I wanted to read this because I’ve always been aware that Dirch Passer, like so many other slapstick, rubber faced comedians, carried the burden of loneliness and melancholy inside, hidden from public view. Little did I know that his partner in comedy, his closest friend and soulmate Kjeld Petersen also struggled with melancholy, which today would be recognized as depression. Their friendship moved me greatly in the biopic about Dirch, and this book focuses on that friendship, on how much they were the one for each other, and how Kjeld’s much too early death on the night after the premier of their reunion show marked the rest of Dirch’s life.
It also sheds light on the type of crazy comedy they were the forefront of and why it became so popular in a post-war Denmark marked by rising industrialization, unemployment and the cold war, resulting in an audience heavily in need of uncomplicated entertainment. I’m not a very big fan of revue, but learning about its origin and place in time was interesting in and of itself.
Well worth a read.