Andrew J. Lederer

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Andrew J. Lederer
Andrew J. Lederer

A performer since childhood, Andrew J. Lederer appeared as a vocal soloist with the Brooklyn Borough-Wide Chorus, both in live performance and on CBS-TV. He became a comedian as a teenager and acted in movies and television, including Family Ties, The Facts of Life, and Fame plus starring roles in the movies Out of Control and Body Count (and an excised scene - later restored on DVD - in This is Spinal Tap). Later, he became an entertainment journalist, working as a writer and/or editor for Film Threat Magazine, Wild Cartoon Kingdom, Sci-Fi Universe and others (even the National Enquirer!).

Andrew wrote a substantial portion of the famous Disney/McDonalds Trivia Challenge (which was so hard it was reported on in the major newsweeklies and caused the overworked library of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to suspend its information line for the duration of the contest). His original screenplay,Won't Fade Out, was given its own chapter in the book The 50 Greatest Movies Never Made (St. Martin’s Press, 1999), alongside unfinished efforts by the likes of Stanley Kubrick, Billy Wilder, and Alfred Hitchcock.

Andrew is a prominent “alternative” comedian with projects including the long-running Second Show and his one-person shows, Petula Clark's Greatest Hits, Bridge-Burner, and Me and Hitler, which were all presented as part of the Edinburgh Fringe Festival. Andrew recently made a high profile return to singing as part of the Loser's Lounge Tribute to the Bee Gees.

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Lederer's performance style has increasingly tended toward storytelling rather than a recitation of jokes or more standard comic observations. His one-time roommate, Marc Price. has called him the "father of alternative comedy" but, as Lederer points out, this could only be true if any of the major practitioners had actually been influenced by him, which they provably have not.

In at least one case, however, influence is clear. Though Lederer generally "works clean", edgy, underground comic Rick Shapiro (who very much does not) has credited seeing Andrew with making him realize he could talk about what he wanted to on stage and not be limited by convention.

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