Mel Brooks? Carl Reiner? Betty Brainerd? Joey Bishop? Kenneth Tynan? S. Sylvan Simon? Anonymous?

Question for Quote Investigator: What makes something funny? Why do so many people find pratfalls humorous? The difference between comedy and tragedy has been described in a comically cynical remark with a tincture of cruelty:
Tragedy is when I get a paper cut; Comedy is when you fall down a manhole and die.
This statement has been attributed to comedians such as Mel Brooks and Joey Bishop. Would you please help me to find a citation?
Reply from Quote Investigator: In 1962 Carl Reiner and Mel Brooks recorded an album during the Cannes Film Festival which was released in early 1963. During one sketch Mel Brooks played a character called the 2000-Year-Old Man, and Carl Reiner acted as an interviewer. The 2000-Year-Old Man described a person being eaten by a tiger while indicating that observers found this event funny. The interviewer was shocked. Boldface added to excerpts by QI:1
Interviewer (Carl Reiner): I would consider that in the realm of tragedy rather than comedy. How do you differentiate between tragedy and comedy?
2000-Year-Old Man (Mel Brooks): To me, tragedy is if I’ll cut my finger. That’s tragedy. It bleeds, and I’ll cry, and I’ll run around, and I’ll go into Mount Sinai for a day and a half. I’m very nervous about it. And to me, comedy is if you walk into an open sewer and die. What do I care? That’s comedy. My finger is important.
This dialogue includes a pun based on “Mount Sinai” which is a biblical location and a prominent hospital in Manhattan.
The sketch presented above contained the earliest close match located by QI. Mel Brooks deserves credit for this compelling formulation. The general idea is older. Below is an outline showing precursors and variants with dates:
1904: Life is a comedy when you’re well. A tragedy when you’re sick.
1913: Comedy — When he deceives her; Tragedy — When she deceives him.
1917: HAPPY THOUGHT: It’s always funny when somebody else falls down.
1934: COMEDY is when you see a fat man take a tumble. TRAGEDY is when you feel your own feet start to stumble! (Attributed to Betty Brainerd)
1950: If you fall down it hurts; if somebody else falls down, it’s funny. (S. Sylvan Simon)
1962: Tragedy is if I’ll cut my finger … comedy is if you walk into an open sewer and die. (Mel Brooks as the 2000-Year-Old Man)
1963: Tragedy is if I’ll cut my finger—comedy is if you’ll walk into an open sewer and die. (Attributed to Mel Brooks by Kenneth Tynan)
1964: If I hurt my finger it’s a tragedy, but if you fall down a manhole, it’s funny. (Attributed to Joey Bishop)
1977: If you fall down a manhole that’s funny. If I cut my finger that is tragedy. (Mel Brooks)
1988: Comedy is when a man slips on a banana peel and tragedy is when you, yourself, take the fall (Old saw)
1989: Comedy is when somebody else falls and breaks his neck, while tragedy is when I stub my toe. (Attributed to Mel Brooks)
1990: If you would be walking on the street in a tuxedo and slip on a banana peel and fall down a manhole and break your head that would be comedy. If I would get a paper cut on my finger that would be tragedy. (Attributed to Mel Brooks)
1993: Tragedy is when I get a paper cut; comedy is when you fall into an open manhole and die. (Attributed to Mel Brooks)
1995: Tragedy is when I cut my finger; comedy is when you fall down a well and die. (Joe Fiorito)
2000: If I fall and stub my toe, that’s tragedy, if you fall and stub your toe, that’s comedy. (Attributed to anonymous by Peter Boyle)
Below are additional citation details.
Continue reading “Quote Origin: Tragedy Is When I Cut My Finger; Comedy Is When You Fall Down a Manhole”







