Spotlight: Bo Burnham

Hamilton native, musician, and comic Bo Burnham turns a sense of humor and a knack for performing into a prolific career—all at the tender age of 20. By Beth Daigle

If you like a good laugh, look no further than Hamilton’s own Bo Burnham. Born Robert Burnham in August of 1990, Bo has taken his inherent talent to perform, along with a weekend passion for crafting clever online videos, and turned them into a satirically raw and successful comedic career.

Now, at just 20 years old, Burnham’s irreverent style and at times politically incorrect humor has landed him two comedy CDs: his first self-titled, “Bo Burnham,” followed by “Words Words Words”; an appearance on E! Television’s “The Soup”; his 2010 nationwide “Bo Burnham and (No) Friends” tour; and the honor of being the youngest person ever to record a Comedy Central special at the age of 18.

It began with a series of YouTube videos created on a whim in 2006. The clips swiftly gained viral popularity, eventually leading to Burnham’s discovery by Comedy Central. Bo’s success can be attributed, in large part, to the multi-talented nature of his work; however, he also recognizes the element of good fortune involved. “I appreciate the fact that I am living a fake life,” he says. “I understand how spoiled I am.”

Burnham  grew up in Hamilton,  son of Patricia and Scott Burnham and younger brother to Pete and Samm. He considers his upbringing rather typical, having enjoyed sports and theatre and attended St. John’s Preparatory School in Danvers.  He views his childhood experience as safe and happy. “I tell people that I have overcome nothing to get to where I am,” says Burnham. “A lot of people say that comedy comes from pain and that it is all about overcoming stuff, but that really couldn’t be farther from the truth for me.”

Burnham ’s attraction to stand-up comedy surfaced with the realization that it was truly an unfiltered way to perform. “I think that stand-up is one of the most pure kinds of art forms,” he says. The idea of comedy without rules is so appealing because there really are no rules to stand-up comedy other than “to stay on the stage and be funny.”  He is inspired by the classic comedy of Steve Martin and George Carlin; Martin because he was fearless, and Carlin because he shared Burnham’s fascination with words. “I am a very left-brain comic,” he says. “I’ve always been into math and breaking down words.”

Burnham’s humor is unquestionably quick-witted and edgy, covering topics like race, sex, and homosexuality. He takes a no-holds-barred approach to addressing issues in the mainstream media. Some might say that his stage persona comes off as arrogant, but Burnham is unfazed by these opinions. If a joke falls flat, Burnham is either moving so quickly through his jokes that it goes unnoticed, or he cleverly incorporates the miss into his routine.

Intellectually charged humor, coupled with broad musical and theatrical skills, fuels Burnham’s unique brand of comedy. He chooses not to be boxed in with manufactured limitations that suggest comedians wear a suit or open with their best joke and considers claims that his material is offensive to be ridiculous. “I may be saying crude words,” he says, “but the stances taken at the end of the day are correct.” Burnham  has received some backlash in his time, but doesn’t concern himself with that. “The hard part with trying to satirize things,” he says, “is that you have to walk a really thin line.” Overall, however, the feedback has been pretty positive: “I’ve been lucky. People seem to enjoy it.”

Fellow St. John’s Prep student Ryan McGillivray was one year behind Burnham in school but met him while together participating in the St. John’s Prep Drama Guild. McGillivray is not at all surprised by Burnham’s success. He believes Burnham’s versatility and ability to make any character his own has fed his growing popularity. “He always stood out far more than any other performer I’ve seen,” says McGillivray. In the many rehearsals and shows in which McGillivray has seen Burnham perform, including a recent live performance, he felt that Burnham had a striking ability to take control of the stage in an extremely entertaining way. “Between his clever remarks and comical personality,” says McGillivray, “he always knew how to cast himself in a way that captivated his audience. He used his witty musical talents and dramatic charisma to engage the audience.”

Making his act feel more theatrical and more like a one-man show is a goal that Burnham continues to pursue. He strives to incorporate many layers of entertainment into his routine, including music, song, stand-up, and poetry. Experimenting with voice-overs, backing tracks, and lighting changes will take his comedy to even higher levels. On a trip to the Fringe Festival in Edinburgh, Scotland, Burnham learned that comedy could be more of a production and was inspired by what he saw.

By his own admission, Burnham’s act can be a little disorienting and intentionally “all over the place.”  He challenges himself to make a joke out of anything, be it Shakespeare or quantum mechanics.  “I pick a topic and work backwards to determine where I can get my jokes from there—I am not trying to change the world or make a statement with my comedy,” he says.

Over the past four years, the pace for Burnham has been fast and furious, and while he recognizes the hard work he has put in to it, he considers himself fortunate to be doing something he enjoys. “I am really happy,” he says, “not stressed or tired.” The toughest part, he admits, has been watching his friends go off to college while he prepares to make audiences laugh, all the while staying at the likes of a Ramada Inn in South Dakota or some other far-away location. Additionally, he misses the collaboration that theatre afforded him. Stand-up is very individualistic and the input of others is often minimized.

Despite his musical abilities, which are showcased in his videos to include piano, guitar, and vocals that slant toward well-developed rap numbers, Burnham does not have specific musical ambitions. Rather, he would like to pursue acting and continue writing. In fact, he is working on a pilot with MTV for which he is set to write and take a starring role. Regarding his desire to write, Burnham says, “In doing all this comedy, I have learned a lot about how to write. Even if this were to end tomorrow, I wouldn’t feel like I have wasted my time.”

The future remains unwritten for Burnham—he doesn’t really have a five-year plan. He is excited for his upcoming tour and says that his audiences can look forward to a “pretty cool opening number.” His immediate plan is to keep his head down and make his material as good as possible, understanding that comedy is not a world in which you should settle down or be content. Conversely, he doesn’t get too caught up in the specifics because, he says, “The specifics are really so out of your hands.”

Bo Knows Bo

Favorite current-day comic: Aziz Ansari. “He’s awesome; he deserves every bit of success he gets.” Most memorable act: George Carlin’s “Last Words.” “Most epic comedy bit of all time.” Where would you like to perform? Orpheum Theatre, Boston. Topics to explore in the future: Love songs. What makes you nervous? Live broadcasts. What impresses you? People going about their everyday life not looking for anything. Favorite personal live performance: House of Blues, Boston, taping his Comedy Central special. If you weren’t doing comedy, what would you be doing? “I would write or open a little theatre.”

Former Carnegie Library Turns into Florida Couple’s Home

A Florida couple falls in love with Cape Ann and turns Rockport’s former Carnegie Library into the second home of their dreams. By Regina Cole, Photographs by Sandy Agrafiotis

Gail and David Vastola enter their Rockport home via a domed rotunda, which creates an acoustic effect in which even a whisper can travel clearly to the other side of the soaring space. Surrounded by Corinthian columns and graced with an Italian-marble mosaic floor, the rotunda leads into a bow-fronted living/dining room that overlooks Main Street and the harbor beyond. When they sit here, the Vastolas are in an area that once housed library stacks. Their bedroom, down the hall on the opposite side of the rotunda, was once the reading room.

The Vastolas’ home is Rockport’s restored Carnegie Library, which they bought from the town in 2007. With extraordinary sensitivity to its origins, they turned the Neoclassical jewel box of a building into a comfortable and stylish second home. Their journey here was serendipitous; they never set out to save one of Rockport’s historic treasures.

Cape Ann art originally brought the Florida couple to Rockport. Some years ago, Gail and David fell in love with a painting they bought of Pigeon Cove by Emile Gruppe. It led them to paintings by Anthony Thieme, Aldro Hibbard, and William Lester Stevens, those mid-20th century American Impressionists who drew their inspiration from the fishing schooners, ramshackle docks, and the incomparable light of Cape Ann.

In the early 1990s, the Vastolas set out to see the rock-bound coast first hand.

“We were on our way to a family vacation in Maine when we took a detour to see the places depicted in our paintings,” says David Vastola, a physician specializing in internal medicine and gastroenterology. “We fell in love with Cape Ann, just as we had fallen in love with the art.”

“We did not know a soul [on Cape Ann],” Gail says. She manages her husband’s practice and, for a stint, served as mayor of North Palm Beach, where they live. “I called the Chamber of Commerce to get a realtor’s name. We bought on the first day.” In addition to Cape Ann and Cape Ann art, the couple loves historic preservation. Thus, when Rockport put its Carnegie Library up for sale, they bought the long-shuttered building.

“We had come to love the area and were thinking of doing something different, of finding another Rockport property,” explains Gail, who confesses to an urge to save and restore old houses. “We could not resist the opportunity—this is such a gorgeous building!”

Built in 1906, Rockport’s granite Classical Revival library is one of 2,509 libraries constructed throughout the English-speaking world between 1881 and 1917 with the support of $56 million in funding from Andrew Carnegie. The steel magnate and philanthropist had a lifelong belief that free public libraries provided a means of self-education to everyone. Typically simple and formal, Carnegie libraries welcomed patrons to enter through a prominent doorway that was nearly always accessed via a staircase. The entry staircase symbolized a person’s elevation by learning. Similarly, outside nearly every library was a lamppost or lantern to symbolize enlightenment.

Rockport’s Carnegie Library, a small, exquisite example boasting all the hallmarks, was a well-loved part of downtown. But the needs of the town outgrew the building, and when the library was moved to larger quarters on School Street, the Carnegie stood unused for nearly 15 years before it was sold to the Vastolas.

“The interior was all thick with mold, bushes and trees obscured the exterior, and all the beautiful interior woodwork, including the rotunda columns, was covered with countless coats of ugly light-green paint,” Gail says. “We called the yard ‘Dog Poop Park.’ There were about 1,000 coats of cloudy, yellowed wax on the Italian marble mosaic floor under the dome.”

In addition to the obstacles of mold, wax, and overwhelming shrubbery, David and Gail were hampered by stringent restrictions dictated by the building’s listing on the National Register of Historic Places. They could not alter any structural elements or remove parts of the building, and all replacement materials had to replicate the original. When Gail wanted to raise the bottom of the windows to match the level of her new kitchen counters, for example, federal guidelines did not allow it. The windows were original to the building and thus could not be altered. The resourceful homeowner directed her contractor to cut niches into the granite counter to accommodate the windows.

Insulation inserted into 10-inch-thick walls had to meet U.S. Department of the Interior standards, which ruled out blown-in products. Mold removal could not damage the plaster crown molding. When the Vastolas wanted a new front door, they were instructed to reinstall the scarred original. They acquiesced to the limitations and restrictions with grace and good humor.
“A building of this quality deserves the extra care and attention,” says David.

Construction was done by Stan Poole of Poole Construction in Rockport, with technical input from his now-retired in-house architect, Horace Turner.

“When we decided to add a front deck, it not only had to be granite, it had to be local granite to match the original,” says Gail. With local quarries shut down years ago, the couple was relieved to learn that a bridge built of Rockport granite was being taken down in Boston and that they could salvage the rock.

“Cape Ann granite is distinctive,” David explains. “It looks different and it’s the hardest granite in the world.”

The building, designed by Boston architects McLean & Wright, features gray granite quoins against golden granite walls and a prominent dentil cornice. It was a local icon whose fate mattered: as David and Gail worked with their contractor, a steady stream of Rockporters stopped by to tell of their personal histories in the old library.

“The last librarian lived across the street,” says Gail. “He shared an incredible amount of information with us.”

After two months of removing mold, paint, wax, and shrubbery, the Vastolas devised an interior plan organized around the domed rotunda that serves as a dramatic entry hall. Opposite the front door is the new kitchen, where counter niches accommodate the long windows. To the right is the living room; bedrooms and adjoining baths are to the left of the hallway. The basement level, once the children’s reading room, now houses a guest apartment and a garage.

“The town said the best use for the building was residential, because they didn’t want the parking issues associated with a business use,” Gail says. “We could have turned it into a duplex, but the rotunda’s location in the middle of the building would have made that awkward.”

Gail’s effortless interior utilizes Classic furnishings against a backdrop of soft, neutral colors. The white marble living room fireplace surround is original; cleaned and repaired, it serves as the focal point for one end of the large room. The homeowner faced more than the usual design issues of space and proportion. The granite of what originally was the exterior wall dominates the master bedroom; Gail coordinated wood and fabric colors with the assertive hues of the stone. The master bath features Biedermeier antique commodes repurposed as sink vanities. Guest bedrooms and bathrooms, which derive drama from the architecture, are historically minded, but not museum-like. Hardwood flooring replicating the original looks as stylish today as it did 100 years ago.

“I love designing rooms,” says Gail. “But I do it as a hobby. I would never do it for work!”

The restored interior provides an ideal gallery for part of the Vastola collection of Cape Ann paintings, which continues to grow. “Even though we’re not natives,” says Gail, “we now feel like a part of the local legacy. Bringing back this lovely building has given us a real sense of gratification.”

Andrew Carnegie would have approved.

Additional Photos

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15 Walnut

nsfm10_15walnut_1Local flavors make Hamilton’s 15 Walnut a must-dine. By Anna and David Kasabian. Photographs by Anthony Tieuli.

15 walnut is a welcome addition to Hamilton’s community shopping center. Headed by executive chef Sam Hunt, who held the same post at Indigo (the most recent restaurant within these walls), the mantra at 15 Walnut is local, fresh, and made from scratch. Continue reading 15 Walnut

Mommies Who Shop

Title: Mommies Who Shop
Location: Hamilton Wenham Community Center – Hamilton
Link out: Click here
Description: Visit the Hamilton Wenham Community Center, located at 284 Bay Road in Hamilton on Thursday, May 7th, 2009 from 6pm-10pm.

Peruse a selection of handcrafted clothes, art, toys, books and gear for babies, kids and expecting moms by up-and-coming artists and designers.

Complimentary Spa treatments, wine bar, door prizes, silent auction, and more!

For more information, please email: info@mommieswhoshop.com, or visit: www.mommieswhoshop.com

Start Time: 18:00
Date: 2009-05-07
End Time: 22:00

Farm Fairy Festival at Green Meadow Farm

Title: Farm Fairy Festival at Green Meadow Farm
Location: Green Meadow Farms – 656 Asbury Street – Hamilton
Link out: Click here
Description: The Farm Fairy Festival will be held Sunday, July 19th, 2009 from 2pm-5pm
at Green Meadows Farm in Hamilton.

Green Meadow Farm and Sue Eaton of Magical Creations invites you to spend an afternoon with your child at our magical event. Enjoy a fairy snack at a tea party, blow bubbles, make a fairy craft, build a fairy house, sing, dance, and receive a certificate with your child’s official fairy name.

Tickets are: $24 per child; $20 for CSA members.

For more information, please visit: http://www.gmfarm.com/events_NEW.htm

Start Time: 14:00
Date: 2009-07-19
End Time: 17:00

BEST SHOE STORE

Viola, Hamilton Continue reading BEST SHOE STORE

BEST GIFT/CARD SHOP

Scribe Paper and Gift, Marblehead and Hamilton

Scribe’s owner Grace Cole has an incredible eye for handpicking cool stuff. Scribe is brimming with beautiful cards, paper, pens and original gifts from super talented local and national artisans. Be prepared to spend endless hours meandering.

Readers’ Choices: Peabody Essex Museum Gift Shop, Salem; Valentine’s, Newburyport; Sweet Water and Co., Beverly Farms; Black Swan, Gloucester; Zinnia’s, North Beverly; RSVP, North Andover; Pisces, Gloucester; Sense of Wonder, North Andover; Stone Leaf, Gloucester

Best Shoe Store

Viola, Hamilton Continue reading Best Shoe Store

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