• ABOUT
  • CONTACT
  • Montrose Star – May 2026
  • STAR–JULY 1976
May 6, 2026

User Panel Banner
Log In

  • ABOUT
  • CONTACT
  • Montrose Star – May 2026
  • STAR–JULY 1976
HomeSTAR READS‘Black Out Loud’

‘Black Out Loud’

  • May 6, 2026
  • 0 comments
  • Montrose Star
  • Posted in STAR READS
  • 0

The Revolutionary History of Black Comedy from Vaudeville to ‘90s Sitcoms’ by Geoff Bennett

By Terri Schlichenmeyer

Wait. Did you hear that right?

Yes, you did – and it was so funny that you just now caught your breath. What the guy onstage said was so unexpected, so dead-on, so real that you couldn’t stop laughing. And as you’ll see in the new book “Black Out Loud” by Geoff Bennett, his routine reaches back more than a hundred years.

Author Geoff Bennett / Johnny Shryock

On April 15, 1990, ten-year-old Geoff Bennett was watching TV in his family living room when his world was shaken. He’d stumbled on the debut of In Living Color, the irreverent, hilariously funny sketch show that featured mostly Black entertainers.

Entertainers, in other words, who looked like him.

©2026, Harper – $32.99 – 336 pages

That show was a first for Bennett. But it wasn’t the only first, by any means.

In the late 1800s, there was minstrelsy, the cast of which were usually mostly white people with burnt-cork-blackened faces – until African American entertainer Billy Kersands came along and performed song-and-dance comedy acts in blackface. Audiences loved him, and he “became the first Black entertainer in America to achieve national celebrity.”

Hot on Kersands’ heels, Bert Williams and George Walker became vaudeville stars in the early 1900s, followed by Stepin Fetchit and his controversial, but very successful, career. Then Hattie McDaniel, who lampooned stereotypes with over-exaggeration in movie roles, became the first Black actor to land an Oscar.

As others made the transition from movies and radio to TV, Rochester (The Jack Benny Show) eased the roles of Black characters into that of friends, rather than domestic workers. Black comedians began recording their acts on LPs, as they moved from live stage to small screen. Some landed their own TV shows, changed popular sketch programming, and made fun of white America right under white America’s noses.

And they made us laugh at ourselves.

“For more than a century,” says Bennett, “Black comedians have been witnesses… And when the world was finally ready to hear the real story of America, it knew exactly where to turn – to America’s conscience: the Black comedian.”

LOL. That was you every Monday-Thursday-Friday-Saturday-Sunday night,
or whenever you caught your favorite comedy show.

Everybody talked about it the next day. Now, read about it.

Yes, you may have a few favorites that aren’t inside this book, but author Geoff Bennett’s work here is pretty comprehensive: he includes today’s hottest Black comedians and some who were once famous but are unremembered today. You’ll have a chance to know them and, while you get acquainted or you read about superstars you love now, Bennett also surprises readers with biographies, little-known facts, and notable accomplishments those stars worked hard for – all in a casual narrative, sometimes profane, but very highly enjoyable. Bonus: read some of the stars’ comedy bits here, and LOL while you enjoy this excellent book.

“Black Out Loud” is a great collection for anyone who devours pop-culture entertainment or who just loves to laugh. It’s one of those books you won’t want to let go, so don’t miss it. No, you shouldn’t hear of that.

––– Want more? Then look for “Darkology: Blackface and the American Way of Entertainment” by Rhae Lynn Barnes (Liveright, $39.99), a book that dives deep into two centuries of racism in American entertainment. It’s unsettling, but a must-read if you love Black performance history.

Related Posts

0 comments
STAR READS

’99 Ways to Die And How to Avoid Them’ by Ashely Alker, MD

0 comments
STAR READS

Anatomy of a Con Artist: The 14 Red Flags to Spot Scammers, Grifters, and Thieves by Johnathan Walton

0 comments
STAR READS

200 Dangerous Truths About Project 2025, By J. E. Fowlers

Compassionate Houston celebrates 15 years

  • May 6, 2026
  • 0 comments

Crazy times, erratic, nonsensical leadership

  • May 6, 2026
  • 0 comments

Share this

About author

Montrose Star

Related Posts

0 comments
STAR READS

’99 Ways to Die And How to Avoid Them’ by Ashely Alker, MD

0 comments
STAR READS

Anatomy of a Con Artist: The 14 Red Flags to Spot Scammers, Grifters, and Thieves by Johnathan Walton

0 comments
STAR READS

200 Dangerous Truths About Project 2025, By J. E. Fowlers

0 comments
STAR READS

How this new book reminds us that pop culture often leads the way in LGBTQ+ progress

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Do not miss

0 comments
STAR READS

’99 Ways to Die And How to Avoid Them’ by Ashely Alker, MD

©2025 All rights reserved. Montrose Star Entertainment News & Events