The         comedy of Sarah Sherman, alias Sarah Squirm, is a reclamation of the         grotesque.      Body functions play a key role in her act, which includes reenactments of     bodily fluids—simulations concocted with ordinary groceries—emerging from     various orifices. Her ambition is to make her audience cringe—but in a fun     way.



   Her obsession with goo and gore stems from a desire to celebrate her body     in all its gross and oozing glory. Growing up on Long Island, specifically     in Great Neck, she saw her well-to-do classmates receive nose jobs and     breast enhancements during their teenage years. Meanwhile, she was     horrified when, at the age of 13, her pubic hairs began sprouting. She     waxed them away in self-defense.



   “My whole life I was taught that women are either sexualized or     vulgarized,” she says. “I’m talking about my own body politics, so I’m     owning that shame, guilt, pain, and embarrassment by performing the act of     torture on myself. If you’re telling me my pubes are disgusting, well, I’m     going to make a video of my pubes growing and then strangling me.”



   Sherman’s act is a combination of one-liners and longer multimedia pieces     incorporating PowerPoint slides and video. She often debuts new segments at     Helltrap Nightmare, the monthly showcase she hosts at the Hideout. It’s a     circus of vulgarity. Bloody cardboard tampons the size of golden retrievers     hang on the upstage curtain. The acts stray far from the traditional     setup-punch line stand-up routine. At last October’s Halloween show, for     example, comic Nicky Martin strapped a Roomba across his midsection with     duct tape, then read graphic erotic fiction about making sweet love to said     Roomba. The show routinely sells out, to the point that it’s evident     Sherman requires a larger venue and more stage time. Her 45-minute set at     the Empty Bottle in mid-February was the longest she has ever performed     solo, and it drew roughly 80 people who waited in anticipation of the next     gross thing like a crowd of fascinated third-graders.



   On the night of her show at the Bottle, Sherman chugs coffee and nervously     paces around the green room—essentially an unfinished basement—while her     friend and opening act Ruby McCollister looks on. She wears a pink bodysuit     depicting boobs, pubic hair, and a digestive tract. Each hair follicle on     the breasts has been carefully placed and measured. The style of the artwork on the bodysuit is reminiscent of    The Ren & Stimpy Show, one of her influences: clean outlines     with an attention to gory details. A robe, adorned with reflective circles     the size of Christmas lights, is draped over her shoulders. She resembles a     peacock holding a disco ball.



   As she paces, Sherman chants lines to herself from an upcoming segment     about a phone sex line, during which she’ll don a pale mask resembling a     dead-eyed Michael Jackson and project her actual cell number on the screen.     “I want you to look at my pussy and think it’s going to teach you French     because it looks like Muzzy,” she says, swaying seductively. “Do you have a     rock-hard boner right now? Well, my bush is always rock hard because it’s a     thicket of coarse, wiry Jew pubes.”



   She flops onto one of the couches and lets out a frustrated groan. “I have     this narrative that everyone has seen my jokes, and I always assume     everyone hates me and nobody cares,” she says, sounding defeated. “I don’t     even like doing this.” After the show, when her nerves have subsided, she     hugs friends who have come out in support and heads back to the green room,     where she lets out an audible sigh of relief.



   Sherman’s work resembles that of Tim Heidecker and Eric Wareheim, the duo behind the absurd Adult Swim sketch show    Tim and Eric Awesome Show, Great Job! Like them, Sherman uses low     production values to skewer self-seriousness in comedy. She and her     videographer, Luke Taylor—who’s also a member of sketch group the Shrimp     Boys—use a single camera, and any special effects are DIY.



   She formulates bodily fluids from recipes she has devised and perfected.     She makes come from chunky cottage cheese blended with milk. She stuffs     chili, chocolate, and hairs from wigs into diapers that later burst in a     geyser of poop and pubes. She purchases fake blood—she prefers the kind     from Party City for its “syrupy and bisque-ness” qualities—and occasionally     mixes it with ketchup. Once she dyed mayonnaise with green food coloring to     simulate slime, then shot a video segment in which the substance dripped     out of her mouth, eyes, nipples, and vagina. “It was burning my face,” she     remembers.



   She’s borrowed from the surreal chaos of Pee-wee’s Playhouse, and     cites The Nanny and The Golden Girls as comedic     influences as well. “I feel like you can’t make fucked-up comedy without     having a solid grounding in knowing how more traditional comedy works,” she     says.



   “Her bits feel so honest, but so ugly at the same time,” says Sullivan     Davis, program director at the Hideout. “She creates a world in the show     where putting microphones on toasters makes sense.”



   Both of Sherman’s slide shows at the Empty Bottle satirize grooming habits.     The first is a mock infomercial for “Flayaway,” a process that simplifies     body issues by peeling the skin away entirely. Dandruff, she says, is no     longer a problem after Flayaway! Cut to a close-up of Sherman painted red,     scratching her scalp until veal brains flop onto her shoulder.



   In the second multimedia bit, she reenacts how she trimmed her unwieldy     bush at the age of 13. She portrays a pube on camera by sticking her head     into a dark gray cardboard cylinder. It appears as if she’s wearing an     overripe banana suit. After Sherman explains each hair-removal     technique—shaving, tweezing, waxing, etc—the PowerPoint plays a clip of     Sherman, in costume, being plucked from a pore as blood and pus erupt. The     audience gasps. “I want to look at all the brutal, violent ways we’ve been     telling women they have to lose their body hair, so I zoom in with a     microscope both metaphorically and physically,” she explains to me after     the show.



   Sherman, who’s 25 and works as a freelance illustrator, has been performing     for two and a half years, ever since she graduated from Northwestern in     2015 with a degree in theater. Though she’s cornered the Chicago market on     body-hair-removal comedy, she finds herself sabotaging her own career     before it takes off—specifically by failing to do anything to integrate     herself into the national comedy scene. Her act, she fears, doesn’t neatly fit into a five-minute slot on, say,    The Late Show With Stephen Colbert, or function as a natural     lead-in to starring on Saturday Night Live. “I was supposed to     record a comedy album a year ago, and I just can’t do it,” she says. “I’m     new, so I guess that’s why I’m struggling with the idea of putting ideas     permanently on a literal record. There’s an archival record of my shit that     I can never change, that will be in someone’s house. I can’t bear it.”



   She also dislikes the idea that with increased exposure comes increased     pressure to speak about current events and hot-button issues. That’s not     her style. “Comedians are replacing philosopher kings,” she says. “People     listen to Louis CK and are like, ‘What does he think about abortion?’ Who     gives a fuck? He’s a comedian, that’s not his job. It’s interesting to see     Louis CK and all these dudes fall from grace because it’s like, guess what?     These moral compasses you look to for answers are losers who got drunk at     bars the past four years.



   “I don’t want to have to speak for anyone else except for my own     experience. And I don’t know much about anything, but I can tell you a lot     of very specific things about how to make slime come out of your eyes.”   v