Letters and laughs at the National Spelling Bee

JOSEPH WHITE
Associated Press

OXON HILL, Md. (AP) — Forget the spelling. Victoria Allen was looking for a punch line.

“I only want a sentence if it’s funny,” the 14-year-old from Green River, Wyoming, said upon getting the word “salaam” on Wednesday at the Scripps National Spelling Bee.

“Well,” replied pronouncer Jacques Bailly, checking his computer screen. “I don’t think I have one.”

“Shame,” said Victoria, looking a tad disappointed — even though she correctly spelled the word.

“The Big Bang Theory” doesn’t have a monopoly on nerd TV humor, not the way the Bee is going. The preliminary rounds were just as memorable for comedic sentences as for any spellings or misspellings of words like “catalepsy” or “mastodon.”

“Andre promised to regale his friends with tales of his entire odyssey,” Bailly told one speller, “but it turned out just to be a 45-minute story about the time he got lost in Costco for 35 minutes.”

After the laughter subsided, Lillian Allingham of Hockessin, Delaware, completed that bit of spelling “odyssey” by correctly spelling the word.

Forty-six spellers advanced to the semifinals using scores from onstage words and a computerized spelling-vocabulary test, their achievements vying for attention with jokes about the George Foreman grill and the game Minesweeper. More humor is on tap for the final day of competition Thursday, when the 87th champion in Bee history will be crowned in prime time.

“The objective is just to kind of cut the tension,” Bailly said. “You know, the sentence is probably the piece of information that has the least clear purpose, and so it’s a place where we can have a little fun and relax a little bit.”

It began as an experiment in 2009, when Bee Director Paige Kimble hired a pair of Hollywood comedy writers to lighten up the proceedings. The inside connection: Jeffrey Blitz, who directed the documentary “Spellbound” more than a decade ago, had won an Emmy that year for directing episodes of “The Office.”

Nevertheless, Kimble was initially so uncertain about the idea that she didn’t even tell broadcast partner ESPN.

“Among other things, we didn’t know if it was really going to be funny, so why put yourself out there?” she said. “We instantly got a very positive reaction. Over time, kids have come to appreciate it and expect it.”

Some of the one-liners are written ahead of time, but the comedy writers are also in the auditorium and will come up with sentences during the competition, based on what they observe in the personalities of the spellers and the potential for the words themselves. Bee officials approve the sentences and send them to Bailly, who has final say over whether they are read — since he’s the voice behind the ad hoc stand-up routine.

“If it really falls flat,” Bailly said, “I can say, ‘Yeah, thanks. I’ll be here all night.'”

Over the last five years, the sentences have become as much a part of the Bee as the huge trophy and the doomsday bell. At a pre-Bee briefing with the spellers, Bailly even joked that he had to meet a laugh quota to have his contract renewed — something the spellers kept bringing up during the competition Wednesday.

He seemed to do just fine. He had everyone chuckling when he spoke of someone who put down a telephone and played “Minesweeper until the yelling stopped” to help describe the word “belligerent.” The word “coloratura” wound up in a sentence about someone getting their hand caught in a George Foreman grill.

Sometimes, though, the speller had the last laugh, such as when Bailly’s sentence about the word “Jacuzzi” referred to someone turning into “The Amazing Prune Man.”

“He sounds like a rally lame superhero,” replied the speller, Mitchell Robson of Marblehead, Massachusetts.

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Follow Joseph White on Twitter: http://twitter.com/JGWhiteAP

Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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