David Letterman, host of the famous The David Letterman Night Show invited Hugh Laurie, leading actor of critically-acclaimed TV Show House.MD. The conversation covers Laurie’s receding British accent due to playing an American doctor; his olympic-winning father who is, by the way, a real doctor; and his recreational sport. Hugh Laurie is also known for various of comic works with Rowan Atkinson, Stephen Fry, and Richard Curtis. This is my favorite part of the 8-minute comic conversation: (*) is where the audience laughs
David Letterman: Do you now do any recreational activity?
Hugh Laurie: I have taken up the noble art of boxing.
DL: Boxing? Really? For what reason?
HL: Well, it’s a number of reasons really. I like learning things. I love to learn skills. I love to being taught anything. I grew impatient for the last few years with the currents of reverence of anything eastern –whether its martial arts, or religion, acupuncture, healthcare, and so on– and i decided to do something that..
DL: You’re kind of tired of that mysticism?
HL: And all that sort of white pajamas, you know, feeling-your-chi kind of thing.* I thought there’s a huge of body of knowledge and expertise –western skill and expertise– right under our noses we turn to disparage and neglect them.
DL: How was it going?
HL: I’m pathetic, obviously*, I mean, I’ve been doing it about a year now, and I’m not to be trusted. I’m a ranked novice.
DL: Have you been bloodied?
HL: I’ve seen stars, you know, when you get that (hand gesturing getting whacked), I would get into to the ring and I said, I am in a TV sh- and that’s about as far as I get. Please not in the f- –WHACK.* And it really stings. It does sting.
DL: I would take a danger here, perhaps not for you, but for someone less reasonable might be that having taken boxing lesson for a while you might go out and not so inadvertently provoke a sort of a dust-up.
HL: That’s uh, that is my plan for tonight, yeah**. The interesting is that I find the reverse is true. The biggest obstacle I have to get over is that once-whole-cultural-upbringing that says it’s bad to hit people. So when you have that chance, you have that quarter of second when you can let go. Of course there’s a big chuck of your brain saying, D-D-Don’t hit the nice man* –also of course the other part of your brain says, If you hit the nice man then he’ll hit you back harder. *
Stand-up comedians are the coolest.