Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,506,428 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

A funny thing happened to Mavis.


HAVE YOU HEARD the one about ... the woman whose daughter died in a terrible ski accident and later found healing through comedy? Doesn't sound very funny? It isn't at first, but it is a true story that began-with tragedy and continues with hope and it happened to Mavis Pickett, now a 73-year-old stand-up stand·up or stand-up  
adj.
1. Standing erect; upright: a standup collar.

2. Taken, done, or used while standing: a standup supper; a standup bar.
 comedian, counselor and wedding co-ordinator at Holy Trinity Anglican Cathedral in New Westminster New Westminster, city (1991 pop. 43,585), SW British Columbia, Canada, on the Fraser River, part of metropolitan Vancouver. Founded in 1859 as Queensborough, it was the capital of British Columbia until Victoria was made capital after the union of British Columbia , B.C.

The awful date that marks this phase of Ms. Pickett's adventurous life was March 24, 1996, when her youngest child, Mavis Anne, was skiing on B.C.'s Blackcomb Mountain, caught some glare ice and plunged 900 feet off a cliff. She was 30. "She wasn't doing anything dangerous. It was really an unfortunate accident," said Ms. Pickett in an interview.

Formerly a teacher at the University of Manitoba Location
The main Fort Garry campus is a complex on the Red River in south Winnipeg. It has an area of 2.74 square kilometres. More than 60 major buildings support the teaching and research programs of the university.
, Ms. Pickett found support at church, but she also moved outside herself and her grief. She decided to train as a counsellor at Century House Senior's Centre in New Westminster.

"In peer counselling, one of the lectures was on humour and healing. I thought I would take that course," she said. But she turned up in the wrong classroom. "The instructor, (psychotherapist psy·cho·ther·a·pist
n.
An individual, such as a psychiatrist, psychologist, psychiatric nurse, or psychiatric social worker, who practices psychotherapy.
) David Granirer, said, 'Are you in the right course?' There were about 15 in the class. Fourteen of them looked about 12 1/2 years old and I looked about 96. Then he wrote on the blackboard 'Stand-Up Comedy Clinic.' I just about died," she recalled.

Mindful of the healing properties of humour, Mr. Granirer urged her to stick with the course.

"Then he told us the exam was (performing) at a comedy club and I said, 'No way.' He said, 'You really should finish what you start'--just like my mother--so I said 'I will do it once,'" she said.

She also thought of her daughter. "I sat down and thought, 'If you want to honour Mavis Anne, this (not to finish the course) is the worst way.' She thought I could do anything," she said.

Quite literally getting her act together, she performed for eight minutes at Laff Lines in New Westminster. The class taught her the importance of bringing on stage a strong persona--a character type with a particular point of view, such as the late Rodney Dangerfield's hapless hap·less  
adj.
Luckless; unfortunate. See Synonyms at unfortunate.



hapless·ly adv.
 "I don't get no respect" act. Ms. Pickett decided that hers was "a senior trying hard to keep up but who doesn't quite make it."

For instance: "You know, as a senior, you have to be careful that people don't take advantage of you. I took my car into the service station and the man said, 'I'd like to rotate your tires.' 'Well, no thank you,' I said, 'the car does that when I drive.'"

Sometimes, her material got a little risque ris·qué  
adj.
Suggestive of or bordering on indelicacy or impropriety.



[French, from past participle of risquer, to risk, from risque, risk; see risk.]

Adj.
: "You know sometimes people don't understand you when you're a senior. I was talking with an older friend of mine when he started looking me up and down, especially down. I said, 'I don't understand what you're looking at. I said I have acute argina.'"

Word spread about "the senior doing comedy" and Ms. Pickett was profiled on CBC Radio For the Japanese broadcaster, see Chubu-Nippon Broadcasting.

For the Caribbean Broadcasting Corporation's radio service, see CBC 900 AM (Barbados).

CBC Radio is the English language radio division of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.
, Vision TV, the now-defunct Mike Bullard Mike Bullard may refer to:
  • Mike Bullard (ice hockey)
  • Mike Bullard (television) (comedian)
  • See also Michael Bullard.
 Show and other national and local shows and newspapers. Working without an agent, she often performs at convention banquets. This year, she is booked for the Red Hat Society (a social group for women 50 and older) convention in April, a Jewish charity fundraiser in June and the Vancouver Island Vancouver Island (1991 pop. 579,921), 12,408 sq mi (32,137 sq km), SW British Columbia, Canada, in the Pacific Ocean; largest island off W North America. It is c.285 mi (460 km) long and c.  Funvention(another Red Hat Society event) in September--so far.

She brings humour and the same sense of empathy to her volunteer work at the cathedral, where she advises brides and grooms on locations for flowers and candies, limousine parking and the vagaries of a church built in 1899 (washrooms are in the parish hall). She also attends rehearsals and ceremonies. "Yes, I have told a joke to a nervous bride--I can't think of one now--but mostly I'm just grandma being there. Most of it is: 'Are my flowers okay? Is my mum here? Is Joe (the groom) here?'" she said.

Divorced since 1974, Ms. Pickett also enjoys spending time "Spending Time" is the first single released by Christian artist Stellar Kart.

The lyrics describe the band members desire to spend "more time with God". "Sometimes it’s a real struggle to spend time with God.
 with son Ed, daughter Marna Cotroneo and four grandchildren GRANDCHILDREN, domestic relations. The children of one's children. Sometimes these may claim bequests given in a will to children, though in general they can make no such claim. 6 Co. 16. .

Doing comedy helped her cope with Mavis Anne's death in the same way that a delicate approach toward humour helps some of her counselling recipients. She talks about a change of focus. "I had difficulty concentrating (after the accident). What people said was words, words, nothing but words. Just focusing was hard," she said.

Now, she runs workshops on humour and healing. When she counselled people directly several years ago, she discovered their interests and started conversations on those topics, sometimes including a little humour.

"If you can pull their focus out for a little while, it's a start," she said. It has worked for her, too. "When Mavis Anne died, it was like the picture where you either see the black vase or the white profile. I saw only the black, negative side. But once in a while, I could see the white, positive side. Now, it's mostly the white side, but I may see the negative. The negative is always part of your life," but the ability to shift focus helps, she said.

Onstage on·stage  
adj.
Situated or taking place in the area of a stage that is visible to the audience.

adv.
In or into the area of a stage that is visible to the audience.

Adj. 1.
, "you do become another person. I sound different. Once you flip to that other spot, then you have a hiatus hiatus /hi·a·tus/ (hi-a´tus) [L.] an opening, gap, or cleft.hia´tal

aortic hiatus  the opening in the diaphragm through which the aorta and thoracic duct pass.
 from where you were. I might as well be in comedy, laughing for a little while, than where I was at," said Ms. Pickett.
COPYRIGHT 2006 General Synod of the Anglican Church of Canada
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:De Santis, Solange
Publication:Anglican Journal
Date:Feb 1, 2006
Words:916
Previous Article:Church in Burma challenges visiting Canadians.(WORLD)
Next Article:The story behind the story of church membership.(EDITORIAL)
Topics:



Related Articles
'Wounded' Ellen Ain't So Bad After All.(Brief Article)
About Mavis and Me.
LAWYER USES LAPD SCANDAL.(News)
LENO'S WIFE SACRIFICES PRIVACY TO AID AFGHAN WOMEN.(NEWS)
A funny thing happened before the concert ...(The Back Page)
SUSPECT DENIES HITTING VICTIM.(News)
Put me back in my house!(a case stude of Zimbabwean women rights )
A funny thing happened on the way to the internet forum.(PERSPECTIVE)
Park was built on a shoestring and a dream.(Features)
Mavis & Her Marvelous Mooncakes.

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles