Sunday, March 16, 2014
Comedian Nancy Ryan, Las Vegas Sun, March 18, 2005
March 18, 2005
Columnist Lisa Ferguson: It figures: Ryan skated
into stand-up spotlight
Lisa Ferguson's Laugh Lines column appears Fridays. Her
Sun Lite Column appears Mondays. Reach her at
lmsferguson@yahoo.com.
You don't often hear comparisons drawn between the worlds
of stand-up comedy and professional figure skating -- unless
Nancy Ryan is doing the talking.
The former-skater-turned-comic, who performs through
Sunday at The Comedy Stop at The Trop, says working in
comedy is "not so much different" from the cutthroat
competition she experienced during her years on the ice.
In both professions, "Everybody's talking about you behind
your back; people are doing this and that," she explained
during a call from her Long Branch, N.J., home. "So you just
have to keep your chin up and do what you know that you do
best."
Ryan began skating as a kid. "I started taking lessons and it
kind of snowballed from there." She competed from 1977
through 1980 as a singles skater before making the switch to
ice dancing in the mid-'80s.
Though she says she dreamt of winning an Olympic medal,
Ryan is the first to concede she never quite fit the
stereotypical ice-princess mold. "I'm not the small, little, tiny
80-pound skater," she explains. "I'm 5-foot-5; I've got a broad
frame, so that kind of put a damper on things."
Add to that a slightly rough-and-tumble personality: "I wasn't
Tonya Harding, no, but I smoked cigarettes and I drank
coffee."
She recalls being backstage at a skating event "waiting to go
on, and I was squatting down on the ground smoking a
cigarette and watching Katarina Witt doing laps (around the
rink) and drinking her water, and I'm blowing smoke at her."
Cigarettes weren't Ryan's only vice.
"I started partying in my teens," she says, and abused drugs
and alcohol. "I just wanted to be a normal kid, and I wanted to
be accepted by my peers ... It started that way and just
continued."
During the late '70s and again in the late '80s, Ryan says she
lived in a boarding house in Lake Placid, N.Y., near similar
residences where some of the sport's biggest stars -- Scott
Hamilton and Peter Carruthers among them -- also stayed.
"They were all around," she says.
In 1982, Ryan switched from amateur- to professional-skater
status. Two years later, however, she took a break and began
teaching the sport to students in New York, Connecticut and
Vermont.
Ryan returned to competitive skating later that decade as an
ice dancer, alongside skating partner Philip Piasecki. The pair
skated together for five years before competing in the 1991 U.
S. Professional Figure Skating Championships. It turned out
to be Ryan's final skating competition.
"Philip wanted to quit (skating) and I wasn't ready to quit," she
explains. Instead, Ryan moved to Connecticut in search of a
new skating partner. "I just wanted to start all over again."
To make ends meet, she took a job waiting tables at a
comedy club. During an open-mike night in 1992, at the
urging of a comedian, Ryan took the stage. "I went up there in
an apron, with a tray and I talked about how it sucked to be a
waitress in a comedy club, and I was horrible."
The experience was reminiscent of her skating days,
however, in that she was quickly bitten by "that performing
bug. I loved being up there."
Once and for all, she says, "I put the skates away and that
was it. I became a comedian."
Still, "It took me awhile to kind of get the whole idea of what
(stand-up) was all about. I mean, it's such an art form to
create a joke, to make people laugh, to make things universal
so everybody understands, but to keep it true to yourself."
In her act, the 41-year-old Ryan references her skating years,
as well as her battle with addiction (she's been sober for 18
years). "I make it funny to the point where it's just ridiculous,"
she explains, joking, "All the other kids were making figure
eights, and I was making 7 and 7s."
Ryan, who has previously appeared on Comedy Central's
stand-up series "Premium Blend," also riffs about her second
marriage, which ended in divorce more than two years ago.
"My act used to be about how happy I was in my marriage -- a
good 20 minutes of it was all about how in love I was and how
great my marriage was," she says. "When it came to be that it
was all a lie, and I came home and my apartment was
empty ... I had to change my entire act. So, it became this
whole 'you-never-know-what-you're-gonna-get'-type of thing."
The adversity Ryan has faced has "made my act better," she
insists. "I would say that my life experiences and the pain that
I've experienced in the past three years has pushed me to
write and to change my whole persona onstage."
Finding the humor in such weighty topics has proved
challenging, especially since "I am one of the most serious
people you'll ever meet," she says, "and it took awhile before I
was able to make things light enough where I could do it."
It helps that "about 90 percent of the audience out there has
gone through something that I've gone through with drinking,
the divorce, the pain of it all. I'm able to touch that and then
create a punch line where they're like ... 'That made me feel
better about my life.' "
Later this year Ryan is scheduled to release a DVD of her
stand-up show. A portion of the proceeds from its sales will be
donated to Any Solider Inc. (www.AnySoldier.com), which
posts requests from deployed servicemen and women on
behalf of their units for much-needed items that civilians can
purchase and send directly to those troops.
Ryan, whose beau is a deployed Marine, serves as Any
Soldier's director of publicity and fundraising. She has
coordinated several comedy shows in New York benefiting
the organization, and says she hopes to stage similar events
in Las Vegas. "I can't think of a more meaningful way to
support a very important cause."
Somebody, get this woman a medal, already. "I'm not Tonya
Harding," Ryan jokes. "I don't believe in hitting people in the
knee for any reason -- well, there might be one or two
reasons -- but not to win a gold medal or anything. I can think a more meaningful way to
support a very important cause."
Somebody, get this woman a medal, already. "I'm not Tonya
Harding," Ryan jokes. "I don't believe in hitting people in the
knee for any reason -- well, there might be one or two
reasons -- but not to win a gold medal or anything. I can think
of much better things."
Out for laughs
•••
When Laugh Lines interviewed Ron White in December, the
"Blue Collar Comedy Tour" co-star chatted about his
upcoming WB sitcom pilot, "The Ron White Show," which will
be taped at 4 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Stardust.
The show, set to air April 21, will also feature an appearance
by comic Dave Attell. Tickets to attend the taping (ages 18
and older only) are free, and are available at the Stardust box
office.
•••
Meanwhile, at 10 p.m. Sunday, catch White when he serves
as Roast Master, alongside Bill Engvall and Larry the Cable
Guy, on "The Comedy Central Roast of Jeff Foxworthy," airing
on Cox cable channel 56. Also scheduled to skewer
Foxworthy is Lisa Lampanelli, who was profiled here in
October.
•••
New York-New York headliner Rita Rudner is featured in the
March/April issue of Golf for Women magazine. In the Q&A
piece, the funny lady recalls the time she hit one of her pink
http://www.lasvegassun.com/sunbin/stories/sun/2005/mar/18/518471525.html?nancy%2
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment