Tag Archives: Comedy

Raccoonery at the Vancouver Fringe

Morgan BraytonEver had the experience of knowing a friend was talented - really talented? And then you see her truly rock out, and you realize, oh my god, I’d only seen a sliver of what she can do?

That’s how I felt watching Morgan Brayton performing her show Raccoonery last night at the Vancouver Fringe Festival. I knew she was funny, but had no idea she was that funny.

Nor did I know she could write characters that are hateful, self-delusional, poisonous or flat-out ignorant… yet bring out their humanity with just a few words, an insecure hesitation, or an offhand gesture, and turn what could have been contempt into compassion.

Nor did I know she could sing, or that she could write the kind of terrific, side-splitting songs that punctuate the show’s procession of characters. (Mayor Gregor Robertson gets a shout-out in one of them.)

Nor did I know that a friend I’ve known and worked with for the past two years could vanish so completely into a character, make me believe her, and then pop out again inside the space of a few minutes.

I know that now. Which is why I’m pretty confident in urging you to go see Raccoonery:

Morgan Brayton (Girls Like Me, 30 Helens) is back with a new collection of comedic characters; a moth with boyfriend troubles; a high school-hating, Van Halen-loving valedictorian of the class of ’84; a princess with a penchant for ice cream; oh, and the return of Button Bradley. Non-stop raccoonery from beginning to end!

“Brayton’s characterizations are detailed, her timing is impeccable, and her range is astonishing.” -Georgia Straight

“Proves sketch comedy can have the same emotional heft as any form of theatre.” -Xtra West

“She’s funny! -Westender
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It runs September 11, 16, 17 and 19 on Granville Island as part of the Fringe Festival. (Comes complete with naughty language and – what’s the expression? – mature themes.) Buy tickets here.

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Join me at Twestival!

I’ll be performing a stand-up set at Vancouver Twestival, the Twitter-centric fundraising event taking place Saturday, Sept. 12 from 4:00 – 7:00 pm at Ceili’s Irish Pub and Restaurant. (Sorry to disappoint, but I’m not the gentleman featured in the photo that Google Maps displays.)

I love the spirit behind Twestival – 200 local Twestivals happened last time around in cities around the world – and Rebecca Bollwitt is a total mensch for organizing it again. This year, the funds raised through ticket sales and a silent auction will go to the BC Children’s Hospital Foundation – an added bonus, because I’ve been working closely with them on their Be a Superhero Facebook app and personalized video.

Better yet, you get to enjoy the company of chanteuse Rachael Chatoo and Erica Ehm… and a bunch of community-minded, thoroughly Twitterfied Vancouverites. It promises to be a blast.

Get tickets and more details here. I hope I’ll see you at Twestival!

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Happy landings, Royal Canadian Air Farce

The Air Farce Comedy AlbumFittingly, they picked April Fools’ Day to announce it: the Royal Canadian Air Farce is coming in for a landing.

In 1978, my parents took me to see the Farce’s original lineup – Luba Goy, Don Ferguson, Dave Broadfoot, the late John Morgan and Roger Abbott – performing at Camp Fortune, in the Gatineau Hills just north of Ottawa. I was crazy for the radio show, laughing at every joke whether I got it or not, and the live concert was absolute heaven. As the night dimmed into darkness, the light on the stage only got brighter – and there, right there, were the people who hosted those voices, who delivered those hilarious lines, who did that magical thing of making me laugh.

I can’t say that’s where my drive to become a comedian began – I’d been a smartass for years – but it sure helped to kick it into a higher gear. What helped even more was just how generous they all were with their fans. I still have the Air Farce album they all signed for me that night.

A few months later, Air Farce performed again, this time right in Ottawa. And again, they were delighted to meet their fans afterward – and Don Ferguson, probably my favourite cast member at the time, was tremendously gracious when this 15-year-old pressed a typewritten, heavily-Liquid-Papered radio script into his hands. He promised to look at it, and I went home in a state of utter bliss.

You know how these stories end: a form letter, maybe a nice little note wishing me luck?

What I got back was a long, long letter filled with notes for punching up the script, tightening the story, making it funnier and faster. And if the story ended there, Don and Roger, who I seem to remember also contributed some notes, would be mere saints.

But it didn’t. Here’s what lifted these people into the status of gods to me: Don connected me with Gord Holtam and Rick Olsen, the two writers who’d joined the show a year before that concert under the Gatineau stars. And they invited me to pitch – even though the show didn’t use outside writers (something I didn’t know at the time).

That began a process of rewrites and intensive assistance on their part that ultimately saw two of my ideas combined into one tight sketch. I got a cheque for a little over a hundred dollars, and saw it performed and recorded at the CBC’s Cabbagetown studios.

My words. Performed by the biggest stars I knew. Making an audience laugh. And all in front of my extended family – after I’d been taken backstage and introduced to the cast as one of the writers for that night’s episode. And if memory serves me, I hadn’t had my 16th birthday yet.

Think about what that would mean to a kid. Set aside what it meant for my confidence as a comedian (it was huge) – just imagine the inner resilience that kind of experience builds. Imagine how long the echoes from the audience’s laughter and applause would have lasted in my mind.

Whatever time using my ideas might have saved them was easily eaten up by the time Rick and Gord spent working with me to make them usable. This wasn’t a business proposition; it wasn’t developing a potential supplier (remember, they didn’t actually use outside writers); this was sheer good-heartedness.

And the experience lasted a lifetime. I’m a writer. I’m back in comedy. And during those times when I doubt my skill at the funny, I can still conjure up the echoes from Cabbagetown.

Thank you, Don, Roger, Rick and Gord – and Luba, Dave and John.

“Women on Top” to run at UBC

I’ve corresponded with Matthew Klippenstein a few times over the past few years, and found him to be an engaging, entertaining writer. Now I learn that, in addition to being an engineer at Ballard Power Systems, he’s also a playwright.

So I’m pretty disappointed that I’ll have to miss the staging of his first play… but that doesn’t mean you have to!

The details (updated – dates changed):

This is part of UBC’s Classics Week, so it’s based on an old Greek comedy (“the assemblywomen”) wherein a bunch of women disguise themselves as men, enter the Assembly (Athenian Parliament) and vote themselves absolute power. And since it’s a Greek comedy, it’s got the three C’s: a chorus, cross-dressing, and coarse humour. All fortified with three musical numbers!

Dates: Jan. 27-30 (Saturday through Tuesday)
Time: 8 p.m. (with a 3 p.m. performance on Jan 28)
Cost: $10 (I think)

Show: “Women on top”

Plot: The women of ancient Athens disguise themselves as men and vote themselves absolute power. Hilarity ensues

Where: Dettwiller Theatre, in the Dettwiller Pavilion of the UBC Hospital, just south of the main building (Google map)

Parking: Hospital parking is expensive, but there’s free parking after 6 p.m. all along Western Parkway just south of University Boulevard. (See map.)

Tickets: if you know when you can make it, I’ll pass the news along to the co-producer / booker, to keep some seats open at that show :-)

NetSquared: thanks for the music tonight

These guys along with several other very talented folks (including comedian Heather Gold) performed tonight at the NetSquared conference party. (Visit their MySpace page and check out the song Change Tha Nation.)
It’s hard, awfully damn hard, to perform for a conference party. A lot of your audience  is in the hallway, talking about the day’s sessions or next week’s work or next month’s potential business. Folks inside the room are probably talking, too, or getting food from the buffet, or pouring coffee, or…

So my hat’s off to all of them. More links to follow as I get ‘em – and thanks for your efforts, especially that golden-voiced singer who kindly performed “Happy Birthday” for a certain 43-year-old conference attendee. You made my night.

Female, funny and fearless? Apply within.

The LaffRiotGirls are looking for Vancouver’s funniest new female comic:

Think you have what it takes to be a stand up comedian? E-mail laffriotgirls (at) shaw (dot) ca to sign up for our Fourth Annual Comedy Competition. This year’s competition will take place in February with the finals to be held March 9th at Lafflines Comedy Club! New comics are those with less than three years stand up comedy experience. Bring us your funniest 7 minutes of comedy (or less) and may the best woman win!

Over $800 in cash and prizes available to be won!

Take my shrink. Please.

From pal and comedy mentor David Granirer:

Come Laugh Your Head Off and Support Mental Health!

Stand Up For Mental Health 2005 Graduation Showcase, Sunday November 20 at 7:00 pm at the Arts Club Theatre in Vancouver.

With MC Vancouver Mayor and future Senator Larry Campbell.

Led by counsellor and stand up comic David Granirer, Stand Up For Mental Health teaches stand-up comedy to people with mental illness as a way of building confidence and fighting public stigma.

Both our 2004 and 2005 classes will be performing. CBC’s The Passionate Eye will also be there filming for the documentary they’re doing on us.

Tickets are only $13.00 each, available through Ticketmaster (604) 280-4444 http://www.ticketmaster.ca or contact david@standupformentalhealth.com (604) 205-9242.

For more information on the program go to http://www.standupformentalhealth.com

All money raised goes to our alumni program!