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Hannah Gadsby’s ‘Nanette’ Won’t Leave Our Conscience Alone 

Watch ‘Nanette’, even if it is  the only thing you do this week. 

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Hannah Gadsby: Nanette

Hannah Gadsby’s ‘Nanette’ is the Most Powerful Thing You Will Watch this Week

You're stuck in a room with no windows. That is how it has always been. At first, it seemed like you would pull through. You tried to laugh it off and distract yourself. There were long stretches when you would vacantly look into the decrepit mirror, the only piece of furniture in the musty room.

But now, you’re getting shifty. You are pacing back and forth, you are wringing your fingers in restlessness.

You have started clawing the walls, thumping the door, and writing long, elaborate pleas to those outside. 

You want to get out.

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Now, let’s set things straight.

You were only IMAGINING all of this.

What about those LIVING it every single day?

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“I identify as... tired,” remarks comedian Hannah Gadsby on her Netflix special Nanette. She has short, cropped hair that accentuates her jawline and a smile that seems cyclic. She lets her face break into it every minute or so. In hindsight, you realize that she smiles while setting up a joke, not while delivering a punchline.

She lets the tension linger.

Watch ‘Nanette’, even if it is  the only thing you do this week. 
Hannah Gadsby on ‘Nanette’.
(Photo Courtesy: Screenshot/Youtube
When she does deliver her punchlines, the blows are severe enough to startle you out of a stupor and throw caution to the winds.
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Gadsby came out of the closet a long time back, but life is still a struggle for her. She recounts incidents from her past with hair-raising candour.

The time she was quite close to getting beaten up at the bus stop, the time she came out to her mother, the time a member of the audience walked up to her after a show and complained about the “lack of lesbian content’’ on the show... the anecdotes are narrated with the same smile, mechanical and weary.

When you are living in the fringes, self-deprecatory humour is “not humility. It is humiliation,’’ she exclaims.

Watch ‘Nanette’, even if it is  the only thing you do this week. 
Watch ‘Nanette’, even if it is  the only thing you do this week. 
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While watching her perform, you can’t afford to get distracted. She does not allow you that privilege. Because privilege is based on choice, and her very existence, as a queer woman, is a constant struggle to be afforded that choice.

Watch ‘Nanette’, even if it is  the only thing you do this week. 
Even when you’re catching a breath, allowing everything to sink in, waiting for some tragicomic relief... Gadsby slips in profound punchlines. 

“Where are the quiet gays supposed to go?’’

What happens to people from the community who aren’t on the streets, waving the Pride Flag and shouting out slogans? Can activism be boxed into a formulaic mode of resistance, she makes you wonder.

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Gadsby makes you realise that there is something very comforting about being ‘normal’. Normalcy brings forth, agreeability, consensus, unity and... safety. The second our noses sniff out the faintest whiff of ‘not-normal’, we do what we we have done for centuries:

Suspect

Mistrust

Fear

Oust.

So what happens when one stomps out of the box, picks an outfit not draped on a hanger in the assigned closet, walks over to you with much pride and tells you that they love differently too?

We freak out and cast them aside. We label them ‘weird’.

“You know what is weird?’’ she asks. Head-bands on bald babies. That is what is weird, not her, not you, not me.

Watch ‘Nanette’, even if it is  the only thing you do this week. 
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Gadsby has had it. She is no longer in a mood to make you or me laugh. She knows she has a responsibility, but her patience has stretched itself thin. She says it is time for her to quit comedy.
Watch ‘Nanette’, even if it is  the only thing you do this week. 

Life doesn’t need to be reduced to a punchline when there is SO much at stake. Because when you laugh along, you perpetuate stereotypes, you further instill debilitating prejudices.

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So,

If you haven't been walking a straight line, (You know, the one drawn by those of us outside the room?)

If you don’t look the same,
dress the same,
talk the same,
and love the same as those outside the room...

It is time to stop giving a f**k. It is time to let artists like Gadsby wrench your eyes open. We’ve gotta take control of our own stories and help others control theirs. 

Watch Nanette, even if it is  the only thing you do this week.

(At The Quint, we are answerable only to our audience. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member. Because the truth is worth it.)

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Topics:  LGBTQ   Netflix   comedian 

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