Paula Poundstone selects audience members to engage in her stand-up routines. Photo provided by Michael Schwartz.

As Paula Poundstone continues her 2024 U.S. tour, audiences can be assured of an evening of hilarity as the comedian launches into a string of humorous stories typical of most observational stand-up comics. But at some point into her routine, the sharp-witted Poundstone will seamlessly morph into her trademark banter with audience members – a part of the show fans have come to expect and adore. Itā€™s a style that evolved out of necessity.
ā€œIā€™ve been doing stand-up for over 40 years, but have a terrible memory,ā€ said Poundstone by phone from Florida recently, while preparing for an evening event. ā€œI started out doing the five-minute open mic thing and spent years trying to memorize an act. Then I just began talking with the audience. My first thought was that it might be a liability, but one night I realized it was kind of the heart and soul of the whole show. Now itā€™s my favorite part of the evening.ā€
How she selects audience members to engage varies from venue to venue as the blinding house lights will often obscure distant individual faces. Sometimes sheā€™ll spot a guest arriving late, or perhaps someone getting up to leave temporarily, while others grab her attention by yelling out answers to her rhetorical questions – and Poundstone pounces.
ā€œIā€™ll often start with the time-honored question of asking what they do for a living,ā€ she explained. ā€œIn this way, little biographies of audience members come up and I use that to set my sails! Their profession might remind me of a piece of material I have stored away in my mind and Iā€™ll run with it.ā€
A memorable interaction occurred in 2006 during a show recorded for the Bravo cable network. About a half-hour into her performance, Poundstone began questioning an engaged couple who revealed the woman worked for an insurance company and the man was in banking. A seemingly innocuous inquiry about who proposed to whom brought a response from the gentleman, ā€œWhat kind of a question is that?ā€ prompting immediate gasps from the audience – an opening for the comedian to fire off her frequently heard laugh-inducing response to the crowdā€™s reaction: ā€œIā€™ll handle it!ā€
And she did, brilliantly, with lightning-fast improvisational skills during a sidesplitting 6-minute interaction with the pair.
ā€œPeople still come up to me and ask about that one and to this day I wonder whatever happened to the couple and if they did get married,ā€ said Poundstone. ā€œAnd every now and then, someone will ask me if itā€™s all planned – that the people somehow know they will be picked. That always makes me laugh and my response is how would that even be possible? It would require a lot of effort and I wouldnā€™t even know how to begin. This is why my shows are never exactly the same wherever I go.ā€
Like many entertainers with a busy tour schedule, Poundstone has little time for sightseeing (see www.paulapoundstone.com for cities and tour dates).
ā€œI donā€™t get a chance to look around much since the touring only allows me to fly in for a show and then Iā€™m off again,ā€ she says. ā€œBut I still think itā€™s the best job in the world.ā€
Nick Thomas teaches at Auburn University at Montgomery in Alabama and writes features, columns, and interviews for newspapers and magazines around the country. See https://www.getnickt.org.