Gad Elmaleh and Jerry Seinfeld eating baguettes in Seinfeld’s “Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee.” known, and not to brag, but I can fill out arenas. And maybe I’m stopped in the street, and my ego is pumped, but, at some point, I need a challenge. Even tonight in Paris I’m going to a very small club unannounced just to try new jokes in French because there is nothing I like more than being excited by doing comedy. What else am I going to do? I don’t want to go to dinner with friends. I’d be bored. TF: That was very Seinfeld-esque. GE: Oh ya, oh ya. I actually talk a lot with Jerry about that. Like, we want to hang out with comedians; we want to be on the road with comedians. It’s a little extreme when you hear it but, in fact, it’s a way of life and it’s the way you see life. It’s a language. It’s not only being funny. Having this mind constantly working, observing, analyzing — it’s really some- thing that I love. Even with my family. TF: Let’s talk more about that. You grew up introducing your father, a mime, in Morocco. How did your childhood shape your humor and comedic style? GE: I grew up in a Sephardic-Jewish family in Morocco. They were not super religious but they were kind of tradi- tionalists. We would do Friday night Shabbat, but we would go to the shul [synagogue] by car. I went to a religious school, by the way, not by choice, but because that was the only school that really wanted me in there. I had been expelled from all of the schools. I grew up in a family [where] the sense of humor was a language. Not being silly or funny or making faces or jokes; just the way we would talk and communicate was always through some- thing comedic, maybe because we were shy. In [Moroccan] culture, there are a lot of taboos. My mother was the spirit, the mind, the quick sharp [one], and my father [taught me the physical aspect of humor]. Sometimes I post videos of her on Instagram and people are like, “Please, give us more.” Not only because she’s a Jewish mother but because she is a fun and funny woman and quick and so smart. The last video I did with her got so many views. On the video, she said, “Everybody talks about Gad as a come- dian but do you think he’s that funny? Really?” TF: You joked about doing the interview in Hebrew, but you do speak Hebrew, correct? GE: Yes. Hebrew, Moroccan Arabic, and now English, and French — which is the second language in Morocco. TF: Have you ever done any comedy shows in Israel? You speak all the right languages. GE: I have many times. I’ve never performed in English in Israel. I have only performed in French for the French community who have made aliyah. But since I speak Hebrew, I would always put some Hebrew into the show. They are always so happy when I do that. I would love to go back and do the show in English, maybe in a small venue… I have a lot of friends now who are comedians in Israel. One of them is Israel Katorza — he is funny and a good friend. My older son had his bar mitzvah in Tel Aviv and then we went to Jerusalem. It was a great trip. We didn’t do a big, crazy party. But what we did, he will remember. TF: When did you decide to become a comedian? GE: What’s interesting or bizarre is that I was not the cliche of the goofy kid doing jokes at school and playing tricks. I was more dreaming in the back of the room, thinking, not really talking. But it was kind of a creative process, all of the time thinking of what could I do, what could I be. There was one point, really, that was the trigger. Every Friday for Shabbat dinner we would gather at my grand- mother’s house. They were very simple people. I was not raised in a rich family. I had a sketch that I used to do when I was maybe 6 or 7 years old. My grandmother lived in a building that had seven floors — back in the day, buildings in Morocco were very noisy and happening. I was raised in this atmosphere. I would do impressions of the women. Only women. I don’t know why. My grandmother, may she rest in peace, passed away two years ago at 102. And by the way, she was not gluten-free or vegan. I would do this little show — it was kind of a mean show — and my grand- mother laughed so hard [along with the rest of the family] that every Friday night I would have to do the show again, [performing every time there were new guests]. It was a great bit called “The Neighbors.” But sometimes I didn’t want to do it — I was tired, I was pissed off, but I learned how to make people laugh even if you don’t want to. TF: You had your first break in the U.S. when you appeared as a guest on Jerry Seinfeld’s show, “Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee,” correct? What was that experience like? GE: Honestly, I don’t think my break happened yet. “Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee” was what first exposed me to American audiences. And then there was the first TV talk show that I did with Seth Meyers … before Seth Meyers, I was no one, noth- ing, and had never done a talk show in America. One of my friends, Diane Von Furstenberg — she’s a fashion icon — I met her when we were stuck on an AirFrance plane that would never take off. We spent the night together, actually. We became friends and we had a friend- ship crush. She said to me, “You know what? You’re very funny. I want to help you.” At the time, I was doing a residency at Joe’s Pub every night. I would perform with 10, 20 people [in the audience]; sometimes it was sold out. But I was going to do a show in French at the Beacon [theater] for the French expat community, and I said to her, “Bring your friends to the Beacon because it’s bigger and we’re going to impress them.” And she said, “No, you don’t understand, people like to feel that they’re discov- ering something new.” And she was so right. She invited some people, including Seth Meyers, to Joe’s Pub and organized a dinner across the street. She was so generous and nice. Seth Meyers sat in the room, he saw the show, and she sat me right in front of him at dinner and we talked and laughed; and he loved the show and said to me, “I want you on my show.” Because I did Seth Meyers I was able to go on Colbert, Conan and Jimmy Fallon. When I’m in New York, I’m at the Comedy Cellar almost every day — I love it, and with the Netflix special out, now I need new material. ■ details Gad Elmaleh performs “The Dream Tour” at the Royal Oak Music Theatre on Oct. 18. $35 and up. Royaloakmusictheatre.com. jn October 11 • 2018 49