As she approached her thirtieth birthday, Erin Terry decided to do something sheโ€™d never done before: stand-up comedy. Sheโ€™d always been a funny person, the kind of person friends ask to retell a funny story that happened to all of them, but she didnโ€™t think of herself as a comedian.ย 

โ€œI really had tried hard to ignore my leanings to get on stages and talk and try to make people laugh for a long time,โ€ Terry says. She knew some acquaintances doing open mics; she thought she was funnier. That was the motivation she needed. โ€œI decided that, before I turned thirty, I was going to get on stage and do a routine.โ€

She watched stand-up routines online. She practiced with a hairbrush in front of her mirror. For her first open mic, in February 2014 at Raleighโ€™s Tir Na Nog, she invited all of her friends and familyโ€”that way she knew someone would laugh. The real test, she says, came the next month, when she did another set for a room full of strangers. When they laughed at her jokes, she knew she was hooked.

It took her only a few months to notice how male-dominated the scene was. Shows rarely featured more than one female comic, if any. But sheโ€™d already met lots of women doing comedy in the Triangle. Why werenโ€™t they getting the same stage time?

โ€œI started asking the women on the scene, โ€˜How do you get booked?โ€™โ€ Terry says. โ€œAre there any shows that do more than one woman at a time? How do we tell them that there is room for more than one woman?โ€

She didnโ€™t think the men were being intentionally malicious; she attributed the discrepancy to a gross oversight on their part. Through her conversations with these women comedians, one thing became apparent: They could run their own show, by women, featuring women.

That way, Terry says. โ€œWe can all shine a bit more instead of trying to duke it out one at a time.โ€

To get an audience, Terry decided to do the show on First Friday in downtown Raleigh. She booked seven comedians, a tall line-up. The now-closed bar Common 414 agreed to let them do a one-time show there. Nervous about the turnout, she worked hard to promote it. Her efforts paid off: By show time, it was standing room only.

The inaugural Eyes Up Here showcase, in March 2015, was a smashing success.

Terry decided that night that Eyes Up Here couldnโ€™t be a one-time thing. Common 414 couldnโ€™t commit to a monthly show, so Terry approached Kings and Neptunes, both of which agreed to give her a regular show. She booked line-ups of exclusively women, and began encouraging curious women to try out jokes at open mics.

โ€œI joke that I started doing comedy so I would stop stalking my ex-boyfriend on Facebook,โ€ says Elisse Thompson, a comedian who is now an organizer and host with Eyes Up Here. โ€œErin was very welcoming, giving stage time when I was really new. If you donโ€™t get stage time, you canโ€™t grow as a comic. And if you only do a couple of minutes here and there, you really wonโ€™t grow. Erin has given me a lot of stage time, and she does that for other new and aspiring comedians.โ€ย 

Thompson now runs her own monthly show at Bull City Ciderworks, giving stage time for short stand-up sets of emerging comedians.

Itโ€™s easy to applaud Terry for bringing more women comedians to the stage. But just as remarkable is that Terry took a meaningful concept and drove it to be successful as possible: Comedians and collaborators in the Triangle note her ingenuity and doggedness as reasons for why Eyes Up Here has been so successful.

โ€œNow that I have been in the comedy scene for a little while, Iโ€™m blown away,โ€ Thompson says. โ€œIโ€™m happy doing my comedy mainly with Eyes Up Here, because I know I will be supported that way. The audience is usually more engaged, bigger, and better than the other showcases that Iโ€™ve done that have been run by men.โ€

The ingredients that make Eyes Up Here so successful is its continuing relationship with venues, persistent and welcoming promotion, and, most important, how Terry grows and develops comedians.

โ€œErin is the sister that you always wanted to have,โ€ Thompson says. โ€œSheโ€™s supportive and welcoming. Sheโ€™s one of the sweetest people, but she also keeps it real. I donโ€™t have any issue with trusting her with my own career in comedy, my own ventures in comedy.โ€

In the almost four years since Eyes Up Hereโ€™s first show in Raleigh, it has grown into a multipronged effort, with regular shows in downtown Raleigh, Durham, and Asheville. Terry has driven carfuls of women comedians to Charlotte and Wilmington to do femme-only shows. There are workshops and open mics targeted at new comedians, including Thompsonโ€™s show at Bull City Ciderworks. Eyes Up Here has also done special themed shows like โ€œFunny for a Fat Girl.โ€

Terry says Eyes Up Here isnโ€™t done growing. In 2019, she hopes to continue its regular programming across the Triangle, as well as host an all-femme comedy festival in Durham.

โ€œIโ€™ve joked this year that Iโ€™ve now been doing comedy longer than both of my marriages combined,โ€ Terry, who has been married and separated twice, says. โ€œYou get what you put into it. I put a lot of kindness and love into the community, as much as I can. There are so many shows to do. Twenty nineteen is going to be busy.โ€

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Correction: This article originally misstated the title “Funny for a Fat Girl” as “Fat for a Funny Girl.”

One reply on “Stand-Up Comedy Has Long Been a Boys’ Club. With Eyes Up Here, Erin Terry Is Changing That.”

  1. Love her, love Eyes Up Here. They put on shows that inclusive, provocative, and, most importantly, FUNNY.

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