Chicago club opens doors for emerging comics
Topics: From the Wires, Entertainment News
In this June 8, 2012 photo, Mary Lindsey, owner if the Jokes and Notes comedy club is silhouetted as she seats guest for the first of two shows in Chicago's Bronzeville neighborhood. African-American female club owners are a rarity in the industry of comedy, but Lindsey is breaking barriers and uplifting a community by providing a place where raw comedic talent can hone their skills. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast) (Credit: AP)CHICAGO (AP) — She may be in the comedy business, but Mary Lindsey runs her club like a drill sergeant, and the young comics spilling in and out of her door know better than to ignore her commands.
Watch your mouth and the clock. Foul language is offensive. Entertainers who exceed their performance time get hit with fines —$100 for going over and $50 for every minute thereafter.
Lindsey is the owner of Jokes and Notes, one of the few comedy clubs in the U.S. that’s owned and operated by a black woman. The club features emerging comedians, and Chicago native Milton “Lil Rel” Howery is among those who has honed his talents there. For a third year in a row, the club on Chicago’s South Side is also a venue for one of the nation’s largest and most prestigious comedy festivals, TBS Just for Laughs.
“The more I see these young comics achieve, the more I want to help them,” said Lindsey, who also co-owned an earlier Chicago club known to feature minority comics before she left to start a house-cleaning company. “Yes, I put this fear in them, but I’ve given up-and-coming comedians opportunities that other club owners wouldn’t.
“I’m a nice person, but if I displayed that, none of this would work.”
TBS Just for Laughs convenes scores of comedians in the city for six days, and Jokes and Notes is its only South Side venue. The festival features well-known acts such as Sarah Silverman, Janeane Garofalo and Hannibal Burress, while also providing venues for the kind of emerging talent Lindsey promotes.
“Some of the best talent is coming out of that club,” Just for Laughs programming director Robbie Praw says of Lindsey’s club.
Lindsey’s career has taken twists and turns. She spent 10 years working at the Chicago Board Options Exchange before getting into the laugh business and opening All Jokes Aside with Raymond Lambert and James Alexander. A burned-out Lindsey left that club shortly before it closed in 1998 and started a successful residential cleaning business. Then, seven years ago, she decided to get back into comedy.
Howery is the most recent sensation to step out of Jokes and Notes and into the mainstream. Howery is set to star in the reboot of “In Living Color,” a sketch comedy series that debuted on Fox television in the ’90s.
“I’ve been coming to Jokes and Notes since they opened,” Howery said. “I used to come here every Wednesday for the open mic to work out. This club has opened a lot of doors for me.”



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