Sketchfest 2013

It's Sketchfest time in San Francisco again...This is always a super fun festival and I'm thrilled to be a part of these events Feb 8-10.

Come join!

 

FRIDAY, FEB 8TH, 8PM:

SEX a.k.a. Wieners and Boobs

A play (about sex, weiners, boobs, hookers, gigolos and more)
Written by and starring Joe Lo Truglio, Michael Showalter and David Wain
with Shari Albert, Ian Helfer, Nina Hellman, Rob Huebel, Peter Salett and Jeremy Shamos
at Marines’ Memorial Theatre

PLEASE NOTE: This performance includes a scene from David Mamet's Glengarry Glenn Ross.
tickets here

 

sex


 

SATURDAY, FEB 9TH, 8PM:

SF Sketchfest Tribute to Childrens Hospital

with Lake Bell, Rob Corddry, Erinn Hayes, Rob Huebel, Ken Marino, Jonathan Stern, David Wain and more

at Cobb’s Comedy Club
tickets here

 

Lake Bell, Ken Marino, Zandy Hartig, Rob Huebel, Erinn Hayes, Rob Corddry

 


 

SUNDAY FEB 10TH, 11AM

Don’t Let The Comedians Do Story Time!

Mo Willems' Picture Books Become Sketch Comedy

A comedy show for young kids and families with Mo Willems and special guests Michael Ian Black, Rachel Dratch, Janeane Garofalo, Joe Lo Truglio, Ken Marino, Laraine Newman, Patton Oswalt, Andy Richter, Maya Rudolph and David Wain.

Kanbar Hall at the JCCSF
SOLD OUT (some tix avail day of show @ door) 

  


 

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10TH, 8PM

Stella Classic Nightclub Show

with Michael Ian Black, Michael Showalter and David Wain
with surprise guest comedians and music by John Vanderslice

at the Mezzanine
tickets here

stella 

 

Newsreaders!

I'm very proud of my association with NEWSREADERS, which premieres this THURSDAY (1/17/13) at midnight on Adult Swim.

hero-newsreaders-premiere-2

hero-newsreaders-premiere-2

The seed of Newsreaders actually began with our movie The Ten, which featured Mather Zickel as reporter Louis LaFonda.  

Then in our 2nd season of Childrens Hospital, we did a "behind the scenes" episode in the form of a news report, anchored by Louis LaFonda, as part of a fictional series, "Newsreaders." 

That episode ("The End of the Middle"), became a fan favorite and we reprised the "Newsreaders" format again in seasons 3 and 4 of Childrens Hospital.

And now Newsreaders is a show of its own, taking on all manner of dumb and funny topics, still anchored by Mather Zickel as Louis LaFonda, along with a truly amazing cast of other correspondents.  

I hope you'll spread the word and check it out! Let me know what you think.

Oh, and PS - you can see the first episode RIGHT NOW at AdultSwim.com or YouTube.

UPDATE: Great interview with Mather Zickel in the New York Times

Les Misérables!

I've been a fan of the musical version of Les Misérables since I first saw it on Broadway in the late 80's, so I've been excited about the movie version since I started casting it in my head that very same night. (Kevin Costner as Jean Valjean; Jennifer Grey as Fantine.)

And now seeing the movie 25 years later I understand why it took so long to get it made. It's something of a lose-lose proposition.  

The rule of thumb in adapting material for the screen is to know that film is a different medium and therefore being slavishly faithful to the source material is almost always a mistake.  But the problem with Les Misérables is that 60 million people have seen it on the stage, and my guess is a good percentage of those (like me) have committed most every word and note of it to memory.  So "reinventing" it would likely turn off a lot of fans who are singing along in their heads. (For those who don't know, this show is 99% sung from start to finish with almost no spoken dialogue.)

The irony to me is that what made the musical work so well on the stage was how liberal they were with their source material.  They took a 1500 page 19th Century French novel and edited, shaped, molded, reinvented every aspect of the story's broad strokes to create a totally modern (very British) stage spectacle, which blew me away.  But when it comes to the movie, they just pretty much do what was in the 25-year-old play.  And much of what works about the play also works on the screen--I was moved by the epic scope and universal themes. But even more of what works about the play falls flat in the movie. 

For example, most of the indelible show-stopping moments from the play simply don't translate to the "real world" language of a mainstream movie. Examples: All the characters coming together on stage together on the first act closer "One Day More"; the students marching in lockstep looking like they're moving forward but they're not in "Do You Hear the People Sing"; Javert's suicide. I think they should have gone for it more and used all the tools unique to cinema in 2012, but instead they just filmed it in a very restrained, conservative style.  I would have been curious to see e.g. Baz Luhrmann's do this.

Also a lot of the plot shortcuts that you can forgive on stage seem so much more glaring on screen (e.g. Marius and Cosette speaking for two minutes before committing to each other for life.)

I love Tom Hooper's choice of having all the actors sing on set to a live piano (later replaced by orchestra), but this too often goes overboard with actors starting and stopping as if to make sure that we're always aware that they, not a pre-recorded music track, are deciding the tempo.  Also they seem to mix all of the music low, I guess so we understand the words? 

All the cast are great and well chosen (with the exception of Russell Crowe whose performance is hampered by the fact that he cannot sing) but there are too many extreme closeups and too many tears streaming down faces. These songs are awesome - you don't have to cry through all of them for us to get emotional weight. 

Also it is super weird that famous American actors (Anne Hathaway & Amanda Seyfried) sing in a British accent while pretending to be French. Perhaps they thought it would be even more distracting among the otherwise British/Australian cast for them to sing in their normal voice? 

Anyway I'm glad I saw it. Movie musicals are really really hard to pull off. My favorites: Hair, Moulin Rouge, Tommy, Wizard of Oz, South Park.

PS: Extra points for casting Colm Wilkinson as the bishop. That was great. 

PPS: Here's my dumb version of "One Day More" and of course me and Paul Rudd doing "Confrontation"

 

Tonight: "WISEDOCS"

An earth-shattering NEW episode of the Emmy™ Award winning Childrens Hospital debuts tonight!

Mafia kingpin Vito (Eddie "The Big Ragu" Mekka) lies about his age to get treated by the doctors at Childrens.  

Joey Coco Diaz Eddie Mekka

 

But Lt. Briggs (Nick Offerman) might just see through the ruse...

Offerman

 

Meanwhile Vito's son Dookie (David Krumholtz) strikes up a romance with Dr. Cat Black (Lake Bell).

Krumholtz

Cat black

Plus Nurse Dori (Zandy Hartig) has a freak-out on Sy (Henry Winkler); Owen (Rob Huebel) tries to teach Briggs what it means to be a doctor; and Chief (Megan Mullally) competes with Blake (Rob Corddry) over who can do more extracurricular kid doctoring on their day off.  

And, also, one of the main regular characters gets killed. 

Set your DVR for 12 midnight, tonight on Adult Swim! 

OR did you know you can download the whole season from  from iTunes or Amazon