"The show I did in England catered to a broad range of people. I like that. I don't want nouveau cult status, though I know we've got that sort of audience in the states"
About this Quote
Ullman is doing that classic comedian’s two-step: flirting with exclusivity while insisting she’d rather not be trapped by it. “Broad range of people” isn’t just a compliment to English audiences; it’s a statement of artistic self-defense. She’s telling you her ideal comedy travels, works in a room that isn’t pre-sorted into insiders and disciples. That matters because sketch and character comedy can easily become a niche sport, rewarded by quote-able bits and fan devotion rather than the harder test of cross-demographic recognition.
The phrase “nouveau cult status” is a neat little jab. “Cult status” used to be romantic: the brave, underseen genius. By adding “nouveau,” she suggests a trendier, more consumerist version of that idea - cult as branding, as merch, as a self-congratulatory club. It’s faintly contemptuous, and it’s also anxious. Cult audiences can be loyal, but they can also become gatekeepers, turning an artist into a password instead of a performer.
Then there’s the transatlantic subtext. England, where Ullman was born and trained, is framed as a place that still allows a mainstream platform for smart, shape-shifting comedy. The U.S. gets coded as more fragmented: comedy as identity badge, fandom as tribe. She “knows” she has that audience in the States, which reads like a concession to reality, not a goal.
Underneath it all is a careerist truth: being widely liked is power. Being narrowly adored is a corner you can get stuck in. Ullman is choosing oxygen over incense.
The phrase “nouveau cult status” is a neat little jab. “Cult status” used to be romantic: the brave, underseen genius. By adding “nouveau,” she suggests a trendier, more consumerist version of that idea - cult as branding, as merch, as a self-congratulatory club. It’s faintly contemptuous, and it’s also anxious. Cult audiences can be loyal, but they can also become gatekeepers, turning an artist into a password instead of a performer.
Then there’s the transatlantic subtext. England, where Ullman was born and trained, is framed as a place that still allows a mainstream platform for smart, shape-shifting comedy. The U.S. gets coded as more fragmented: comedy as identity badge, fandom as tribe. She “knows” she has that audience in the States, which reads like a concession to reality, not a goal.
Underneath it all is a careerist truth: being widely liked is power. Being narrowly adored is a corner you can get stuck in. Ullman is choosing oxygen over incense.
Quote Details
| Topic | Art |
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