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 In
1948, Lenny Bruce was just another comic who couldn't
get arrested. By 1961, all that would change.
Synopsis.
Twelve years in the making, this Oscar-nominated, Emmy-winning
documentary, narrated by Robert
De Niro, chronicles the life of the unorthodox American
stand-up comedian who was no stranger to controversy.
By the early 1950's, Bruce shared the stage with local
strippers and ended up marrying one. By the late 50's
he had perfected a jazzy improvisational delivery that
led to TV dates with hosts Steve Allen and Hugh Hefner.
By
the early 60's, his sold-out club dates were cracking
up audiences from coast to coast, taking a hipster's
aim at conventionality and hypocrisy -- and the Catholic
Church, arguably the reason prosecutors now felt compelled
to repeatedly arrest him for obscenity and narcotics
possession. With humor and pathos, director Robert
B. Weide profiles this provocative social comic
and features rare, unaired TV appearances, newsreel
and home movie footage, and interviews with Bruce's
mother, wife, daughter, lawyers, club owners, friends
and prosecutors.
New
York Post: "The documentary is exceptionally powerful.
The story is about much more than just a comic. It
is about the way society treats non-conformists who
threaten established values, the need to be vigilant
about constitutional rights, and much more."
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