From DallasVoice.com
Pretty, funny
By Daniel A. Kusner - Life+Style Editor
Apr 24, 2008 - 5:19:59 PM
The beautiful and sensuous Margaret Cho
knows how Dallas’ gay community should welcome George and Laura when
they move to Big D
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| CHO SHOW
Margaret Cho’s “Beautiful” tour stops at Nokia Theatre, 1001 Performance Place. Grand Prairie.
April 27 at 8 p.m. $35-$49.50.
214-373-8000
Ticketmaster |
On Sunday, Margaret Cho returns to North Texas for her newest tour,
“Beautiful.” Her last tour, “The Sensuous Woman,” never made its way to
Big D: the singing-and-dancing musical was mostly an off-Broadway gig.
But Cho says to expect some singing at her Nokia gig.
“Beautiful” was inspired by a question a DJ had asked Cho: “What if you
woke up tomorrow and you were beautiful, what would you do? If you
were, blonde, blue-eyed, 5-foot 11 and weighed 100 pounds, what would
you do?”
The question set her off and inspired the about-to-turn-40 comedian to
riff on the definition of beauty. A few weeks ago, Dallas Voice caught
up with Cho, who recently started filming her own celeb-reality show.
So
you were talking to a DJ who asked you about being beautiful, and it
struck a visceral chord inside you. What was your reaction: anger,
depression? It was shock. He said, “What if you woke up and you
were beautiful?” I was like, “What do you mean, ‘What if?’” I also
think he was trying to get a rise out of me, which is fine. But it made
me more philosophical about this idea of beauty.
What did you discover?
That I’m really beautiful. I also discovered that we can call ourselves
beautiful. I used to think that people only told you that you were
beautiful, and that was how you became beautiful. But you can just tell
other people that you are beautiful, and it works just the same. Then
people will be talking about it — like, “Wow, she’s really beautiful.”
So it works on a lot of different levels.
How do you define beauty?
It’s about feeling good about myself. Feeling right. I’ve tried to be
thinner, and I’ve tried to really control my body. And I don’t feel as
good as when I would just let it all just go. I just don’t worry about
it now. And that really feels beautiful. It’s not a struggler — not a
painful thing. I’m very easygoing about it. And I’m going to be 40 this
year, and so I think what’s beautiful is feeling comfortable in your
own skin.
If you could bitchslap gay men for chasing after flavorless definitions of beauty, what would you say? I
want gay men to feel beautiful about themselves. Because it’s too hard
to be a gay man and not feel beautiful. That not-beautiful feeling is a
painful disaster for gay men because you don’t get any dick. All you do
is work on your “Wizard of Oz” collection. And it’s painful. I just
want gay men to feel beautiful because they are beautiful.
At the University of North Texas you
spoke to students to provide some really solid life-lessons. You’re
good at giving advice. On that tip, George and Laura Bush are moving to
Dallas when they leave the White House. What should gay Dallasites do
to welcome our newest citizen next year? I don’t know. Maybe
have a rave? No, wait. You should have a T-dance — that wonderful gay
phenomenon, the 4 p.m. George Bush Moves to Dallas T-dance. It’s
actually a joyous occasion for celebration — just because he’s not in
office anymore. As long as he’s in Dallas, he’s not in Washington, and
that’s awesome.
In that past year, some things have crossed the cultural radar, and I wondered, “What does Margaret think about this?” Last
year, Rosie O’Donnell parroted a “ching-chong” Asian-sounding person
from China, and she had to apologize for doing so. I know Rosie very
well, and she’s not racist at all. There is a lot of sensitivity among
some people in the Asian-American community because there’s an ease
about racism towards Asian-Americans that doesn’t exists for other
ethnic groups, and it is very disturbing. I don’t think that Rosie is a
perpetrator of that. There’s just a paranoia amongst a lot of
Asian-Americans who just can’t stand it and don’t want to hear anything
that sounds like that at all.
If Rosie had imitated the way you do your mom, do you think there would be a huge reaction?
When I do Asian impressions or Asian-American voices in my work, it’s
really who they are. My mother really talks like that. So I’m recalling
my reality as opposed to creating a caricature
Race is a weird-sticky thing — especially with the Obama campaign.
We’re talking a lot about race right now, and it’s important because
race is confusing and mysterious. It’s offensive to some people and not
offensive to others, and we don’t know why. But exploring the why is
important.
In a previous performance, I heard you use a Shirley Q. Liquorism — the word “ignunt.” Oh, yes.
Last year, GLAAD condemned her comedy for perpetuating ugly
stereotypes. From comedian to comedian, were you flattering Shirley by
using the word ‘ignunt’?
Well, ‘ignunt’ is a word I hear from my friends all the time, so maybe
they borrowed it from her. I don’t really know. I’m not that familiar
with what Shirley does. But I do know that a lot of my friends are big
fans of hers and they use that word constantly. I think I got it from
her once removed.
Okay, Hillary or Obama? I’m
really an Obama fan. I like Hillary, too. That’s the problem — I’m very
much into both. It’s hard. But you can’t vote for both. You have to
vote for one.
When did you know you became an Obama fan?
I was working a lot with Kal Penn [the Asian-American actor from
“Harold and Kumar”] who is a big Obama campaign surrogate. I recently
taught a class for him at U Penn in Philadelphia. We were talking about
Obama, and he’s working for his campaign. I thought I would join him.
What got you over the Obama fence? Because
he’s talking a lot about race and where we are as a country when it
comes to race. It’s tremendously thrilling to have a person of color in
the White House. Tucker Carlson was recently talking about how upset he
was — as a straight white man — that his opinions were being eclipsed
by the women and by the people of color. I thought that was great, and
that’s what turned my attention towards the Obama campaign.
Both Hillary and Obama can’t manage stoop low enough to give gays full
equal marriage rights. Why would you say to gays who are like, “What’s
the deal with either of you two phony Democrats who are trying to
represent the minority face of our nation?”
One of my reasons for joining the Obama campaign is to have some sort
of influence in that regard — to make sure that the gay marriage issue
isn’t forgotten. Gay marriage isn’t about marriage — it’s about
equality. It’s about looking at gays and lesbians as absolutely at the
same level place of all our citizens. Right now it’s unequal, and it’s
a problem.
So when you’re filming your reality show, if Obama gets elected and you
get face time with him, we’ll see the footage of Margaret sticking it
to him over gay marriage? I hope so. Hopefully by then, we won’t have to worry about it.
How will your reality show be different from Kathy Griffin’s? I
don’t know. I love her show. But she and I are very different. In ways,
I think our shows will also be quite similar. I just did her show in
Australia, so I think it will be really great.
What did y’all do? We
were in Sydney and we went to the big Mardi Gras celebration, and we
were at this big drag queen store with Cyndi Lauper, so it was like the
gayest thing that ever happened.
This article appeared in the Dallas Voice print edition April 25, 2008.
© Copyright by DallasVoice.com
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