Tim & Eric Awesome Tour Great Job! (Cannery, 12/3)

Tickets are now on sale for the Nashville stop of the Tim & Eric Awesome Tour Great Job! Chrimbus Spectacular 2010 at the Cannery Ballroom December 3rd.

Legend has it that Tim Heidecker and Eric Wareheim mailed Bob Odenkirk an unsolicited demo dvd of their videos packed with an invoice, charging him for the package as an attempt to get his attention. The ploy worked, and it wasn’t long before Odenkirk helped the duo produce “Tom Goes to the Mayor” (a very odd, hilarious cartoon) for Cartoon Network’s Adult Swim. Tom ran from roughly 2004 to 2006, when TIm & Eric began working on their new show “Tim and Eric Awesome Show, Great Job!” – a very odd, hilarious sketch comedy show that has featured guest appearances from John C. Reilly, Neil Hamburger, “Weird Al” Yankovic, Maria Bamford, Patton Oswalt and many more wonderful people. The show uses cheesy editing and crappy effects to link together surrealistic, satirical anti-humor with public access-style music acts, fake commercials and poop joke weirdness to make what they refer to as “the nightmare version of television.”

Tim and Eric have taken the show on the road for their second multi-city tour leading up to the airing of their one hour special on December 5th 2010, called “Tim and Eric’s Chrimbus Special.”

The live show line-up includes Tim & Eric’s band, Pusswhip Banggang:

..and America’s Funnyman Neil Hamburger:

I’m just going to assume that you’ve already stopped reading this and bought your tickets.. if you haven’t.. I’ll just let Tim & Eric pitch you the show themselves:

Tim & Eric Awesome Tour Great Job! Chrimbus Spectacular 2010
w/ Neil Hamburger & Pusswhip Banggang
18+
December 3rd, 2010 @ 9pm
Cannery Ballroom
1 Cannery Row
Nashville, TN
(tickets)

TimAndEric.com

Nashville comics to compete in Laughing Skull Festival

Now in it’s second year, the Laughing Skull Comedy Festival has announced the comedians  who have been selected as participants, including several names familiar to Nashville comedy fans.

The brainchild of Atlanta’s Marshall Chiles and ComedySoapBox.com‘s Steve Hofstetter, the Laughing Skull Comedy Festival features a 25-city, two-day first round, followed by a five-day event in Atlanta. Comedy industry from all over the US and Canada will participate to help find, expose, and give work to some of today’s top emerging comedians.

Traveling to the Stardome comedy club in Birmingham (November 16th – 7:30 PM) will be: Chris Killian, Donna Carter, Brian E. Kiley and Chad Riden.

Among those competing at Sidesplitters in Tampa (November 17th – 8:00 PM) will be former Nashvillian Kendra Corrie.

The comics making the trip to the Comedy Catch in Chattanooga (November 17th – 8:00 PM) include Nashville’s Paul Curtis.

Congratulations and good luck to everybody!

Nissan whistle-blower Sharyn Bovat now doing stand-up

Nissan whistle-blower Sharyn Bovat just got written up by Punchline magazine – who embedded a video of her performing at Spanky’s last Tuesday. Of course, the Spanky’s regulars are heard talking in the background and/or heckling, so congratulations on YOUR punchline magazine debut, as well:

Punchline’s Josh Evans wrote, “Granted she’s by no means a seasoned comedienne, but Bovat shows some promise, if only for her comfortable stage presence and ability to generate at least a few good laughs.”
Sharyn will perform at Zanies Nov. 17th as part of Rik Roberts’ School Of Laughs graduation performance show.

Doug Stanhope announces Feb. 18, 2011 show at Exit/In

The great Doug Stanhope will return to Nashville for one show only February 18, 2011 at the Exit/In. Tickets are on sale now. If you’d like to read the N’Sup recap of his last show in town, see Anna Matsen’s review of his April 10, 2009 show.

February 18, 2011 – Doors at 8, show at 9

Exit/In
2208 Elliston Pl
Nashville, TN 37203
615-321-3340
http://www.exitin.com

Tickets: $20.00, on sale NOW.

Doug Stanhope brings his Heavenly gift of Comedy & Rock

18 and up. Its probably wrong to sneak in your own booze but I’m no bouncer.

(here’s the Facebook event)

<a href="http://www.linkedtube.com/Cg-X8HWAB1Mb9b5d6568376963c5b42cdfb371b00fb.htm">LinkedTube</a>

More infos:
DougStanhope.com
Twitter.com/DougStanhope
Facebook.com/officialstanhope

Sue Fabisch’s “Motherhood, the Musical” gets great review in Variety

Nashville native Sue Fabisch‘s “Motherhood, the Musical” just got a great review in Variety. Their site has some weird ‘subscribe now’ overlay that flops on top of articles a few seconds after they load.. which is annoying. So to save you from that, we’ve cut and pasted the review here:

Motherhood, the Musical
(Miniaci Performing Arts Center, Davie, Fla.; 498 seats; $40 top)
By BILL HIRSCHMAN

A GFour Prods. presentation of a musical play in one act by Sue Fabisch. Directed by Lisa Shriver.

Tasha – Kareema Khouri
Amy – Lisa Manuli
Brooke – Margot Moreland
Barb – Laura Turnbull

Some may sneer they wouldn’t be caught dead under any marquee announcing “Motherhood, the Musical.” That’s their loss. This examination of how tough it is to be a parent is so engaging, hilarious and touching that it is likely to be an even more successful tuner than the same producers’ other mega-hit, “Menopause the Musical,” which has played to 11 million people in 250 cities since 2001.

Anticipating a similar success, the GFour producers (whose Broadway resume encompasses the original “Nine” and “9 to 5”) have mounted the world premiere on their home turf outside Fort Lauderdale, Fla., to ensure the new tuner isn’t smothered in its crib.

But unlike “Menopause’s” collection of parody songs, “Motherhood” has a mostly original score and book by first-timer Sue Fabisch, whose country songs include satirical, occasionally poignant vignettes of suburban life, bearing titles like “Costco Queen.”

Be assured that diabetics will be in no danger of going into insulin shock over homespun homilies; when it’s not cracking wise, which is most of the time, “Motherhood” is a slick, polished work that embraces genuine sentiment without becoming manipulatively sentimental. It disguises itself as nothing more than an entertaining evening of chuckles and tears. But without overreaching, Fabisch plugs into the universality of human experience.

“Motherhood” focuses on wide-eyed Amy (Lisa Manuli), who is close to giving birth when her neighbors throw her a shower. The club includes tart-tongued Barb (Laura Turnbull), overwhelmed with four children; stressed-out Brooke (Margot Moreland), splicing motherhood and a law practice; and Tasha (Kareema Khouri), a minivan-driving divorcee who wonders if the split was worth the damage to her child.

At first, Amy gushes with naive expectations, but her clear-eyed friends quickly educate her on the draining demands and unique delights of motherhood.

Fabisch’s ebullient score echoes genres from classic rock in “Nothing but the Best for My Baby” to roof-raising gospel in “The Kids Are Finally Asleep” to introspective ballads such as a new mother’s sudden understanding of her own mother, “Now I Know.”

Taken by themselves, Fabisch’s tuneful melodies and nimble lyrics might seem just pleasant and inventive. But melded as one piece, their synergy creates something more powerful and touching. The actors’ wry but earnest performances never vamp or wink at the material, and keep the tuner from becoming just a stale riff on “Parenthood.”

Motherhood marks the directorial debut of Manhattan-based Lisa Shriver, who choreographed GFour’s “Ring of Fire” in 2005. She provides some classic girl-group choreography, but her real achievement is the smooth fluidity and polish that imbue the production.

Sets, Sean McClelland; costumes, Ellis Tillman; lighting, John Demous; sound, Matt Corey; production stage manager, Amy London. Opened, reviewed Oct. 7, 2010. Runs through Oct. 31. Running time: 93 MIN.

Musical numbers: “Welcome to Motherhood/I’m Having a Baby,” “Mommy, Mommy, Mommy,” “Nothing But the Best (For My Baby),” “Minivan,” “I’m Danny’s Mom,” “Costco Queen,” “I Leak,” “Every Other Weekend,” “How Great They Were,” “Do It,” “Baby Weight Blues,” “Not Gonna Take It Anymore,” “Grannyland,” “Bun in the Oven Medley,” “Now I Know,” “The Kids Are Finally Asleep, “When the Kids Are Grown.”

Read more: http://www.variety.com/review/VE1117943821.html?categoryid=33&cs=1#ixzz12FfjrQzO