a newspaper as a prop.

Sahl spent his early years in Los Angeles and moved to the San Francisco Bay Area where he made his professional stage debut at the hungry i nightclub in 1953. His popularity grew quickly, and after a year at the club he traveled the country doing shows at established nightclubs, theaters and college campuses. In 1960 he became the first comedian to have a cover story written about him by Time magazine. He appeared on various television shows, played a number of film roles, and performed a one-man show on Broadway.

George Carlin on Mort Sahl: "Obviously, I was very influenced by Mort Sahl, because I was in my formative stage and I was a rebel at heart and an anti-authoritarian at a time when they were succeeding by taking those positions." said George Carlin, who also acknowledged that Sahl got him his first stand-up comedy record (with partner Jack Burns) with Playboy (Sahl was friends with Hefner) as well as getting Burns & Carlin at the hungry i.

Television host Steve Allen claimed that Sahl was "the only real political philosopher we have in modern comedy." His social satire performances broke new ground in live entertainment, as a stand-up comic talking about the real world of politics at that time was considered "revolutionary." It inspired many later comics to become stage comedians, including Lenny Bruce, Jonathan Winters and Woody Allen. Allen credits Sahl's new style of humor with "opening up vistas for people like me."

Numerous politicians became his fans, with John F. Kennedy asking him to write his jokes for campaign speeches. After Kennedy's assassination in 1963, however, Sahl became obsessed with what he saw as the Warren Report's inaccuracy and conclusions, and spoke about it often during his shows. This alienated much of his audience and led to a decline in his popularity for the remainder of the 1960s. By the 1970s, however, his shows and popularity staged a partial comeback which continues to the present.


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