âI talk very quietly in a monotone voice where thereâs almost zero performance in there, to see if the material holds up,â she said.
Purposefully boring an audience might sound like career suicide for a stand-up, but Wong insists thereâs a method to it: If the crowd laughs despite her dull delivery, then she knows the joke is really good.
âItâs all about word choice,â Wong said. âSometimes I have a joke I know is funny, but I havenât found the right word, and when I do find it, itâs so satisfying.â
Wongâs conviction that language, even more than performance, is a comedianâs greatest weapon also guided her when she was writing her first book, âDear Girls,â a collection of essays about her rebellious youth, her struggle to break into comedy, her romantic and sexual exploits, and what it was like to grow up in what she calls a âvery atypical Asian-American family.â
Even though Wong seems wildly uninhibited onstage (one of her early signature moves was pulling down her pants to moon the audience), sheâs nervous about the reception to her book, which comes out Oct. 15 and is even more personal than some of her stand-up.
âI donât know how people are going to react and itâs scary,â she said. âI hope my siblings donât get pissed at me.â
In an interview, Wong spoke about recent controversies in the comedy world, her writing process and the question she hates getting asked. Below is an edited transcript of the conversation.
Q: In the preface, you describe how you panicked while writing the book. Did you really almost quit and return your advance?
A: I almost gave the money back! I love Zadie Smith and I love Ta-Nehisi Coates, and âHomegoingâ (by Yaa Gyasi) is one of my favorite books. I feel like I have great taste in books, and I started writing and I was like: âHow come I donât sound like them? This is terrible. This is embarrassing." Then I had this discussion with Sarah Dunn, the creator of âAmerican Housewife,â who said the trick to writing is accepting that youâre not a genius. And then it got easier.
Q: One of the recurring jokes in âDear Girlsâ is that the book is formatted as letters to your daughters, who are 1 and 3, but then you tell them extremely inappropriate and scandalous stuff. At what age will you let them read it?
A: Itâs funny when people ask me that because, are we trying to pretend like Iâm going to have any control over them? I lost my virginity when I was 15, you know what I mean? I would be flattered frankly if theyâre interested in anything I do, first of all. But I would feel comfortable with them reading it when theyâre 15. They can watch the special when theyâre 12.
I do think the book is a lot more scandalous than my act. Iâm revealing how naughty I was at a young age, and I donât really do that in my stand-up. Onstage I talk about sleeping with two homeless people, but itâs like, how old was she, we donât know, itâs a mystery.
Q: Your husband, Justin Hakuta, writes an afterword to the book, and heâs also the subject of some of your stand-up, which he says sometimes makes him âuncomfortable.â Why did you want him to address readers directly?
A: I wanted to see what he wanted to say, because he has a lot to say too. And frankly, I was tired of writing so many words and I needed to meet a word count.
Q: You describe a humiliating experience early in your career, when the host at a comedy club introduced you as someone who âdoes your nailsâ and âdoes your laundryâ and people booed during your act, and you almost quit comedy after that. How did you work up the nerve to try again?
A: Of course I thought about quitting at times, but I just kept going because I liked the process so much. Your attitude after bombing distinguishes the comics who are the real deal from the comics who arenât the real deal. Like, people would be so devastated after a set, so many grown-ass men kick chairs and cry after a bad set at a place where the stakes could not be lower, you know what I mean? It just motivated me to go up again and fix whatever I did wrong.
Q: In the book you bring up a question that you hate getting, so of course I feel compelled to ask it, which is what itâs like to be an Asian-American woman in comedy. What bothers you about the premise and how do you answer when it comes up, like now?
A: That question comes so much from Asian-American women. They clearly want to be in comedy, but is this how you see yourself? Is this how youâre reducing yourself? And it upsets me when they ask that, because it makes me think thatâs how they see themselves: as an Asian-American woman. And also itâs just not a very good question. If their goal is to pick my brain and get some insight on how to succeed, a much better question is, how do you cope with failure, or how do you write a great joke? Not what is it like to be an Asian-American woman in comedy. Underlying that question is this assumption that being an Asian-American woman is a weakness. If you see it as a weakness, it will be a weakness.
Q: Similarly, you talk about how annoying it is when white male comics tell you that youâre lucky to have a ânicheâ because youâre an Asian-American woman.
A: When they say that to me, itâs a reflection of how theyâre not seeing a precedent, with the exception being Margaret Cho, of someone looking like me succeeding. Iâve never felt entitled to a career in comedy, whereas these guys, theyâre like, âHey, Iâm good looking, I can make an audience laugh for 10 minutes, whereâs my movie career, whereâs my TV show?â But I never felt entitled to any of this. This has all been a delightful, lovely surprise. To me, saying I want to be a stand-up comedian felt like saying I want to be president. Those guys are not successful, and itâs because theyâre not giving enough credit and weight and importance to the skill of writing, and theyâre not giving me credit for writing.
Q: Theyâre just reducing you to your appearance instead of the quality of your jokes.
A: Right. So itâs like, if that were true, how come my momâs not, like, Richard Pryor? Sheâs hilarious, sheâs an Asian woman. Geez, why couldnât she just snap her fingers and have like two specials or something? I donât know.
Q: Thereâs been a recent controversy in the comedy world that I wanted to ask you about, since itâs opened up a debate about using racial stereotypes in comedy.
A: Oh my God, Iâm so out of it right now. I know what youâre going to ask about and I havenât read enough about it to make an informed comment. Iâve been really out of it. My husband was on a trip with his friends from business school and itâs been just me and the kids so I havenât been on my phone reading everything. I know what youâre going to ask about.
Q: Right, I wanted to ask you about the controversy over Shane Gillisâ use of racial slurs and stereotypes about Asians on his podcast, and also ask you about a different episode of the podcast that people also found offensive, which references you.
A: Oh God.
Q: Gillis and his co-host rank comedians by race and gender, and Gillis says, âAli Wong is making it so Asian chicks are funnier than white chicks.â
A: He said Ali Wong is making it so that Asian chicks are funnier than white chicks?
Q: Yeah, and I was going to ask you what your response was when you heard about it, but it sounds like you hadnât heard about it before.
A: No. And you know, for these things I donât feel comfortable commenting on it if I donât know the full context. You gave me some context, but before I give any official comment I should really read and watch those clips and stuff. Because, I donât know, I heard he had said some slurs and people were really disturbed by it and that âSNLâ had rescinded its offer. I was just really excited about Bowen [Yang] because I know Bowen. I just want to make sure to take the time to celebrate Bowen and not focus on this too much because itâs a bigass deal that Bowen is going to be in the main cast. Heâs a smart guy whoâs hilarious and is such a fresh voice in comedy and on top of that heâs this Asian-American man. I love it. Iâm sorry I canât give you more.
Q: One thing the Shane Gillis controversy highlights is this ongoing debate in the comedy world about sensitivity and what lines shouldnât be crossed. In your comedy you talk about racial stereotypes, sometimes invoking a stereotype to disarm it or other times pointing out truth in a clichĂ©. Whatâs your view, should some material be avoided because itâs insensitive and offensive?
A: People can get away with doing really offensive things as long as itâs funny. Because if itâs funny, then the laughter wins over the feelings of hurt and then youâre doing something right. It comes down to writing and instinct. Also, when you know different people from all different walks of life and youâre a compassionate person, then youâre probably more capable of writing something thatâs really offensive thatâs funny, because thereâs truth in it and itâs something that you havenât heard before. Come up with something thatâs fresh and true and unexpected.
Q: In the book you tell your daughters âyou can be whatever you want to be, but not a vlogger. Never a vlogger. Videoing yourself and putting on makeup or unboxing candles is not a job.â You also tell them, âyou can be whatever you want to be, but Iâll be worried if you want to do stand-up.â Why would you discourage them from pursuing stand-up?
A: Itâs the safety thing. I stayed in so many shady-ass motels by myself. You have to put yourself in those situations. Even now Iâll go to dive bars and I always ask some other comics to walk me back to my car.
Q: So youâd rather have your daughters grow up to be vloggers than stand-ups?
A: I guess so, because then theyâd be safe. But not from my ridicule.
This article originally appeared in
.