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Article

That funny feeling: the tragic stylings of Bo Burnham’s Inside

 

Abstract

Bo Burnham’s Inside, promoted as a musical comedy special by its platform Netflix, released in June 2021 to almost unquestioning praise, and has now won 3 Emmys. The work is an evocative retrospective of Burnham’s fictionalized experience during the Covid-19 quarantine. Written, performed, filmed, and edited by Burnham himself, the piece reflects his career as a musical comedy performance artist, and also provides an intimate look into his struggles with mental health, internet culture, and artistic ego. Of particular appeal in this piece is the complex pairing of comedy with pathos. Its songs have become ironic backgrounds to TikTok videos and popular sea shanty renditions. Critics remark: ‘What he’s describing is the near-universal feeling of despair in 2020. And that feels good’ (Herman Citation2021); ‘A tricky work that for all its boundary-crossing remains in the end a comedy in the spirit of neurotic, self-loathing stand-up’ (Zinoman Citation2021); ‘A claustrophobic masterclass in comedy and introspection, Inside is a beautifully bleak, hilariously hopeful special’ (Rotten Tomatoes). It is this complexity which I seek to investigate. I assert that Bo Burnham’s Inside achieves its poignancy not through its comedic stylings, but through its implementation of a traditional Aristotelian tragic structure. This paper will discuss the ways in which Burnham follows the tragic structure and the monomyth while engaging with, and subverting, benign violation theory to provide a postmodern catharsis in its audience that feels like comedy, but ultimately provides a shared expression of, and outlet for, the audience’s grief.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

Notes

1 Perhaps sadly, the short song ‘Biden’—which includes the refrain ‘how is the best-case scenario Joe Biden?’—was cut from the special.

2 Shout out to the unmitigated bop that is ‘Jeffrey Bezos.’

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Julia Moriarty

Julia Moriarty holds a PhD in theatre from Wayne State University in Detroit, an MA in theatre education from Emerson College and dual BAs in Theatre and Psychology from Drake University. She is also a certified teacher of the Michael Chekhov Acting Technique with the Great Lakes Michael Chekhov Consortium. She is a Visiting Assistant Professor of Theatre History at Millikin University and the Director of Education and Outreach at Hope Repertory Theatre. She has worked as a director, dramaturg, performer, and teaching artist throughout the country, notably at the Jewish Ensemble Theatre in Detroit, Lyric Stage Company of Boston, and Heart of America Shakespeare Festival in Kansas City. Julia is the co-founder and co-editor-in-chief of Etudes, a theatre and performance studies journal for emerging scholars. She has also served in leadership with the Mid-America Theatre Conference and the Theory and Criticism Focus Group within the Association for Theatre in Higher Education. Her research focuses on dramatic structures within contemporary performance.

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