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Adam Weinstock
and Creative Concept Productions:
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Paula Poundstone |
PAULA POUNDSTONE!
PROVINCETOWN TOWN HALL
CREATIVE CONCEPT PRODUCTIONS/
ADAM WEINSTOCK
jULY 16, 2006. 8:00 pm
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Dates: 07/16/2006 - 07/16/2006
Times: Sunday @ 8:00pm
Location / Venue: Provincetown Town Hall
Price: $38.00
Running Time: 2 hours
Appropriate For:
Appearing on stage with a stool, a microphone, and a can
of Diet Pepsi, Paula Poundstone’s ability to create
humor on the spot is legendary. There’s a wonderful
synergy to each of her one-of-a-kind two-hour shows. She
improvises with a crowd like a jazz musician. She’ll
find an audience member who sells grass seed to golf
courses in part of the state of Maryland and wonder, “In
such a small territory, even if the grass seed were any
good at all, how could you possibly be working to your
full potential?” -- then she swings in another
unexpected direction without a plan, without a net.
Paula is so quick and unassuming that audience members
leave complaining that their cheeks hurt from laughter
and debating whether the random people she talked to
were “plants.”
Known for her honesty, and an off-kilter view of the
world, Paula is currently delighting crowds across the
country. Never one to be defined by the usual
gender-biased topics of relationships, diets, men or
sex, Paula nimbly mixes in everything from how the
shameful deterioration of the broadcast news industry
threatens our democracy, and arguing over a parking
space at the museum of tolerance, to recycling her
newspaper with the cover story on the oil spill, her
near-death experience with cinnamon, and the frustration
of living in a house full of pencils with no erasers.
“How can an eraser that small possibly eradicate all of
the mistakes one could make with all of that lead?” She
even handles politics without provoking the pall of
disapproval less artful comics have received.
A single working mother, with children ages l4, 11 and
7, much of Paula’s material is based on her life at home
in Santa Monica. The house is never quiet. There are
nine cats, a big cat-eating dog, a bearded dragon
lizard, an elderly bunny and one doggedly determined ant
left from an ant farm. Recently, one of her children was
upset that the family didn’t celebrate Easter: “First of
all, it’s not our religion,” she told the child. “Second
of all, you all don’t like eggs. Third of all, you guys
don’t look for anything.”
“I love doing my job,” Paula says. “It’s a privilege to
perform for people who come to see me and I would do it
if there were only six, although I’d have to up the
ticket price.”
In the Spring of 2002, Paula became a regular panelist
on NPR’s oddly informative, weekly hour-long news quiz
program “Wait Wait Don’t Tell Me!” where she matches
wits and tests her knowledge against some of the best
and brightest in the news and entertainment world
including Roy Blount Jr, Calvin Trillin, Adam Felber and
P.J. O'Rourke. Paula’s website,
www.paulapoundstone.com, is being applauded for it’s
originality and entertainment. Visitors are treated to
Paula’s personal diary entries with pictures from her
life; her Calendar, with humorous detail; and a special
column, “Ask Paula to ask Hep Cat.” Paula’s cat Hep can
speak (but only to Paula) with authority on a
surprisingly wide array of topics, and what Hep doesn’t
know she’s only too glad to try and find out. Paula, for
example, asked Hep recently if she should use a “no
stick” spray on a “no stick” pan and Hep replied, “no.”
Answers are posted on the website for all to read.
A talented writer, Paula had a monthly column in Mother
Jones magazine from 1993-1998 where her broad base of
topics ranged from covering the basics of government
with former Senator Paul Simon (while enjoying rides at
an amusement park) to poignantly noting the similarities
between her life and that of Koko, a gorilla who knows
sign language, and answering questions from her readers.
Her articles have appeared in the Los Angeles Times’
Sunday Calendar, Glamour, Entertainment Weekly and Buzz,
among others. She is currently writing a book for
Harmony Books, a division of Random House, which she
says is taking her a long time to write “because I’m
writing it in real time.”
Paula grew up in Sudbury, Massachusetts (a suburb of
Boston) and began performing at open-mic nights in 1979.
She was among a handful of comics who rose to prominence
during the comedy craze of the 1980s, and her talent was
so genuine, she was still standing when the fad
subsided. Paula credits her kindergarten teacher, Mrs.
Bump, with her success in comedy. Bump stated in a
“summary letter” sent to Paula’s home in 1965 that “I
have enjoyed many of Paula’s humorous comments about our
activities.” Paula says, “she found something positive
to say and expressed an adult interest instead of
squelching my sense of humor. In the first grade, Miss
Carter wrote I was subject to emotional outbursts and
that I had poor penmanship. That didn’t help at all.”
In 1992 Paula was the first woman to win a Cable ACE
Award for Best Stand-Up Comedy Special for her HBO
special “Cats, Cops, and Stuff.” In l996 she debuted her
second HBO stand-up special, “Paula Poundstone Goes to
Harvard,” the only time the elite university has allowed
their name to be used in the title of a television show.
Paula was the first woman invited to headline the White
House Correspondents Dinner, and she provided memorable
live coverage of the ’92 political conventions and
presidential inauguration for “The Tonight Show.” Her
casual air and razor-sharp wit made her a perfect fit as
backstage commentator for the ’93 Emmy Awards the
following year. Paula starred in a self-titled series
for HBO in ’92 (for which she won her second Cable ACE
Award for Best Program Interviewer) and moved the show
to ABC in ’93, where it was short-lived but applauded
for its break from convention. She performed at both “A
Gala for the President at Ford’s Theatre” television
specials broadcast on ABC during President Clinton’s
administrations. In the Fall of 2004, Paula hosted the
WIN Awards (Women’s Image Network), honoring Jack
Nicholson, director Catherine Hardwicke, and several
other luminaries for their outstanding work to further
the image of women in all forms of entertainment. In
February 2005, Paula will perform at the highly-regarded
HBO Comedy Arts Festival in Aspen Colorado, a part of
which will air as a special on TBS in the Spring.
Additional credits include numerous appearances on “Late
Night with David Letterman,” “The Tonight Show, Garrison
Keillor’s “A Prairie Home Companion” for American Public
Radio, and “The Rosie O’Donnell Show, ” She has served
as a guest commentator for the Oscars on “E!
Entertainment Television.” Paula voiced the character of
Judge Stone on the acclaimed ABC-TV Saturday morning
animated series “ Science Court” (a.k.a. “Squigglevision”)
for three years, as well as the character of “Paula” on
Cartoon Network’s “Home Movies.” She has appeared on PBS
favorites “ Sesame Street” and “Storytime.” During 2000
and 2001, she served as a celebrity regular on the
syndicated game show “To Tell The Truth.” Not one to be
easily defined, Paula guest-starred on the CBS series “Cybill,”
which led to a recurring role during the show’s final
season. Her field pieces on the renowned series “Life &
Times” for PBS station KCET won Paula a local Emmy
Award.
Paula has lent her services to help raise funds for
several causes she believes in, including legislation
for gun control and campaign finance reform, healthcare
for the homeless, the Democratic party, the ACLU,
Planned Parenthood, and Actors and Others for Animals.
Paula recently participated in the first “Standup for
Justice” benefit in San Francisco, and she has performed
on HBO’s “Comic Relief” since its inception. A woman of
many interests, Paula produced the award-winning
children’s audio book project Completely Yours and gave
voice to one of the characters alongside Mary Tyler
Moore, Bea Arthur, Kathy Najimy, Ed Asner and Lily
Tomlin. Released in 1997, the project featured a story
about adoption called A Mother for Choco and is
available through the Children’s Book of the Month Club
and select bookstores.
While she has amassed an impressive list of accolades in
print and on stage, Paula is a dedicated single mother,
so the majority of her time is spent at home, with her
children, where she watches steadily improving
cartwheels, denies junky snacks, tries desperately to
remember the parts of speech, corrects long division,
listens to Nancy Drew read aloud, overcooks noodles, and
tries to explain that life isn’t always fair, but that
right now it’s Thomas E’s turn to use the pogo stick.
She says things couldn’t be better.
Location / Venue
Provincetown Town Hall
Provincetown Town Hall
260 Commercial Street
Provincetown, MA 02657
Capacity
700
Venue Features
Handicapped Access
Elevator
Parking (municipal lot)
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