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						Dying on stage: comedian 
						Marx has come closer than most 
			
   
            
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						[July 22, 2016]   
						By Robin Pomeroy 
						
						GREENWICH, England(Reuters) 
						- Like most stand-up comedians, Carey Marx has stories 
						about "dying on stage", but in his case they are almost 
						literally true. 
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				 Just weeks after a heart attack at the age of 46 which he put 
				down to smoking, drinking and poor diet, economic necessity 
				forced Marx back to work. But the crowd reacted badly when he 
				tried to make jokes about his illness, chanting: "Die! Die! 
				Die!" 
				 
				He shuffled off stage and into an ambulance. He survived but 
				only after a second operation to keep his arteries open. 
				 
				"I tried to do material about the heart attack and I think if 
				you do material like that badly you just embarrass the 
				audience," Marx told Reuters ahead of a gig in south London. 
				 
				"And I was also was genuinely afraid of hecklers, and that's 
				when comedy becomes frightening. You should never be afraid of 
				the heckler. When you feel your heart racing and you're aware 
				that you could go down at any moment then it's pretty scary." 
				 
				Just hours after his heart attack, Marx told hospital staff he 
				intended to get to a gig that evening. The doctor, astonished 
				that he was contemplating rushing back into such a high-stress 
				occupation, inadvertently gave him his first heart joke. 
				
				  
				"He said: 'You can't do comedy.' What he hadn't bargained for is 
				I've been told that loads of times!" Marx says in "Intensive 
				Carey", a show about his heart attack which he performed at the 
				Edinburgh Festival and BBC radio. 
				 
				These days the Londoner, a combative, confident performer who is 
				both lauded and criticized for his "dark" subject matters, 
				rarely does material about his heart attack, partly because "I 
				don't want to ruin their night" but more because it is so 
				personal. 
				 
				"I found it embarrassing to talk about at first. I am able to 
				criticize the world and behavior and rules normally (during my 
				comedy) because they don't affect me personally and I don't mind 
				how the audience react to it. 
			
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			"But if I had an audience I didn't really like, I didn't want to 
			tell them the story, because it was personal. I felt like I had an 
			investment in it." 
			 
			One of the most touching stories in "Intensive Carey" is when Marx 
			recalls walking to the local shop to buy a bag a sugar. 
			Severely weakened by his heart disease, he has to clutch it 
			desperately to his chest as he staggers home, aware that people 
			around him must be thinking: "Look at that poor old man. He really 
			loves sugar." 
			 
			Research published in the "International Journal of Cardiology" 
			(http://tinyurl.com/gkpbuyc) that found standup comedians were 
			particularly at risk of fatal illness, with "an inverse association 
			between comedic ability and longevity", is something of a 
			double-edged sword for Marx. 
			 
			"Should I be putting 'has had a heart attack' amongst the reviews on 
			my flyers?" he asked. 
			 
			Marx rejects the idea that stress levels and personality traits are 
			to blame for comedians' poor health, and says it is more to do with 
			lifestyle. 
			 
			“Nowadays there’s a lot of very healthy people on the circuit. When 
			I started it was a lot more rock and roll." 
			 
			Rather than grabbing a greasy kebab after a late-night gig, he says: 
			"Lots of comedians arrive with their packed lunch. I have never been 
			that good a person." 
			 
			(Editing by Angus MacSwan) 
			[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
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