F.
Scott Fitzgerald once wrote that there are no second acts in American life.
He never met Margaret Cho, who’s currently on her third and counting. The
San Francisco-born Korean-American comedian’s rise to the top of the stand-up
profession culminated in the 1994 debut of “All-American Girl,” her starring
TV vehicle and the first Asian-American sitcom in history. Reviled in almost
all quarters, the show was canceled after a single season. Cho chronicled
that debacle – and her subsequent descent into self-abuse – in “I’m the
One That I Want,” an acclaimed one-woman show she performed off-Broadway
and later spun off into a film and book of the same name.
This fall, Cho will be back on weekly TV, providing the Andy Rooney-esque commentary to a PBS series titled “Life 360.” But just now, she’s hitting the road with “The Notorious C.H.O.,” a series of stand-up performances that weld her sardonic observations to the iconography of female-oriented rap. Metro Times: What
is it about the hip-hop-mama genre that appeals to you?
Metro Times: Which
lady rapper most exemplifies that?
Metro Times: So
how do you respond to Chris Rock’s comment that, if Li’l Kim wants to be
taken seriously as a feminist, she needs to “put her titty away?”
Metro Times: What
qualities do you share with someone like her?
Metro Times: Food?
Metro Times: In
what way?
Metro Times: Which
was?
Metro Times: Well,
“I’m the One That I Want” seemed pretty intimate. I’m surprised you have
anything left to reveal.
Metro Times: How
so?
Metro Times: How far can you go with self-improvement and still retain the underdog’s outlook a comedian needs? Cho: Fortunately, I’m a slow enough learner. I have a learning disability when it comes to self-improvement. I think everybody does. It’s part of the human condition. Metro Times: Do you follow another familiar path in that your ideas for the improvement of others are crystal clear? Cho: Absolutely. Metro Times: Who
would you like to improve right now?
Metro Times: How much self-exposure is too much? Have you ever left a piece of material out of one of your routines because you were worried no one else would relate to it? Cho: No, that’s never happened. I think everybody relates. And if they don’t relate, they’re shocked. And if they’re not shocked, they’re laughing. So it all works out. Metro Times: What
happens the day you wake up and realize you’re no longer considered shocking?
Metro Times: As somebody who discusses her addictions at length, what do you feel when you hear about someone like A.J. McLean (the Backstreet Boy who checked himself into rehab for alcoholism)? Empathy? Cho: Or that kind of idea like, “There but for the grace of God go I.” Metro Times: Meaning
the rehab portion, correct? Not his entire career?
Metro Times: You’ve
taken a lot of responsibility for the failure of “All-American Girl” on
your own shoulders. But did you have the power to change the way it turned
out?
Metro Times: I
remember being disappointed that the show wasn’t more “Asian.” But is that
opinion itself part of the problem?
Metro Times: One
of these days, some cable-TV executive is going to schedule a multi-night
reappraisal of the series. Will you agree to be interviewed?
Metro Times: What
will you say?
Metro Times: It
is now, because you said it in my presence without a lawyer. How can I
get rights to “The Courtship of Eddie’s Father?”
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