David Koechner expanding his comedy skill set with standup in Burbank
David Koechner is a master of the uncomfortable laugh. Onstage and on the screen, the comic actor has often specialized in characters of unquiet desperation, ill-mannered and needy, clueless and hilariously crude.
In 2004âs âAnchormanâ and its 2013 sequel, he was Champ Kind, the boorish, conflicted sportscaster in a 10-gallon hat who punctuated his sentences with a booming âWhammy!â On several episodes of âThe Office,â he was Todd Packer, loudmouth friend to Michael Scott (Steve Carell) and a walking sexual-harassment case study.
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âThe roles Iâm known for are these boorish louts that are in extreme pain,â Koechner says. âI would hope that you can see that thereâs nuance to those characters. I think most people think itâs just me hitting an anvil with a hammer. But Iâm hoping theyâre catching whatâs happening with these guys because theyâre unaware of who they are.â
His career on television began with a year on âSaturday Night Live,â where he first met his âAnchormanâ co-star Will Ferrell in 1995. A few months ago, he filmed a role in the Showtime revival of âTwin Peaks,â of which he can reveal nothing. And he continues to provide the voice of Dick on the animated sitcom âAmerican Dad!â
People say, âWhatâs your standup like?â Thatâs almost like asking âWhatâs your personality like?â Thatâs best described by somebody else.
— David Koechner
Aside from his scripted roles, Koechnerâs specialty for the last three decades has been improvisational comedy, but in recent years has added standup to his repertoire. On June 11, he appears at Flappers Comedy Club in Burbank.
âI stay busy, man,â he says, noting five kids at home in the Valley, aged 5 to 17. âIâve got mouths to feed.â
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Marquee: Youâre best known for improvisational comedy. Will you be doing traditional standup at Flappers?
David Koechner: [Laughs] I think itâs puzzling everybody: Whatâs he doing? How can he possibly stand up like everybody else? Thatâs a consistent question. But yeah, I do standup. Iâve only been doing it for the last five years. Iâve done live for 30 years â in sketch and improv. I look at standup as just another way to do a performance. In sketch and improv, itâs with a partner onstage. The only difference in standup comedy is that your partner is the audience.
Is your standup hugely different to what you do in improv?
I have a wife and five kids, and that certainly plays into it. Iâm from the Midwest, so my perspectiveâs a bit different. I grew up in a large family, and was working since I was 7 years old for my father, who was a livestock-trailer manufacturer in a small town in Missouri. That certainly infused my perspective.
People say, âWhatâs your standup like?â Thatâs almost like asking âWhatâs your personality like?â Thatâs best described by somebody else. Itâs storytelling with jokes. I normally say its like youâve got a 40-foot flatbed trailer going down the road at 80 miles an hour, and on it is a circus tent â and in the tent is a carnival barker with a bullhorn and the tent is on fire. Thatâs what my act is like.
Do you wear a hat?
[Laughs] Sometimes. On Monday night I did four sets at four different clubs. Thatâs what you can do here in town, so you end up getting an hour of stage time. Which is fantastic.
I know that you studied political science in college. Were you ever interested in politics as a career?
Oh, yeah. I was always interested in politics. Iâm from a small town, so that might have been part of my pursuit of getting out. How does one leave here? I thought, with politics, you move to the city, which was one of my goals. And I was always interested in helping people, but as you get into the process you realize politics is not actually about helping people. [Laughs]
I never met an actor. I didnât know how someone went about doing something like that. Then I took a trip with a buddy of mine to Chicago. Iâd always been a fan of âSaturday Night Live,â and I knew a bunch a people from that had come from Second City. I went to the show and noted that they taught classes â and itâs almost like a light bulb went off: âOh, Iâm going to move here and take classes, and thatâs how you become an actor.â
Is your comedy ever topical?
No, especially these days. Itâs relationship-based â the relationship we all have in the institutions of our lives, whether itâs work, marriage, children, friendships, employers, employees, school, church. Thatâs always topical. Itâs relevant to your relationship to life.
Were there comedians or comedic actors you looked up to on your way up?
I loved the Marx Brothers and how smart they were. Monty Python â I was blown away that you could be that funny and that smart â when you think about Dennis the Constitutional Peasant [laughs] in âMonty Python and the Holy Grail,â itâs incredible. It was one of my first introductions into socialism [laughs]. Abbott and Costello, who I used to watch on Saturday afternoons with my dad. And of course I was 13 when âSNLâ debuted. I was mesmerized.
With the âAnchormanâ films, youâve had a chance to work with the same people on different things together. Is there something special about that?
Absolutely. I remember distinctly thinking when we were doing the second âAnchormanâ â we were about two weeks before finishing â I wished this was a television show we could do the next 10 years. It was so much fun.
In those movies, how much is in the script and how much happens on the set?
Itâs a combination of things. It all essentially comes from [writer-director] Adam McKay and Will, and the attitude that they bring to the whole thing, the playfulness. Their attitude is, weâre going to get the scene in three or four takes, and then letâs improvise. That adds a different chemical reaction and focus to all the players. Youâre on your toes in a different way.
Adam McKay has a microphone when heâs directing and heâll throw out new lines for everybody, for every character in the movie for every scene. Itâs remarkable. The mind on that guy is almost unmatched, of the people Iâve worked with.
Youâve been doing some non-comedic roles.
Itâs lovely when people are surprised: âOh. You can act!â Most comics can because theyâre drawing from a wealth of experience, which is what youâre supposed to do as an actor anyway. Comics typically draw from their lives for material or draw from their relationships. Whether youâre doing improvisation or standup, youâre putting your life out there, and thatâs what youâre supposed to do as an actor. Youâre supposed to equate these lines as something meaningful and purposeful to you and your own life.
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Who: David Koechner
Where: Flappers Comedy Club, 102 E Magnolia Blvd., Burbank
When: June 11
More info: (818) 845-9721, flapperscomedy.com
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Steve Appleford, [email protected]
Twitter: @SteveAppleford