Stand-up Comedy

Overview

Stand-up comedy is a performance style typically featuring a single performer who aims to make an audience laugh. It evolved from several 20th-century American comedy traditions and has since grown into an influential—and commercially successful—international artistic form.

1440 Findings

Hours of research by our editors, distilled into minutes of clarity.

  • At its core, stand-up is about a comic making a crowd laugh

    The performance style typically features a single performer who aims to make an audience laugh. It evolved from 19th and 20th-century American comedy traditions and has since grown into an influential—and commercially successful—international artistic form.

  • Stand-up arrived in the late 19th century

    Vaudeville theaters featured family-friendly comics, often working in teams, to execute tightly written comedic back-and-forths. Burlesque, vaudeville’s bawdier offshoot, often featured single comics delivering rapid-fire, joke-filled sets.

  • Edgier burlesque shows helped define the form

    Stand-up came into its own at burlesque shows, thanks to audiences who sought humor that reflected the hectic, urban settings where they lived. According to historian Joseph Boskin, “The tempo of the comedy, like the movement of city streets, was swift and jolting and possessed highly recognizable parameters.”

  • Hear a joke from Charley Case, the first stand-up comedian

    Vaudeville performer Case is believed to be the first modern stand-up. While others before him told jokes onstage, Case was the first to do it without props or costuming. This 1909 recording features one of his jokes. The content may be outdated, but the structure can still be found in stand-up sets today.

  • Mark Twain was an early influence on stand-up

    The writer’s live lectures looked a lot like modern stand-up comedy specials. Twain’s world tour in the 1890s featured 90-minute performances in which he stood alone on the stage, delivering long, comedic monologues with his hand perched on his chin.

Explore Society & Culture

Art, music, sports, entertainment, movies, and many other subjects—these elements define who we are as a society and how we express ourselves as a culture. Take a deep dive into the topics shaping our shared norms, values, institutions, and more.

View All Society & Culture