Kyle Dunnigan
Saturday, Oct. 1, 8 p.m.
The ArtsCenter in Carrboro

When Eric Yoder moved to Chapel Hill two years ago, he was startled that the community was bereft of a stand-up comedy venue.
Although Carrboro has a healthy, established culture of sketch comedy and improv, thanks to Transactors Improv and the variety of acts at DSI Comedy Theater, Yoder felt there was something missing. โI didnโt see anyplace really doing professional, national stand-up stuff,โ he says.
This didnโt sit well with him, not only because heโs a stand-up comedy fan, but because stand-up puts food on his table. For the past six years, Yoder has been handling club bookings for the Funny Business Entertainment Agency, an Asheville-based company that has been booking comedians for 30 years. On any given week, the agency will book comics in 60 cities.
Yoder went immediately to work looking to see if there could be a venue for stand-up in the Chapel Hill/ Carrboro area. He hooked up with Steve Brady, who runs a weekly open-mic night at Chapel Hillโs Jack Sprat Cafe, to aid him with this. They eventually found a home in the ArtsCenter in Carrboro. โThey were enthusiastic about it and it was a nice space,โ says Yoder. โSo we decided itโd be a good place to bring some national acts through.โ
The ArtsCenter is located in the same strip area as Catโs Cradle, which has been a venue for many visiting stand-up acts. It has also been a venue for DSIโs annual N.C. Comedy Arts Festival (which has booked Emo Philips and Louis C.K., among others, at the Cradle in recent years). But Yoder didnโt think the Cradle was the right place.
โIt didnโt have as much seating. It was a smaller venue, and it wasnโt really set up with the kind of stadium seating. And it didnโt seem as intimate and comedy club-like as I felt the ArtsCenter was.โ
Nevertheless, Yoder has set up a monthly stand-up night called Funny Business Live at the ArtsCenter, where two comedians will perform at the beginning of each month. The headliner for the inaugural show this Saturday will be Kyle Dunnigan, a 13-year veteran of the stand-up scene. Cranky, fedora-wearing comic Paul Strickland will be the opener.
Some of us may know Dunnigan as Craig Pullin, the creepy, nerdy, pouty-lipped character he created while performing with famed improv company the Groundlings and has done on such shows as Reno 911! (where he played Pullin as a serial killer) and The Jay Leno Show. Dunnigan says the character is partly based on a shut-in neighbor he had, also named Craig. โI think Craig is just a horrible name,โ says Dunnigan. โI donโt want to be called Craig.โ When I told him that the person who was interviewing him is named Craig, he responded, โShut up! Is it really? Iโm so sorry. I donโt think Iโve ever said that out loud, and I just did to a Craig.โ
Dunnigan says this monthly event could have legs. โPart of the key is having young kids around,โ he says, โWith all the social networking, I think things like that could happen very quickly.โ
As a comic who lives and does stand-up in Los Angeles, where both audiences and performers are eschewing traditional cover charge-and-drink minimum comedy clubs in favor of more alternative spots like the UCB Theatre and Largo, Dunnigan is finding that audiences want to see comedy, but in a different, offbeat setting. โThatโs happening more and more lately, which I think is a good thing,โ says Dunnigan. โClubs areI donโt know, they feel like theyโre dying a little bit. And I feel like comedy nerds who really enjoy comedy, they wanna hear alternative stuff now.โ
For the show next month, the headliner will be Theo Von, best known for appearing on Road Rules and Real World/ Road Rules Challenge in the early โ00s before breaking out as a stand-up. Biracial comedian Michael Yo will be the opener. There wonโt be a show in December, but Yoder is hoping to get Marc Maron, host of the popular WTF With Marc Maron podcast, for January or February.
The ArtsCenter has been burdened by financial and organizational difficulties in recent years, so officials are psyched about this new endeavor. โWe have comedy here, and we have stand-up here,โArtsCenter concerts director/ facility rental coordinator Tess Mangum Ocana says. โBut this is stand-up of a really big, national stature. Kyle Dunnigan has been on all the big shows โฆ So, thatโs a big deal.โ
But it wonโt just be about bringing in touring comics to the Triangle: Local comedians will also be spotlighted. Carrboro comic Tom Keller, who won DSI Comedy Theaterโs title of Carolinaโs Funniest Comic in 2010, will host this Saturdayโs show.
In the end, as Yoder explains, itโs just about giving stand-up comedy a proper venue in the Chapel Hill-Carrboro community. There may be six open-mic nights in the area, as Yoder says, but there needs to be a spot for visiting comics to do their thingand for audiences who love stand-up to enjoy them.
โIโm just a big stand-up comedy fan,โ says Yoder, โand when I moved out to Chapel Hill, I was reallyyou know, with all these people here, with the two colleges right there and everything else, it just seemed kind of surprising that there wasnโt something just directly stand-up comedy-based, with all the other kind of entertainment going around. So, itโs really just wanting to bring something new to the area.โ


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