The most star-studded day on the local comedy calendar this fall has to be Sept. 23. Great talent will be competing for your attention from various stages across the Twin Cities on the very same night.
Jackie Kashian, whose material is so smart that it can make your head hurt, is back at Acme Comedy Co., the Minneapolis club where her career initially took off. "The King of Queens" fans will want to head to nearby State Theatre to see if star Kevin James, who is on his Irregardless Tour, is just as relatable in person as he is on screen.
And there's Dave Chappelle. Despite the controversy that swirls around him, he remains immensely popular — and unpredictable. For his last arena show in the area, he brought along surprise guests Justin Bieber and Usher.
Just a few blocks from Chappelle's show at Xcel Energy Center, another marquee name will be at work at the Fitzgerald Theater. Margaret Cho has been doing stand-up for 40 years, breaking numerous barriers along the way. Her sitcom, "All-American Girl," may have been canceled after just one season, but it laid the groundwork for everything from "Fresh Off the Boat" to "Crazy Rich Asians."
Cho, 54, spoke by phone last month about her career — and Chappelle — as she drove to the doctor's office in Los Angeles. It was a rare moment where she wasn't with her dog, Lucia, a Chihuahua and Dalmatian mix who will be in the wings during Cho's St. Paul gig.
Q: I guess you've really made it when you can travel with your dog.
A: It's great that I get to take her on tour with me. It's very lavish compared to the early days when I would rent a car and drive from one side of the country to the other, doing shows along the way.
Q: Is there any part of you that misses that scrappy period?
A: Absolutely. At the time, it was a real gamble, whether this career would work out. although I had a fairly good level of success right out of my teens. But we were all struggling. Everyone shared hotel rooms or apartments, did shows together.
For one TV show, Janeane Garofalo, Karen Kilgariff and I could only afford one dress, so we bought one that fit us all and shared it. We all wore it a little bit differently on stage. I don't know who ended up with that dress. It should probably be in the Comedy Museum.