It’s a Gift
The best comedians don’t have an act, they are the act. 1934’s It’s a Gift is a brilliant example of this principle and of WC Fields’s approach to comedy. As a film it’s not always funny but he always is, every grimace and muttered aside comedy gold. This time around the Fields persona â a useless, drunken curmudgeon with the world against him â is a family man this with a wife, son and daughter, none of whom give him any respect. “I am the master of this household,” he says to his daughter at one point, but quietly so his wife doesn’t hear him. Harold Bissonette (his wife prefers the pronunciation Bisson-aye) … Read more