6/7: UCB’s Matt Besser @ Bongo Java


Wed. June 7 @ 7:30pm
Bongo Java After Hours Theatre
2007 Belmont Blvd.; Nashville, TN
615-385-1188
Tix: $8 advance; $10 door
www.BongoJava.com
An amateur could not pull off the subject matter or format of this show.. actually, a lot of professional comics couldn’t pull this off: it’s an hour-long one man show full of religious-themed story telling and well structured stand-up with improvisational elements. The pacing is consistent and conversational. Besser is relaxed, confident and commited to the material. It’s his real life he’s telling you about.. and it’s funnier than hell.
It’s no surprise to the comedy nerds who idolize Matt Besser and envy him for his resume. After graduating from Amherst College (” where I learned how to collect CDs”), Matt toured the Midwest doing stand-up, while taking improvisation classes with Del Close at Chicago’s Improv Olympic Theater. In 1991, he became a founding member of the sketch group Upright Citizens Brigade, and with them has performed and written stage productions ever since. Starting in 1997, the UCB produced a sketch show bearing their name for three seasons on Comedy Central.
Soon after the success of the tv show the UCB opened their own comedy theater and improv school which now operates in both New York City and Los Angeles. He co-created and performed on the spoof debate show “Crossballs” for Comedy Central. He has directed several stage productions including “Feature Feature”, “Immortal Combat”, and Todd Barry in “Icky”. Besser’s one-man shows include: “How Much I Lied”, “May I Help You Dumbass?”, “Don’t Be A Dick”, and “RUhi?”. He has appeared on “Late Night with Conan O’Brien” and he’ll be at Nashville’s Bongo Java After Hours Theater on June 7th.

Dear Atheist, Humanist, Secularist, Theist, Cynic, & UCB Fan:
I have a show that Ive been doing for over a year at our theaters in NYC and LA. The show is essentially stand up comedy about current issues concerning the separation of church and state, and I tie these issues into the crazy letters of my Evangelical grandmother who objected to the marriage of my Jewish dad to my Protestant mother. She thought that my parents were going to hell and she would not like this show at all, G*d rest her soul.
Please inform me of any separation of church and state issues currently boiling in your state. I’d love to know about them.
Sincerely,
Matt Besser
www.mattbesser.com
www.ucbtheatre.com
www.uprightcitizens.org


The subject matter doesn’t sound all that funny. “Separation of church and state” doesn’t sound like the theme of a night full of laughs so much as it sounds like a heated, drunken argument you might find going on next to a burning pile of tires somewhere between Nashville and Jackson. Matt Besser knows that. He knows Nashville is the over-sized urban-cowboy-style buckle of the Bible belt. He knows J.D. and Jimbo down at the tire fire aren’t coming to Bongo Java on a Wednesday night to see a comedy show – hell, he probably knows J.D. and Jimbo from the old days back home in Little Rock, Arkansas.

My father is a Jew from Little Rock, Arkansas. My mother was a Christian from Harrison, Arkansas.. and somehow I’m an athiest now living in LA. I was not banned from Arkansas by the Babelonians like the Jews were, I left on my own accord. The main reason I don’t live in Arkansas is because there’s not a booming comedy industry there right now.. but even if I wasn’t a comedian I don’t think I could live there because it’s a Red State.


Besser’s bias is Blue, but he doesn’t paint us all with the same Southern-red-state brush, he singles out the ignorant and intolerant among us – mostly within his own family:

At the end of her life, [my grandmother’s] prayers became so absurd that she actually started writing letters to God. Here’s two of her letters right here, you can see this one is actually addressed to God, This one has her return address on it, just in case it got stuck in the Devil’s mailbox accidentially.
On the inside, she wrote simply, “Diane and family” – that’s my mother’s name. “Diane and family – our relationship with them has been released to Christ.” and what she meant by that was, she didn’t want my family to go to Hell because my father was a Jew. So that’s what her prayers mostly consisted of for the rest of her life.


Somehow, “the half-Jew of the South” survived his Arkansas upbringing and has condensed it into joke form. His stories about learning what it means to be Jewish only from Woody Allen movies and being the only Jew at born-again Christian sports camp are funny and conversational, but not preachy or mean-spirited. Matt doesn’t belittle the beliefs of the audience, but instead offers a different, hilarious, perspective on them and some insight into his own without forcing his beliefs on you or criticizing you for thinking differently.

We don’t pray, as athiests.. we ask questions. That’s what we do. We smirk a lot when we ask them. Athiests are big smirkers. Our favorite question is: if there is a god, why would he allow blank to happen? Why would he allow a hurricane? Suicide bombers? The World Trade Center? You know, tragedies are usually upsetting to a lot of people.. but the day after tragedies, athiests are all excited ’cause they think, “I get to ask my question today!” There’s always an answer: “God works in mysterious ways.”
Don’t you wish you could use the same answer with your roommate? “Man, how come you haven’t picked up all the trash and cleaned up these dishes?”
“Well, Bob, I work in mysterious ways. Who knows my great plan?”
“Come on, Matt, take the trash out right now!”
“Bob, I will smite you. Pillars of salt do not pay the rent.”


The butt of the jokes isn’t any single belief structure.. Besser points out both the hypocrisy of the Catholic church and the ridiculous extremes of Jewish law. He discusses things as silly and trivial as sneazing and as heavy as the Terri Schiavo debate and the battle between Creationism and Evolution. He doesn’t simply sit smug on a pedistal, taking shots at both sides.. he offers alternative solutions:

I don’t believe in Creation or Evolution, I believe Santa Claus created Man as a toy for dinosaurs. And who needs Ten Commandments? Santa Claus has one commandment – don’t be naughty, be nice. Doesn’t that cover everything basically? If everyone followed that, the prisons would be empty.. except for weed dealers.


Don’t be scared, zealots! It’s just a comedy show.. and it’s a really, really good one. The harshest words are in criticism of himself, in the form of a letter his mother received from a “family friend.” This final letter that Matt reads is a heart-breaking, devastating denouncement of his family in which he is singled out and treated as a sub-human “albatross” around his mother’s neck. The very fact that Besser has the courage to confront these words, let alone read them to theaters full of strangers is an incredible thing.. but he has also turned them into one of the funniest performances you’ll ever get a chance to see live.. and that is why he has the reputation of being one of the sharpest comedic minds of our time.
The bottom line is this: you’re a damned fool if you miss this show.
Wed. June 7 @ 7:30pm
Bongo Java After Hours Theatre
2007 Belmont Blvd.; Nashville, TN
615-385-1188
Tix: $8 advance; $10 door
www.BongoJava.com
Comments?

Last Comic Standing IV premiers

Last Comic Standing, Season IV: The Quest For A Sitcom Star premiered last night and the the reviews are trickling in:
From the wonderful SHECKYmagazine:
Why this desire to promote this thing as a yahoo amateur contest? We’re not clear as to why this can’t be a clash of seasoned professionals who are all good at what they do. Instead of a dicey sideshow where a part-time student might take all the marbles. Have they not learned their lesson from Season I’s Mr. Phan?!
(read more)
From TVsquad:
What struck me about the audition phase this year is how they decided to not show as many bad comedians as they had in the past, instead concentrating on maybe a half-dozen good comedians who happened to have nice back stories to tell.
(read more)
From the Boston Herald:
“None of them are open-mikers. They’ve all done it for four or five years, going through the comedy-club circuit all over America. But no one in the final five is a household name by any means. But they’re really, really funny.”
One could ask, if they’re so funny, why aren’t they already successful? Clark doesn’t have an answer. “For some reason, a lot of these comics get passed over,” he said. “I think it’s the luck of the draw sometimes.”
(read more)
From the Gannett news service:
If this show works so well, why did it disappear for 20 months from NBC’s ratings-challenged, fourth-place lineup?
(read more)
From “Canada Anne”:
I received an entire eight seconds on the Last Comic Standing show last night. The funny part is that they “bleeped” out two of my words: “bitches and ass”. I didn’t know those were expletives and “bleep-able”words! I thought NBC has come further then that..
(read more)
Discuss it in our forum!

Lewis Black: Black Attack

Punchline Magazine has a good interview / article about Lewis Black where he talks about getting his start in comedy, the movies he’s working on and a show that Comedy Central may or may not air, “Red State Diaries”.

He may be pissed off but Lewis Black has his reasons. Punchline Magazine spent some time with the future stand-up comedy legend to see what makes him tick – and ticked. In the process, we found a softer side of the surly man in black.
Read the article at Punchline Magazine

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5/12 & 5/13: Cat Scratch Fever Comedy Concert


Three very funny females storm the stage and take no prisoners.
Dawna Kinne, Valarie Storm & Mel Fine, in a non-stop-laughs comedy concert. Mother’s Day weekend – May 12 & May 13 – 8:00 p.m. each night – bring your mom, sister, daugther, wife, brother, son, dad, uncle, husband. It’s comedy for everyone!!
This show is rated R-17 for adult content and language.
This show will sell out so order your tickets early (only 320 Seats available per show) $15.00 (advance) $18.00 (door) $12.00 (MTSU Students w/ID).
Tickets available online at: mollyguard
Patterson Park Center Theater
521 Mercury Blvd
Murfreesboro, TN
37130

What Chicago taught Conan

The Chicago Tribune has an interesting write-up about Conan O’Brien’s time in Chicago in the late 80’s (with Bob Odenkirk, Robert Smigel & them) in anticipation of his upcoming week of shows there:

There were a lot of funny people around that summer — O’Brien had landed in the middle of a sketch-comedy mafia that would go on to infiltrate every corner of television over the next two decades — but even then, the gawky Harvard grad stood out.

Read the entire column at the Chicago Tribune.
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