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UB alum goes for top prize in ‘America’s Got Talent’

Gary Vider performs on “Conan,” comedian Conan O'Brien's late-night talk show on TBS.  

By BERT GAMBINI

Published August 27, 2015 This content is archived.

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“When I get a student who wants to do something so interesting, then I say ‘why not.’ ”
Andrew Stott, dean for undergraduate education

A guy walks into a major American research university and tells the English department he wants to study comedy as part of his major. The administrator listening to the student’s enthusiastic suggestion delivered with an inimitable dead-pan veneer sits silently for a moment before saying, “OK.”

It’s not a very funny joke, but it’s not meant to be. It’s history, not comedy. And the curious spin that UB graduate Gary Vider (BA ’06) put on his English degree could turn out to be a million-dollar idea.

Vider, a standup comic who Esquire magazine already has named “Comic to Watch,” is among the remaining contestants vying for the seven-figure cash prize that will be awarded to the winner of the NBC television show “America’s Got Talent.”

Vider made it through to the semifinals on Wednesday, Aug. 26, garnering enough votes from viewers after the show’s quarterfinal round on Tuesday, Aug 25. The first semifinal round will take place on Sept. 1; Vider will perform during the second round on Sept. 8.

UB’s College of Arts and Sciences will be live Tweeting @UBCAS. You also can join the Twitter conversation @GaryVider.

Vider wanted to be a standup comic from the time he entered UB.

“The department always supported what I was doing,” he says. “They pointed me to the right classes and to the things that were going on outside of my classes.”

He says UB’s rich student life gave him opportunities to hear comics like Chris Rock, Dave Chappelle and Conan O’Brien, all of whom visited campus during Vider’s undergraduate years.

“I eventually performed on Conan’s show,” he says.  “I can’t help but think about that and how my experience came full circle, from a student in the audience to actually being on his show.”

Undergraduate English degrees tend to bring timeless literary works to mind long before anyone thinks of the groundbreaking, stand-up acts that began in ramshackle comedy clubs before moving to major television networks and national tours, but that’s the wonderful thing about the English major at UB, says Andrew Stott, vice provost and dean of undergraduate education and a former standup comic.

“The English degree at UB is extremely varied in the kinds of things we do,” says Stott. “We write and theorize about avant-garde poetry; we have documentarians, science fiction writers, experimental fiction writers and a host of literary and cultural critics.”

Stott’s background and interests meshed perfectly with Vider’s ambitions.

In addition to Stott’s experience as a comic, he is a noted scholar who has written a book on theoretical methodologies of comedy, now in its second edition, and is currently editing a six-volume history of comedy.

“When I get a student who wants to do something so interesting, then I say ‘why not,’” says Stott. “These are the opportunities available in a major like this. The curriculum is not constrained. It’s as free as a student’s inventiveness.”

Stott led Vider’s senior year independent study, teaching joke-writing methods from an academic perspective sharpened by experience as a touring comic in London, England. Stott also helped Vider with a spec-script for “The Office,” the television comedy series that ran from 2005-13.

Spec-scripts give writers not affiliated with a program an opportunity to use a show’s premise and characters as a vehicle for a possible episode.

“Professor Stott guided me through that whole process,” says Vider. “Finishing the project gave me so much confidence. I never would have been able to do that on my own.”

Yet, Vider’s career puts him precariously “on his own,” a state that succinctly describes the world of standup comics, sole performers working to win over an audience that isn’t invested in their success.

It’s an arduous life, says Stott.

But it’s a life that still has appeal.

“If this vice-provost thing doesn’t work out, I might go back to it,” says Stott.

Vider, meantime, says being “on his own” sounds good to him.

“My roommate is the worst,” he says with a nearly visible smile that fleetingly betrays his customary expressionless delivery. “If I win, I’ll use the winnings to first move out of the apartment we share.”

Stott and Vider have stayed in touch over the years, but the upcoming performance has reconnected student and teacher.

“Face forward and be funny,” Stott offers to his former student.

“I’ll take that advice,” says Vider. “I hope to make the UB community proud and hopefully everything will go well.”