Media Parents

5 minutes with comedy producer Anna Coane

January 27, 2025 @ 9:00 am Posted in News Comments

Recently I was asked by Funny Women https://funnywomen.com/ to share my tips for making Comedy, Entertainment, and ‘Funny Fact Ent’ TV with a room full of people. But how to condense a 20-year career into a tight half hour, that’s remotely useful to the audience, without sounding like Alan Partridge reading aloud from his autobiography? Tough gig, writes Series Producer, Series Edit Producer, and Writer Anna Coane

Comedy Producer Anna Coane, right, with Nic Lamont c/o Funny Women

I’ve been a comedy geek since I was a kid (my best mate and I would perform our ‘sketches’ in school assembly, under the shared delusion that we were French & Saunders). As a TV freelancer I’ve produced and developed scripted and unscripted comedy in many guises -  sketches, stand up, sitcoms, hidden camera pranks, travelogues, chat shows, panel shows, and archive formats. For shows including The Graham Norton Show, Frank Skinner On Demand, The Misadventures of Romesh Ranganathan, Tonight With Omid, Julian Clary’s Greatest Xmas Adverts, The Comedy Bus, and The TNT Show. I’ve also been brought on board to ‘find the funny’ in factual formats too.

So on a cold, dark, windy evening in November, I found myself in a quirky board games café in Rochester, in front of an expectant audience, and host Nic Lamont – a brilliant actor and writer I’d last worked with 12 years ago on BBC3’s comedy newcomer vehicle Live At The Electric.

I eased in with a few anecdotes – that time in my pre-kids 20s I had to find a doula for Olivia Colman and her newborn on the set of Peep Show, that other time money was saved on extras by casting me in a speaking part opposite Paul Kaye in Strutter. But then onto perhaps more useful take home from my TV journey…

Anna Coane on the Media Parents Back to Work scheme at Edinburgh TV Festival

With Nic and I reconnecting this time as mums, and because in addition to making comedy for grown-ups I’ve recently made children’s TV (Big Fat Like, Meet The McQueens, I Can Do It You Can Too, for CBBC/CBeebies), I decided to share some headlines from my experiences of writing comedy for young kids, as a genre that the aspiring writers and stand ups in the audience might turn their pens to. Kids laugh at different things to adults, and children’s TV comes with constraints, and a whole load of compliance, so it’s a creative challenge that can really focus the comedy mind and exercise those writing muscles.

anna’s comedy writing tips

First up I suggested watching what your kids/nephews/nieces laugh at when watching films, TV or online content.

I found that visual and physical comedy lands better than wordy dialogue, so use props, mime techniques, slapstick and prat falls – adults/authority figures getting things wrong or falling over is hilarious.

But tone is key – on the shows I’ve made we were required to make sure young viewers weren’t left believing the presenter/performer had genuinely hurt themselves or others.

And always beware imitative behaviour (featuring activities or actions that might be dangerous if kids copy them at home).

It’s also important to know the target age group (3-year-olds being different from 10-year-olds), and pitch any dialogue and references accordingly.

Sketches about school life might not resonate with pre-schoolers. Likewise gags that rely on cool on-screen text or written graphics won’t mean much to younger kids who don’t read yet.

Silly or scatological sound effects were always a winner (kids find farts funny, who knew?!).

And you can’t rely on swear words to get laughs. Shit.

I’ve been asked back to be a guest speaker at a Funny Women workshop for female /non-binary comedy writers – Stand Up To Stand Out Winter Warm Up at London’s Groucho Club on Saturday 1st February 2025. I’m delighted that it’s with Nic Lamont again, and Funny Women founder Lynne Parker. There’ll be techniques on writing, performing, and creating comedy, and using humour in everyday interactions, at work or play. Media Parents subscribers who those who identify as female or non binary can get a 50% discount (email info@funnywomen.com for details). So if you want to supercharge your comedy, get a confidence boost, or are just comedy curious, come along and get some tips in a friendly, supportive environment. I promise no anecdotes this time.

Anna’s writing agent is:

https://www.gloriousmanagement.com/artists/anna-coane

Meet Anna at Media Parents drinks on Thursday 30th Jan and log in to view Anna’s Media Parents profile here:

https://www.mediaparents.co.uk/freelancers/2251/anna-coane

Our next event is on Jan 30th. Scroll down the blog for more info www.mediaparents.co.uk - the jobs and social networking site for short term, part time, job share and regular hours jobs in media. For free events for subscribers, join here:https://www.mediaparents.co.uk/signup/?t=freelancer


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