NYC Comedy Picks for Monday 7/14/08
Tonight's recommendations for the best in New York City comedy
(in chronological order, with top picks marked by colored brackets) include:
[TOP PICK] stellar stand-ups Leo Allen (SNL, Conan O'Brien), Ophira Eisenberg (Comedy Central, VH1),
Rob Paravonian (Comedy Central, VH1), Craig Baldo (Conan O'Brien, VH1), and Sean Donnelly
(Ochi's Motel, Don't Touch Me There) at Liam McEneaney's free Tell Your Friends (8:00ish pm),
political sketch comedy, plus an interview with Amy Goodman (host of daily show Democracy Now!
and author of new book Stand Up to the Madness) at Liz Winstead's Shoot the Messenger (8:00 pm),
three hours of new sketch comedy by UCBT students tried out before your eyes—and hosted by
brilliant comic Dave Hill (VH1, Spike, TLC, MOJO)—at Maude Night (8:00 pm & 9:30 pm),
[MEGA-TOP PICK] and brilliant storyteller and stand-up comic Mike Birbiglia (David Letterman,
Conan O'Brien, three Comedy Central specials) performing for $5 one of the best shows
you'll see at any price—in preparation for an off-Broadway run—mixing Mike's years of
stellar laugh-a-minute material with a Broadway-caliber tale of sleepwalking and life choices,
under the deceptively humble title 80 Minutes of New Comedy (11:00 pm).
Ophira Eisenberg, Leo Allen, and Rob Paravonian...
...and Craig Baldo, Sean Donnelly, and Liam McEneaney
This free weekly comedy show is produced by Liam McEneaney
(VH1's Best Week Ever, Comedy Central's Premium Blend,
former writer for Standup Nation with Greg Giraldo).
Tonight's host is Sean Donnelly (co-host of weekly NYC open mic live comedy show Ochi's Motel; member of sketch comedy & funny short film troupe Don't Touch Me There;
for a stand-up video, please click here).
And the fine guests are
Leo Allen (writer for Saturday Night Live 2002-2005; Late Night with Conan O'Brien,
two Comedy Central Presents half-hour specials, Ed, Sex and the City).
Ophira Eisenberg (Comedy Central's Premium Blend and Fresh Faces of Comedy, VH1's Best Week Ever and All Access; E!, Oxygen Network, Discovery Channel; Fashion Police writer for US Weekly),
Rob Paravonian (Comedy Central, VH1; frequently opened for George Carlin on tour;
to watch Rob's hit videos, including Pachelbel Rant which has been viewed by
over 4.5 million people on YouTube, please click here), and
Craig Baldo (performed numerous sketches for, and also recently did a stand-up set on, Late Night with Conan O'Brien; Last Comic Standing, Comedy Central's Premium Blend and Comic Remix, VH1's Best Week Ever, and Bravo; written for The Onion;
for Craig's Conan stand-up, please click here).
8:00ish pm at Lolita Bar, 226 Broome Street (between Allen and Orchard Streets); free
Nearest subway stops are Delancey Street via the F or Delancey-Essex via the J/M/Z.
Amy Goodman, and STM host Lizz Winstead
Lizz Winstead is co-creator and former head writer of the original The Daily Show; former Executive VP of Air America Radio; and a performer on such shows as Comedy Central Presents and HBO's Women of the Night. (She's also a character; e.g., for a memorable anti-apology after canceling her appearance on the NYC show Drink at Work, please click here.)
Tonight's guest is Amy Goodman, host of nationally syndicated daily TV & radio show Democracy Now!, and co-author of the new book Standing Up to the Madness: Ordinary Heroes in Extraordinary Times.
To get a feel for STM, please view a fun interview with cartoonist David Rees by clicking here
and read a March 2008 New York Times article about the show by clicking here.
8:00 pm at The Green Room, 45 Bleecker Street (off Lafayette); tickets are $12.50
Nearest subway stop is Bleecker Street on the #6 (which brings you virtually to the door of the theatre)
and Broadway-Lafayette on the F/V/D/B.
Writers, performers, and directors, most of whom are students at UCBT,
try out their sketch comedy routines.
Tonight features four groups in two double-bill slots:
at the 8:00-9:15 pm show, The Skuntz and Stone Cold Fox;
and at the 9:30-10:45 pm show, mixtape '98 and 27 Kidneys.
Some of the material will probably be very funny.
And a lot of it probably won't.
But if you enjoy the raw energy of young artists trying out bits,
come and support tonight's experiments, live on stage.
And as an added incentive: tonight's lineup will be hosted by brilliant sketch/alternative comic
Dave Hill (written for The New York Times, Salon, HBO, and the eerie
Web site Black Metal Dialogues; written & starred in MOJO TV's King of Miami; written and performed for VH1, Spike TV, The Learning Channel, and the much-missed Smoking Gun TV series; hosts monthly UCBT live comedy extravaganza The Dave Hill Explosion—to learn more, please click here).
8:00 pm & 9:30 pm at UCBT, 307 West 26th Street (off 8th Avenue); tickets are $5 per show
Mike Birbiglia: 80 Minutes of New Comedy
Mike Birbiglia is flat-out one of the funniest stand-up comedians in the country.
He's not loud or rude—just smart, relaxed, honest, and hilarious. (Sample line:
"If the best part of waking up is Folgers in my cup, I'm not sure I want to wake up.")
This razor-sharp comic recently performed an hour-long Comedy Central special
titled What I Should Have Said is Nothing. Mike's also performed two
Comedy Central Presents half-hour specials; appeared multiple times on
Late Show with David Letterman and Late Night with Conan O'Brien;
and has released the comedy CDs Two Drink Mike and My Secret Public Journal—Live.
The latter was chosen by Time Out New York as the Comedy Album of the Year.
Tonight Mike will be mixing his stand-up and storytelling skills to craft a tour de force performance that results in one of the finest shows you'll ever see.
Mike's honing this material for an off-Broadway run; but it's already
Broadway caliber, and one of the best shows in New York.
You can wait until this production is at a theatre that appropriately
charges $40 and up a ticket; or you can see it tonight for a mere $5.
For sample stand-up videos, please click here and here;
and then come let Mike make you both laugh helplessly and feel deeply
in this extraordinary solo show about sleepwalking, bears, and life choices.
11:00 pm at UCBT, 307 West 26th Street (off 8th Avenue); tickets are $5
NYC Comedy Picks for Tuesday 7/15/08
Tonight's recommendations for the best in New York City comedy
(in chronological order, with top picks marked by colored brackets) include:
[TOP PICK] Michael Ian Black (NBC's Ed, MTV's The State) performing a free reading
from his new humor essay book My Custom Van (7:00 pm),
a rare NYC appearance at Madison Square Garden by star Ricky Gervais (7:30 pm),
[TOP PICK] Rob Cantrell (Last Comic Standing), Jesse Pop (Comedy Central), Dartanion London (popular
Seattle comic), and more at a hot new show mixing sketch & stand-up: Sweet Haven (8:00ish pm),
Brendan McGinley (writer of such Zuda series as Hannibal Goes to Rome)
joining in on a lively & fun discussion about comic books at Comic Book Club (8:00 pm),
three full hours of improv for only five bucks at Harold Night (8:00 pm),
[TOP PICK] LA alternative comedy star Brent Weinbach (2007 Andy Kaufman award winner,
Comedians of Comedy) performing a 50-minute set; plus top stand-ups John Mulaney (Conan O'Brien,
VH1's Best Week Ever) and Jay Larson (Comedy Central, Craig Ferguson) at one of
the finest & funniest shows in NYC the wonderful Seth Herzog's Sweet (9:00 pm),
and two innovative improv troupes: Stray follows the twists & turns of an audience-selected object, and
Factory Factory demonstrates how actions in different locales affect each other, in Thread and Tracers (9:30 pm).
Michael Ian Black: My Custom Van
Michael Ian Black (MTV's The State, NBC's Ed, Stella comedy troupe)
is performing a free reading tonight from his new humor essay book
My Custom Van—And 50 Other Mind-Blowing Essays
That Will Blow Your Mind All Over Your Face.
Some endorsements:
"Michael Ian Black has proven that even the most simple-minded among us can occasionally create works of genius."—Stephen Colbert
"Fun to read while you're pooping."—Sarah Silverman
Seating is first come, first served, so arriving early is recommended.
7:00 pm at Barnes & Noble: Tribeca, 97 Warren Street; free
Nearest subway stop is Chambers Street on the 1/2/3/A/C trains
Ricky Gervais Live at Madison Square Garden
UK comedy superstar Ricky Gervais will be performing tonight and Wednesday
at the WaMu Theater at Madison Square Garden.
Gervais is best known for creating, co-writing & co-directing
(with long-time collaborator Stephen Merchant) and also starring in
the BBC TV shows The Office (which led to the NBC hit sitcom)
and Extras (which was subsequently broadcast by HBO).
Gervais' razor-sharp work has been recognized with two Emmy awards, three Golden Globe awards, seven BAFTA awards...and enormous commercial success.
Plus, he's way funny.
This rare NYC appearance is pricey; tickets are $46, $56, or $66,
depending on seat location. (Plus, if you order online,
an outrageous additional $10.15 "service charge.")
But if you've got the cash and are a fan...
For a Jane Borden Time Out New York interview
with Gervais about this show, please click here.
7:30 pm at Madison Square Garden's WaMu Theater,
Four Pennsylvania Plaza (7th Avenue between 31st and 33rd Streets);
tickets are $46, $56, or $66, plus $10.15 charge if ordering online
This exciting new show comes from sketch troupe Peoples Republic of Komedy, whose members learned how to be funny in Seattle and then sunk all their savings into making a mark in NYC. They're off to a great start with this new weekly extravaganza, which uses sketch (and even a theme song) to create a comedic framework for their stand-up guests.
Tonight's fine lineup consists of
Rob Cantrell (Last Comic Standing, Tough Crowd with Colin Quinn, CBS's Late Late Show, VH1),
Jesse Popp (Comedy Central's Premium Blend; co-host of the
weekly NYC live Beauty Bar Comedy Show for 6 years running),
Dartanion London (popular Seattle-based comic; for stand-up video about how he got his name, please click here; for twisted Web medical game, please click here),
Brent Weinbach (LA alternative comedy star; 2007 Andy Kaufman Award; Comedians of Comedy tour; for stand-up video involving pants, please click here), and
Andy Wood (member of the Sweet Haven sketch troupe).
8:00ish pm (doors open at 7:30) at Rififi, 332 East 11th Street (between 1st & 2nd Avenues); $5
Friend of Brendan McGinley (by artist Andres Ponce)
Hosted by Alex Zalben, Justin Tyler and Pete LePage,
who enjoy discussing comic books while getting laughs.
Tonight's guest is Brendan McGinley (writer of such Zuda comics as Hannibal Goes To Rome).
To get a feel for the smart, playful vibe of Comic Book Club, please check out its podcasts—
that is, audio recordings of previous shows in their entirety—by clicking here.
(And for my fave, a delightful show with Kevin "Batman" Conroy, please click here).
8:00 pm at The Peoples Improv Theater, 154 West 29th Street (off 7th Avenue); tickets are $5
The Harold is longform improv, pioneered by Del Close.
Tonight, five improv troupes—
Bastian, RAGNARÖCK, The Scam, Bangs, and DeCoster—
each give it a go for 30 minutes, with
short breaks in between, for a total of 3 hours.
Some of the groups are great; some are less so. And this show
is designed more for students of improv than the general public.
But if you're interested, and patient, a mere $5 will buy you
a full evening's education...and periodic solid laughs.
8:00-11:00 pm at UCBT, 307 West 26th Street (off 8th Avenue); tickets are $5
Brent Weinbach and John Mulaney...
...and Seth Herzog and Jay Larson
Hosted by the razor-sharp, dynamic, and hilarious Seth Herzog (VH1's Best Week Ever).
Seth is one of the finest hosts around—and this is one of the best comedy shows in NYC.
Tonight's wonderful guests are
Brent Weinbach (LA alternative comedy star; 2007 Andy Kaufman Award; Comedians of Comedy tour; for stand-up video involving pants, please click here), who'll be performing a 50-minute set;
John Mulaney (one of the finest and most razor-sharp stand-ups around; VH1's Best Week Ever, Late Night with Conan O'Brien; for John's Conan sets, please click here and here); and
Jay Larson (Variety's "Comics to Watch;" Comedy Central's Live at Gotham, CBS' Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson; upcoming Web series The Steamer;
for stand-up video about uncomfortable anniversaries, please kick here).
9:00 pm at The Slipper Room, 167 Orchard Street (corner of Stanton Street); tickets are $5
Stray: Thread and Factory Factory: Tracers
Two unique improv shows for just five bucks.
First, improv troupe Stray performs a show titled Thread: "After getting a physical, tangible object from the audience, Stray follows this object as though a camera were trained on it, catching the action that happens around it. Whether the object stays in one place or moves through a variety of different people and places, you're along for the ride." The group consists of Jill Farris, Wendy Herlich, Kristy Kershaw, and Stefan Schick.
The double-bill then continues with Chicago troupe Factory Factory demonstrating a fascinating new improv form called Tracers. The official description: "Two young lovers sneak into the boys locker room for a forbidden kiss. Morris, a retiring janitor, inadvisably tries out for the school play in the theater. The sound of a lot of broken glass rings out from the parking lot. The roar of a yeti is heard coming from the direction of the gym...Tracers allows the audience to see all of those locations over the same time period, and how they affect one another. When you fire a bullet into the next room, where does it go? With Tracers, the mystery is revealed." Factory Factory consists of Jon Bander, Karsten Cross, Luke Franklin, Megan Gray, Leslie Korein, Garrett Palm, and Morgan Phillips.
9:30 pm at The Magnet Theatre, 254 West 29th Street (off 8th Avenue); tickets are $5
NYC Comedy Picks for Wednesday 7/16/08
Tonight's recommendations for the best in New York City comedy
(in chronological order, with top picks marked by colored brackets) include:
[TOP PICK] Michael Ian Black (NBC's Ed, MTV's The State) performing a free reading
from his new humor essay book My Custom Van (12:30 pm),
a rare NYC appearance at Madison Square Garden by star Ricky Gervais (7:30 pm),
open mic stand-up in Queens' LIC, with guest headliner Jacqueline Novak and
host John F. O'Donnell (Comedy Central) at The Kingdom of Heaven (8:30 pm),
[TOP PICK] typically stellar stand-up comics mixed with sketch comedy
(most of which is improvised!) at Gelmania (9:00 pm),
[TOP PICK] several entirely improvised musicals from genius duo Glennis McMurray
& Eliza Skinner (accompanied by pianist Frank Spitznagel) as I Eat Pandas (9:30 pm),
and a laid-back free variety show where virtually anything can happen on a School Night (11:00).
For details, please click here.
TV Alert: South Park is one of the funniest shows in TV history—
and also one of the most consistently superb, over an amazing 11 seasons.
On tonight's repeat, a Cartman prank makes it look like Butters
engaged in gay sex...and gets the poor kid sent to a camp
intended to "straighten him out."
Set your TiVo to 10:00 pm or midnight at Comedy Central
to learn about alternative lifestyles.
Michael Ian Black: My Custom Van
Michael Ian Black (MTV's The State, NBC's Ed, Stella comedy troupe)
is performing a free reading tonight from his new humor essay book
My Custom Van—And 50 Other Mind-Blowing Essays
That Will Blow Your Mind All Over Your Face.
Some endorsements:
"Michael Ian Black has proven that even the most simple-minded among us can occasionally create works of genius."—Stephen Colbert
"Fun to read while you're pooping."—Sarah Silverman
Seating is first come, first served, so arriving early is recommended.
12:30 pm at Bryant Park Reading Room, West 42nd Street (between 5th and 6th Avenues); free
Ricky Gervais Live at Madison Square Garden
UK comedy superstar Ricky Gervais will be completing his run tonight
at the WaMu Theater at Madison Square Garden.
Gervais is best known for creating, co-writing & co-directing
(with long-time collaborator Stephen Merchant) and also starring in
the BBC TV shows The Office (which led to the NBC hit sitcom)
and Extras (which was subsequently broadcast by HBO).
Gervais' razor-sharp work has been recognized with two Emmy awards, three Golden Globe awards, seven BAFTA awards...and enormous commercial success.
Plus, he's way funny.
This rare NYC appearance is pricey; tickets are $46, $56, or $66,
depending on seat location. (Plus, if you order online,
an outrageous additional $10.15 "service charge.")
But if you've got the cash, and are a fan...
For a Jane Borden Time Out New York interview
with Gervais about this show, please click here.
7:30 pm at Madison Square Garden's WaMu Theater,
Four Pennsylvania Plaza (7th Avenue between 31st and 33rd Streets);
tickets are $46, $56, or $66, plus $10.15 charge if ordering online
Big Black Car and Fancy Dragon
This free weekly show features the two PIT improv teams above,
each of which performs for about 30 minutes. For a video sample of Big Black Car,
please click here; and for a video sample of Fancy Dragon, please click here.
8:00 pm at The Peoples Improv Theater, 154 West 29th Street (off 7th Avenue); free
John F. O'Donnell and Jacqueline Novak
Free open mic stand-up comedy show in Queens' Long Island City
(just one stop from Manhattan on the #7 train).
Hosted by John F. O'Donnell (Comedy Central's Fresh Faces; for stand-up video, please click here),
a wild man who will make you love him...and who genuinely loves comedy and fellow comics.
If you're looking for stage time, John makes this a very friendly place to perform.
Sign-up for the open mic is at 7:30.
Tonight's guest headliner is Jacqueline Novak (for her
"response to heckler" video, please click here).
8:30 pm at The Creek and The Cave, 10-93 Jackson Avenue, Long Island City, Queens; free
From Manhattan, take the #7 subway to the Vernon Boulevard-Jackson Avenue stop (one stop after Grand Central);
exit on Jackson Avenue and walk one block north to 49th Avenue.
Tonight's lineup hasn't been announced; but as you can see from
the poster above, the comics tend to be superb.
9:00 pm (doors open at 8:00) at Rififi, 332 East 11th Street (between 1st & 2nd Avenues); $5
Glennis McMurray and Eliza Skinner are simply geniuses
at taking a suggestion from the audience and creating
an entire musical based around it, using only their imaginations,
immense talent, and the aid of their wonderful improv pianist
Frank Spitznagel. Each of these gals is a powerhouse performer;
what they manage to create together tends to be sheer magic.
You don't have to take my word for it, either;
the duo won the 2008 ECNY Award for Best Improv Group.
Don't miss any chance to enjoy these comedic wizards at play.
9:30 pm at UCBT, 307 West 26th Street (off 8th Avenue); tickets are $5
Kurt Braunohler, Pat Shay, and Kimmy Gatewood
The Faculty and The Baldwins and Sid Viscous
Some of the PIT's instructors—who include such talents as Ali Farahnakian,
Kurt Braunohler, Ptolemy Slocum, Jen Nails, Pat Shay, Matt Donnelly, Kevin Scott,
Rebekka Johnson, and Kimmy Gatewood—perform improv for around 30 minutes.
And opening for them will be house improv troupes The Baldwins and Sid Viscous.
9:30 pm at The Peoples Improv Theater, 154 West 29th Street (off 7th Avenue); free
Justin Purnell
Host Justin Purnell provides a mix of guests who perform stand-up, improv, music,
and occasionally acts that defy categorization. The level of talent can vary wildly—
but for some (like me), that's part of the laid-back fun.
Come support the experimentation, and periodic magical surprises,
that this free show makes possible.
11:00 pm at UCBT, 307 West 26th Street (off 8th Avenue); tickets are $5
NYC Comedy Picks for Thursday 7/17/08
Tonight's recommendations for the best in New York City comedy
(in chronological order, with top picks marked by colored brackets) include:
a very odd but intriguing sketch troupe, and a one-woman show involving a Rubenesque
woman and a genie, in Murderfist and Your Fat Girlfriend (6:30 pm),
Dave Ahdoot and Ethan Fixell relating their YouTube-documented romantic adventures
live on stage—possibly accompanied by visits from some of the gals—on Double Date Us (7:00 pm),
acclaimed comedy duo Joe Schiappa & Nathan Phillips performing improv in Project:Projekt (8:00 pm),
original, manic, and very funny comic Rick Shapiro (HBO's Lucky Louie) performing
a long stand-up set in his one-man show Wild Card (8:00 pm),
[TOP PICK] typically stellar stand-ups at the hilarious Joe Mande's & Noah Garfinkel's Totally J/K (8:30 pm),
[TOP PICK] Dave Hill demonstrating he's one of the sharpest, freshest, funniest comics around,
accompanied this evening by exceptionally wonderful guests—brilliant & iconic actress Martha Plimpton,
and breathtakingly talented singer-songwriter Lucy Wainwright Roche—at The Dave Hill Explosion (9:30 pm),
sketch troupe As Sparks Fly Upward, which uses personal anecdotes and improv
as a means for building complex stories, debuting their latest work tonight:
a tale of learning to let go of old wounds titled Escape from Past Mountain (9:30 pm),
[TOP PICK] and energetic & inventive improv troupes Death by Roo Roo and The F*cking Kennedys
competing for audience laughs & votes at the raucous Cage Match (11:00 pm).
For details, please click here.
On TV: Many have a love/hate relationship with NBC's Last Comic Standing. The show can make careers; but it can also opt for shallow nonsense over substance.
Last week was a good example of both sides of the coin. Among the
comics eliminated was
Esther Ku...who, if what we saw on the show is representative, should never
have made it past the first round. (One of her jokes essentially says that
all Asians really do look alike...) It's hard to believe Ku was
a choice based on talent as opposed to "reality show" considerations about
building in contestant conflict. There were only two women picked for the top
dozen this season...which by itself is shameful. That one of those spots was
tossed away on Ku adds insult to injury for the many sharp female comics working
today.
On the other hand, Wilson Hall & Krister Johnson (a.k.a. Jeremiah Smallchild & Gideon Lamb of God's Pottery) were a breath of fresh air this season. While a "one-joke" act, these guys were consistently quick-witted, energetic,and entertaining. I'm not shocked they were eliminated; an LA audience at a mainstream stand-up club is more likely to vote for a mainstream LA stand-up. (Plus Iliza Shlesinger, unlike Ku, has genuine comedy chops.) But Hall & Krister carved the foundation for mass media success from their performances; and Last Comic Standing deserves kudos for giving them that opportunity.
The comic who most impressed last week, however, was Jim Tavaré (above right). Any Brit who can win a "yo mama" contest is someone quite special. (And he didn't even use his bass...)
For all the show's flaws, I want to see what happens next.
If you do too, tune in tonight from 8:00 pm to 10:00 pm on NBC.
Some of the guises of sketch troupe Murderfist; and Katie Cunningham, member of Your Fat Girlfriend
Murderfist and Your Fat Girlfriend
Two sketch comedy shows for a mere five bucks.
Murderfist creates sketches that are very odd and unsettling.
For example, to watch a somewhat grueling tale of an unlikely gay couple done in
the style of a silent film, please click here. The troupe will be performing a show next month at the New York International Fringe Festival for $15. Catch them tonight for, effectively, $2.50.
The double-bill then continues with sketch troupe Your Fat Girlfriend, which includes comedic writer & actress Katie Cunningham playing a murderous genie. To get a feel for Katie, check out her Christmas suicide song and Emo Chick show by clicking here and here.
6:30 pm at UCBT, 307 West 26th Street (off 8th Avenue); tickets are $5
Dave and Ethan: Double Date Us
Dave Ahdoot and Ethan Fixell challenged pairs of women to double date them,
then documented the results on YouTube. Tonight they relate their tales live on stage...
along with guest appearances. "And possibly even a live date."
7:00 pm at The Peoples Improv Theater, 154 West 29th Street (off 7th Avenue); tickets are $5
Rick Shapiro
At his best, Rick Shapiro is a hilarious hyper & unrestrained stand-up who's a breath of fresh air. That said, Rick can also be wildly inconsistent, so there's no telling what to expect when you see him.
Rick's impressive credits include HBO's Lucky Louie and PoCreations Radio; a hit show at the 2007 Edinburgh Festival; performances at virtually all the top comedy clubs in NYC; and a comedy CD titled Unconditional Love.
If you're feeling adventurous, come experience this manic, honest comic deliver an extended set.
8:00 pm at UCBT, 307 West 26th Street (off 8th Avenue); tickets are $5
Respected improv comedy duo Project:Projekt consists of Joe Schiappa (comedic actor, and director of numerous fun productions including the off-Broadway comedy Matt and Ben) and Nathan Phillips (CBS, CNN, BBC; one-man show Bill the Billboard).
8:00 pm at The Peoples Improv Theater, 154 West 29th Street (off 7th Avenue); tickets are $5
Hosted by quick-witted best buds Noah Garfinkel and
Joe Mande, the 2008 ECNY Award winner for Best Emerging Comic.
(For dueling birthday videos, please click here and here; for their
recent appearance on The McLaughlin Group, please click here;
and for other videos, please click here and here.)
Tonight's guests haven't been announced, but they're typically superb comics.
8:30 pm at Rififi, 332 East 11th Street (between 1st & 2nd Avenues); tickets are $5
Martha Plimpton, Dave Hill, and Lucy Wainwright Roche
Dave Hill has written for The New York Times, Salon, HBO, and the eerie Web site Black Metal Dialogues. Dave has also written and performed for VH1, Spike TV, The Learning Channel, and the much-missed Smoking Gun TV series; starred in the MOJO Network TV series The King of Miami; creates comedic short films for both SuperDeluxe.com and Bud.com; and hosts this monthly extravaganza (to learn more, please click here). Dave says, "Sometimes I miss being able to walk into the free clinic and stuff without being harassed by people who watch television really late at night, but for the most part I gotta say this 'fame thing' suits me well. Really, really well." Indeed it does; Dave is an enormously witty, razor-sharp comic.
Dave's guests tonight are stars, and both awesome:
Martha Plimpton (one of my favorite actresses; her more than two dozen feature films include Running on Empty, Another Woman, Parenthood, Stanley & Iris, Samantha, Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle, I Shot Andy Warhol, Beautiful Girls, I'm Not Rappaport, 200 Cigarettes, and Dante's Inferno) and
Lucy Wainwright Roche (superb singer-songwriter who The New York Times said has the best qualities of both her parents—Loudon Wainwright & Suzzy Roche—and a voice “clear as a bell;” has also been described as "a refreshing, pure alternative to pop" and "sincere and raw, at times recalling Joni Mitchell and Patty Griffin, Roche's bittersweet voice leaps out; she paints an indelible image;" has performed solo shows, and opened for musicians ranging from Dar Williams to her brother Rufus Wainwright; has released two albums, 8 Songs and 8 More).
I can't believe this show hasn't already sold out...! To make your reservation, please click here.
9:30 pm at UCBT, 307 West 26th Street (off 8th Avenue); tickets are $5
As Sparks Fly Upward: Escape From Past Mountain
Comedy troupe As Sparks Fly Upward tells stories off the top of their heads, then improvises
scenes based on the tales...which may later turn into scripted sketches.
It's a clever way of crafting a sketch show organically, week by week—
and tonight you can watch the results.
The show is titled Escape From Past Mountain...and has nothing to do with orphan children with extraordinary powers. Instead, it's "about how our pasts can catch up with us, unless we choose the hard road of forgiveness. From moment to moment this show isn't afraid to be heady, physical, dark, or boldly juvenile. Most of all, it's funny.".
The writer/performers are Chris Caniglia, Scott Eckert, Sarah Nowak,
Nate Starkey and Shelly Stover; and they're directed by Ptolemy Slocum.
9:30 pm at The Peoples Improv Theater, 154 West 29th Street (off 7th Avenue); tickets are $8
Cage Match: Death by Roo Roo vs. The F*cking Kennedys
This delightful show pits two improv teams against each other while creating the
atmosphere of a professional wrestling arena—and providing such side-shows
as a bout to the death between guys costumed as an alcoholic wolf and TV's Alf.
(For a spirited weekly report on the wrestling aspect of Cage Match, please click here.)
The current reining champ at Cage Match is arguably the gutsiest improv group in NYC: Death by Roo Roo, consisting of uniformly brilliant comics Anthony Atamanuik, Neil Casey, Jackie Clarke, Brett Gelman, John Gemberling, and Curtis Gwinn. This juggernaut doesn't merely walk over opponents, it pounds them into the ground. So far this season, DBRR has trounced nine troupes, winning a total of 861 audience votes vs. a mere 305 for all its opponents combined.
Tonight's contender is UCBT Harold team The F*cking Kennedys, which consists of Devlyn Corrigan, Brian Berrebbi, Sean Clements, Brian Faas, John Frusciante, Jon Gutierrez, Ben Schwartz, and Nate Smith.
Will the audience prefer Roo Roo to F*cking? Or will it like the Kennedys more than Death?
There's no telling what'll happen...which is one of the great pleasures of this extravaganza.
11:00 pm at UCBT, 307 West 26th Street (off 8th Avenue); tickets are $5
NYC Comedy Picks for Friday 7/18/08
Tonight's recommendations for the best in New York City comedy
(in chronological order, with top picks marked by colored brackets) include:
sketch comedy routines airing past grudges in Rue Brutalia: Dirty Laundry (7:00 pm),
a parody romp through this summer's top flicks at The Blockbuster Movie Spectacular (7:30 pm),
sketch comedy from troupe Les Encompetent in its new show Luxury (8:30 pm),
[TOP PICK] some of the sharpest stand-ups in the country, including Pete Holmes (Comedy Central, VH1),
Leo Allen (Saturday Night Live, Conan O'Brien), Andrea Rosen (Comedy Central, VH1, Variety SHAC),
DC Benny (Last Comic Standing finalist), and more at one of the funniest productions in NYC—and
winner of the 2008 ECNY Award for Best Variety Show—The Greg Johnson & Larry Murphy Show (8:30 pm),
[TOP PICK] some of the finest improv in NYC from the comedy genius members of The Stepfathers (9:30 pm),
a groundbreaking and surreal improv troupe—Centralia: Au Bon Panic! (9:30 pm),
singing improvisors who use an interview with an audience member to craft The Made-Up Musical (10:00 pm),
[TOP PICK] one of my all-time favorite improv troupes—which has currently trounced 10
challengers in a row at Cage Match—the brilliant and daring members of Death by Roo Roo (11:00 pm),
[TOP PICK] and UCBT's free monthly open mic stand-up show, where deliciously odd things
tend to happen around 1:30 am, hosted by lightning-quick & hilarious Pete Holmes
(Comedy Central, VH1; one of the finest comics in the country) at Gutbucket (12:20ish am).
Rue Brutalia is comedy duo Jon Pack and Jason Kalter,
who tonight air grievances...and attempt to get even.
To obtain a feel for these guys' odd work, check out a saga
about a cartoon character with no balls, and another about two guys
who are the same man, by clicking here and here.
7:00 pm at The Peoples Improv Theater, 154 West 29th Street (off 7th Avenue); tickets are $8
The Blockbuster Movie Spectacular
This one-shot extravaganza is described as follows: "Join your favorite (and least favorite) characters from this summer's blockbuster movies along with critics, fans, and other film nerds as we celebrate all things we love to hate paying money to see."
Expect lots of bad impersonations, hit-and-miss jokes, and considerable fun.
The small army of a cast includes Emily Axford, Pat Baer, Kirk Damato, Jill Donnelly, Pam Murphy, John Murray, Zhubin Parang, sketch troupe Sidecar, and Will Storie.
And the festivities will be hosted by Aaron Glaser and John Frusciante.
7:30 pm at UCBT, 307 West 26th Street (off 8th Avenue); tickets are $8
Pete Holmes, Leo Allen, and Andrea Rosen...
...and Greg Johnson, Larry Murphy, and DC Benny
The Greg Johnson & Larry Murphy Show
This is one of the best comedy shows in New York.
It's hosted by Greg Johnson (sharp, quick-witted stand-up comic) and
Larry Murphy (genius comedic chameleon & voiceover actor who performs all the
key characters on Adult Swim's Assy McGee; other animated TV series include
Home Movies, O'Grady, Computer Lab, Word Girl, and Sunday Pants;
sketch performer on Late Night with Conan O'Brien; announcer for
ESPN's Cheap Seats; for an animated VO reel, please click here).
Tonight's wonderful guests are
Pete Holmes (razor-sharp & lightning-fast mind, and one of the finest stand-ups in the country;
VH1's Best Week Ever, Comedy Central's Premium Blend and Motherload;
writer for CollegeHumor.com; cartoonist for mags ranging from
The New Yorker to Cosmo Girl; host of UCBT's monthly open mic extravaganza Gutbucket),
Leo Allen (writer for Saturday Night Live 2002-2005; Late Night with Conan O'Brien,
Comedy Central Presents half-hour special, Ed, Sex and the City),
DC Benny (Last Comic Standing finalist, Comedy Central Presents half-hour special;
film and TV actor for Law & Order, Spider-Man 3, etc.),
Andrea Rosen (Comedy Central's Stella, VH1's All Access, comedy troupe Variety Shac), and
Ken Zimlinghaus (can be heard regularly on Sirius Satellite Radio's Wake Up With Cosmo;
host of NYC live comedy show Fat Tuesday).
8:30 pm at Rififi, 332 East 11th Street (between 1st & 2nd Avenues); tickets are $5
A new sketch comedy show by Lizzie Goldberg-Redner, Dave Maulbeck,
Lauren Olson, and Jana Schmieding. The official description:
"Inept characters and human folly give rise to this original compilation of sketches.
Employing witty transitions and the occasional dance number, Les Encompentent
is a fresh reminder of how silly—and, for this show, luxurious—sketch can become. "
8:30 pm at The Magnet Theatre, 254 West 29th Street (off 8th Avenue); tickets are $5
Bobby Moynihan, Zach Woods, former member Christina Gausas, Michael Delaney, and Chris Gethard
Some of the smartest & finest improv comics in NYC—Michael Delaney,
Chris Gethard, Will Hines, Bobby Moynihan, Shannon O'Neill, Silvija Ozols,
and Zach Woods—make up a series of scenes from a one-word audience suggestion.
With art and grace, these star talents will make you laugh—a lot.
9:30 pm at UCBT, 307 West 26th Street (off 8th Avenue); tickets are $8
Acclaimed improv troupe Centralia consists of Kevin Scott, Jay Rhoderick, and Matt Higgins (Comedy Central, PSNBC; former improv instructor at Yale School of Drama; also founding member of improv troupe Burn Manhattan; three-time finalist for the Andy Kaufman award; for a stand-up sample, please click here).
The official description: "Centralia is known as one of the boldest, most inventive, ground-breaking improvisation groups to ever hit a New York stage. See the performers the Daily News called 'the purest form of theatre,' the Chicago Sun said is 'advancing the art of improvisation,' and the Village Voice said watching is 'like having a front row seat at a stranger's dream.' Au Bon Panic is Centralia's trademark surreal, satirical, hysterical spontaneous theater."
9:30 pm at The Peoples Improv Theater, 154 West 29th Street (off 7th Avenue); tickets are $8
Veteran improvisor John O'Donnell is accompanied
by a rotating cast that might include such superb talents as
Tara Copeland, Scott Glover, Alex Marino, Louis Kornfeld,
Jessica Allen, Robin Rothman, and Megan Gray
—and with Frank Spitznagel on piano—
turn an interview with an audience member
into a musical they make up on the spot.
10:00 pm at The Magnet Theatre, 254 West 29th Street (off 8th Avenue); tickets are $7
Death by Roo Roo: Your F*cked Up Family
Arguably the gutsiest improv troupe in NYC, the brilliant comics of Death by Roo Roo—Anthony Atamanuik, Neil Casey, Jackie Clarke, Brett Gelman, John Gemberling, and Curtis Gwinn—interview an audience member about family and then act out his or her life story
via improvised scenes. Sometimes scary, and usually hilarious.
11:00 pm at UCBT, 307 West 26th Street (off 8th Avenue); tickets are $8
Pete Holmes
UCBT's monthly open mic show for stand-up comics.
If you're simply looking to laugh, this show can be
lots of fun, or deadly, depending on who turns up.
But if you're a comic yourself, it's a fine opportunity
to perform in front of an exceptionally sharp audience.
And in my opinion, it's well worth sitting through five minutes of
a dreadful comic to get even 30 seconds of hilarious comments
about the set afterwards from brilliant host Pete Holmes (VH1's Best Week Ever,
Comedy Central's Premium Blend and Motherload; writer for CollegeHumor.com;
cartoonist for mags ranging from The New Yorker to Cosmo Girl).
Holmes' lightning-fast mind will generate more perfect remarks
in a few moments than most comics can manage in a week.
Watching a master like Pete Holmes is a great treat;
and this show is free.
On top of that, the fact Gutbucket runs from roughly 12:20 am to 2:00 am
adds a surreal, drunken spin to the festivities that usually results in something
weird and memorable happening with either an amateur comic or an audience member.
For all these reasons, this is my favorite open mic show; and if you're both
patient and adventurous, it's highly recommended.
12:20ish am at UCBT, 307 West 26th Street (off 8th Avenue); free
NYC Comedy Picks for Saturday 7/19/08
Tonight's recommendations for the best in New York City comedy
(in chronological order, with top picks marked by colored brackets) include:
Second City veterans, Magnet instructors, UCBT stars, and occasional celebs
at the Magnet's signature improv show The Tiny Spectacular (7:30 pm),
TV and book writers Laura Krafft (The Colbert Report), Peter Grosz (The Colbert Report), and David Rakoff
(Fraud; Don't Get Too Comfortable) performing improvised monologues at Three-Piece! (7:30 pm),
[TOP PICK] two world-class sketch troupes joining forces when Pangea 3000, a group focused on
smart writing, visits a group specializing in physical comedy and music: Drop Six (8:00 pm),
[TOP PICK] improv comedy mixed with audience-supplied music at the rockin' Mother: The Soundtrack (9:00 pm),
[TOP PICK] inventive & hilarious sketch comedy from The Harvard Sailing Team (9:30 pm),
[TOP PICK] improvised TV shows about audience members via world-class troupe Reuben Williams (10:30 pm),
organic & energetic improv by the four guys of 4 Track! (10:30 pm),
and stellar sketch troupe Olde English performing all-new routines
that parody a wide range of TV shows: Very Fresh (Midnight).
Magnet instructors & Second City veterans such as Rachel Hamilton, Ed Herbstman, Abby Sher, and Miriam Tolan, plus stars of Mother: The Soundtrack (see below) Jason Mantzoukas, Tara Copeland, James Eason, Christine Walters, plus occasional special guests (such as superstar Mike Meyers), turn a tiny suggestion into larger-than-life improvised scenes.
7:30 pm at The Magnet Theatre, 254 West 29th Street (off 8th Avenue); tickets are $5
Peter Grosz, Laura Krafft, and David Rakoff
An evening of improvised monologues (springboarding off
audience suggestions), performed in three parts.
This show is hosted and stars the multi-talented Laura Krafft, who's a
staff writer for The Colbert Report, a former writer for Comedy Central's Crossballs,
and has acted on such series as on HBO's Curb Your Enthusiasm.
And performing with Laura tonight are superb guests
Peter Grosz (also a staff writer for The Colbert Report; star of over 100 Sonic fast-food commercials; member of Chicago's Second City acclaimed improv troupe 4 Square, and half of the current UCBT improv show 2 Square), and
David Rakoff (The Daily Show with Jon Stewart; NPR; author of the
humor essay books Fraud and Don't Get Too Comfortable).
7:30 pm at UCBT, 307 West 26th Street (off 8th Avenue); tickets are $8
Ace sketch troupes Pangea 3000 and Drop Six
Drop Six is a superb NYC-based sketch troupe that makes great use of physical comedy and music. The group consists of Mary Theresa Archbold (for my review of this star's funny & touching 2007 FringeNYC show Jazz Hand, please click here), Tim Girrbach, Alicia Levy, Jason Salmon, Rodney Umble, and director Larry Rosen. This group's honors include Best of the Fest selection by Second City at the 2006 Toronto Sketch Comedy Festival. And their Drop Six: Mr. Lucky show killed at last year's FringeNYC, placing in my top 15 of the festival (out of 188 wildly diverse & competitive productions).
Tonight features new sketches, plus a visit from fellow world-class sketch troupe Pangea 3000, which consists of Andrew Cleary, Sam Kemmis, Dan Klein, Arthur Meyer, and Seth Reiss.
These guys have blown the roof off with such instant classics as a spelling bee
for fart noises, and a doctor announcing devastating news and then going off to calmly eat a chicken sandwich while family members panic. To view two of Pangea 3000's surreal tales of games guys play, involving whoopee cushions and tag, please click here and here; and then come let these exceptionally clever writer/performers make you laugh hard and often.
I always recommend Drop Six. But And with Pangea 3000 thrown in,
tonight's show is simply not to be missed.
8:00 pm at The Peoples Improv Theater, 154 West 29th Street (off 7th Avenue); tickets are $8
Jason Mantzoukas leads a vibrant team of improv comics—Scot Armstrong, Tara Copeland, Jon Daly, James Eason, Jesse Falcon, Doug Moe, and Christine Walters—who make up scenes based on CD tracks contributed by the audience. One of UCBT's most beloved shows.
9:00 pm at UCBT, 307 West 26th Street (off 8th Avenue); tickets are $8
The Harvard Sailing Team: A Hundred Years of Song and Dance
The Harvard Sailing Team, which just won the ECNY Award for Best Sketch Comedy Group,
performs their special brand of fresh, imaginative comedy
that turns familiar rituals on their head. (For a video about awkward goodbyes
at the end of a party, please click here.) The very talented troupe consists of
Rebecca Brey, Jen Curran, Clayton Early, Faryn Einhorn, Katie Larson,
Adam Lustick, Chris Smith, Billy Scafuri, and Sara Taylor.
This new collection of sketches, titled
A Hundred Years of Song and Dance, covers such topics
as Melissa Etheridge, Duck Tales, and American Gladiators.
9:30 pm at The Peoples Improv Theater, 154 West 29th Street (off 7th Avenue); tickets are $8
Reuben Williams: As Seen on TV
Anthony King demonstrates that in addition to running UCBT-NY brilliantly, he's a superb improvisor and actor. Joining him are stellar talents Eugene Cordero, Lennon Parham, Charlie Sanders, Eric Scott, Kate Spencer, Charlie Todd, and Joe Wengert. Together, they interview an audience member, and then use the answers as the basis for a new TV show...which this fiercely talented comedy troupe creates & performs for you on the spot.
10:30 pm at UCBT, 307 West 26th Street (off 8th Avenue); tickets are $8
Springboarding from a word suggested by the audience,
George Basil, Frank Campanella, Christian Capozzoli, and Matt Evans
perform organic & energetic long-form improv for about 40 minutes.
Basil is a stand-out, but they're all sharp, committed improvisors.
There's also a warm chemistry between the men, which is especially evident
if you arrive early to watch them getting ready on stage: They toss a ball
back and forth, and then toss each other back and forth...sending
a body message of "If you throw an improv concept at me, you can trust me
to not let it drop..." One of the Magnet's most popular shows.
10:30 pm at The Magnet Theatre, 254 West 29th Street (off 8th Avenue); tickets are $5
...and host Olde English
Very Fresh with Olde English: Our Show of Shows
Hilarious sketch comedy group and prodigious generator of funny videos Olde English
(Caleb Bark, Ben Popik, David Segal, Adam Conover, and Raphael Bob-Waksberg)
star in this wonderful show consisting of sketch, stand-up, short films, and more—
and devoted to all-new (i.e., Very Fresh) material.
Tonight Olde English will be "trying their hands at tons of tiny TV shows-- sitcoms, britcoms, sketch shows, and kvetch shows--live on the UCB stage. It'll be like late night channel surfing...except live, and not nearly as anti-social." If you saw last month's version, please be aware the group is promising to deliver all-new material for each show.
Midnight at UCBT, 307 West 26th Street (off 8th Avenue); tickets are $5
NYC Comedy Picks for Sunday 7/20/08
Tonight's recommendations for the best in New York City comedy
(in chronological order, with top picks marked by colored brackets) include:
[TOP PICK] UCBT's playground for celebrities and ace improvisors, ASSSSCAT 3000 (7:30 & 9:30 pm),
[TOP PICK] veteran improvisors Jess Allen, Tara Copeland, James Eason, and Jesse Falcon
pairing up in every possible combination to create six scenes
for a show devoted to duos in Ampers&nd (8:00 pm),
stellar comics Claudia Cogan & Jackie Monahan hosting guests Eric Andre (Comedy Central), Jon Friedman (Rejection Show), Vidur Kapur (LOGO), and Becky Ciletti at Doris Yeltsin (8:00 pm),
typically superb stand-ups at Vince Averill's & Jesse Popp's free Beauty Bar Comedy (9:00 pm),
[TOP PICK] and a small mob of fine stand-ups, including Michelle Buteau, Jackie Monahan, and Tom Ragu,
holding a roast and saying farewell to Adam Sank (before he moves to LA) on this final edition of
his free gay-themed Electro Shock Therapy Comedy Hour (10:00 pm).
The Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre's signature show, which features a monologist telling stories based on audience suggestions and a group of top improvisers (sometimes including stars such as SNL's Amy Poehler and Horatio Sanz) creating scenes based on the stories. There are two shows every Sunday which share the same format, but are otherwise entirely different because everything is improvised. The 7:30 pm show is $8; advance tickets might be sold out by the time you read this, but a limited number of seats are available at the door for
those who arrive early enough to nab 'em...and even more tickets are available for those willing to watch the show standing. The 9:30 show is free, with tickets distributed outside the theatre
at 8:15 pm; but again, you may need to come early and wait on line to ensure getting into
this first come, first served performance.
7:30 pm & 9:30 pm at UCBT, 307 West 26th Street (off 8th Avenue)
A showcase for talented improvisation twosomes.
Tonight's duos will be formed from these four highly skilled improvisors...
Jess Allen
Tara Copeland
James Eason
Jesse Falcon
...in every possible combination, resulting in six scenes.
8:00 pm at The Magnet Theatre, 254 West 29th Street (off 8th Avenue); tickets are $5
This monthly show is hosted by two delightful comedic gems:
Claudia Cogan (ECNY Award nominee for Best Female Stand-Up;
Logo Network, Sirius OutQ; for stand-up video about Claudia's aspirations to be
a stripper, please click here; for video about her being unemployed, please click here), and
Jackie Monahan (co-host of weekly NYC live comedy show Dykes on Mics;
Lesbians of Laughter Tour; for sharp stand-up video, please click here).
Tonight's stand-up guests are
Eric Andre (Comedy Central's Live at Gotham; 2007 HBO Aspen Comedy Festival;
Geico caveman; for a video sample, please click here),
Jon Friedman (host of the superb NYC live comedy extravaganza The Rejection Show; author of the book Rejected: Tales of the Failed, Dumped, and Canceled),
Victor Kapur (NBC's Stand Up for Diversity, LOGO Network), and Becky Ciletti.
8:00 pm (doors open at 7:30) at Rififi, 332 East 11th Street (between 1st & 2nd Avenues); $5
Hosts Vince Averill & Jesse Popp
Vince Averill (Comedy Central's Live at Gotham, DC Comedy Festival) and Jesse Popp (Comedy Central's Premium Blend) host this free comedy show.
Tonight's stand-up comics haven't been announced, but they're usually superb.
9:00 pm at Beauty Bar, 231 East 14th Street (between 2nd & 3rd Avenues); free
Jackie Monahan, Adam Sank, and Michelle Buteau
The Electro Shock Therapy Comedy Hour: Final Show & Roast!
Adam Sank (Last Comic Standing; VH1's Best Week Ever; Sirius OutQ Radio;
former TV news producer for FOX and WABC-TV;
written for The New York Times, Esquire Magazine, and The San Francisco Sentinel)
has hosted this free weekly gay-themed stand-up comedy show for over two years.
Adam has decided to move to LA, however, so tonight will be the final installment.
The comics helping bid the show adieu, and also holding a roast for Adam, include Brian Barry, Michelle Buteau, Karith Foster, Robin Fox, Brad Loekle, Jackie Monahan, and Tom Ragu.
To get a feel for the show, please click here.
10:00 pm at Therapy, 348 West 52nd Street (between 2nd & 3rd Avenues); free
Alternatively, consider seeing a funny and/or musical
Broadway, off-Broadway, or off-off-Broadway show.
To learn how theatre tickets can be purchased for around 50% off—
or, in some cases, for as little as $3.50 each—
please read Hy on Theatre Discounts.
Return to Previous NYC Comedy Picks
Copyright © 2008 Hy Bender
Email: hy@hyreviews.com