The Comedy Store

Last updated
The Comedy Store
The Comedy Store.jpg
The Comedy Store in 2006
The Comedy Store
Former names Club Seville
Address8433 West Sunset Boulevard
Location West Hollywood, California, U.S.
Coordinates 34°05′42″N118°22′26″W / 34.09510°N 118.37384°W / 34.09510; -118.37384
OwnerPeter H. Shore, Trustee of the Mitzi S. Shore Trust
Type Comedy club
Capacity Main room: 450
Construction
OpenedApril 1972 (1972-04)
Renovated1976
Website
thecomedystore.com
The Comedy Store ComedyStore 02.jpg
The Comedy Store

The Comedy Store is an American comedy club opened in April 1972. It is located in West Hollywood, California, at 8433 Sunset Boulevard on the Sunset Strip. An associated club is located in La Jolla, San Diego, California.

Contents

History

The Comedy Store was opened in April 1972 by comedians Sammy Shore (1927–2019), and Rudy De Luca. The building was formerly the home of Club Seville (1935), [1] later, Ciro's (1940–1957), a popular Hollywood nightclub owned by William Wilkerson, and later Ciro's Le Disc, [1] a rock and roll venue, [2] where The Byrds were discovered in 1964.

When the venue reopened as The Comedy Store in 1972, it included a 99-seat theatre. As a result of a divorce settlement, Sammy Shore's ex-wife Mitzi Shore began operating the club in 1973, and she was able to buy the building in 1976. She immediately renovated and expanded the club to include a 450-seat main room. [3]

In 1974, The Comedy Store hosted the wedding reception of newlyweds Liza Minnelli and Jack Haley, Jr. The Comedy Club signage was covered, for the evening, by signs reading "Ciro's", denoting the venue's prior identity. The event was attended by many dozens of Hollywood glitterati, including Elizabeth Taylor, Sammy Davis Jr., Cher, Bob Fosse, Johnny Carson, Goldie Hawn, Cesar Romero, Priscilla Presley and other stars, past and present.

Locations

The original Comedy Store on Sunset at Ciro's had been joined by the Comedy Store Westwood, at 1621 Westwood Blvd., [4] the Comedy Store La Jolla, at 916 Pearl St., [5] Comedy Store Playhouse, [6] on Las Palmas, Comedy Store at the Sheraton Universal Hotel, [7] in Universal City, [8] and the Comedy Store Las Vegas at the Dunes Hotel. [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14]

Job action

Beginning in 1979, The Comedy Store served for many years as the host location for the annual HBO Young Comedians specials.

Tension between the club owners stems from a 1979 strike of Los Angeles comedians against the Comedy Store’s “no-pay policy.” Until that time, neither Shore nor Friedman paid comedians a salary. The theory was that comedians should almost be paying the owners for the exposure the clubs provided. When the comedians’ strike began, The Improv (opened in 1974 at 8162 Melrose Avenue) was closed for fire-damage repairs. Therefore, the strike focused on Shore, not Friedman. [7]

Also in 1979, stand-up comedians formed a short-lived labor union and demanded to be paid for their appearances at The Comedy Store. For six weeks (beginning in March), [15] several famous comedians staged a protest in front of the club, while others crossed the picket line. [15] The comedians involved formed a union called Comedians for Compensation and fought for pay where they had received none before. They eventually picketed in front of the club when their demands were not met. Jay Leno and David Letterman were among those on the picket line while Garry Shandling and Yakov Smirnoff crossed the line. [16]

The job action was not legally a strike as the comedians were classified as "independent contractors" and were not under contract with the club.

Mitzi Shore argued [17] that the club was and had always been a showcase and training ground for young comedians and was not about profits. She alleged that comedians came to the club and could work on their material in front of casting agents and other talent scouts who would possibly hire them as professionals if they were good enough.

The comedians at the club became unhappy when the club was expanded several times and it was perceived that Shore's profits were quite substantial. Shore also paid the rest of her staff, including waitresses and bartenders.

After the strike, some comedians were no longer allowed to perform at the club, including Steve Lubetkin, who committed suicide by jumping off the roof of the Continental Hyatt House next door. His suicide note included the line: "My name is Steve Lubetkin. I used to work at The Comedy Store." [18] Lubetkin hoped that his suicide would resolve the labor dispute. He also cited Shore as the reason he no longer had a job.

The union ceased to exist in 1980, although from the time of the job action onward, comedians in Los Angeles were paid for their shows. This included The Comedy Store and The Improv.

Cresthill house

Mitzi Shore also owned a 5,000-square-foot house a few doors away from the club, on 8420 Cresthill Road. The house was bought with the club in 1976. In 1979, she started to let the comedians from the clubs crash there. During the 1980s, numerous famous comedians resided or just partied there, including Dice, Maron, Robin Williams, Richard Pryor. Argus Hamilton and Mike Binder were the first to officially move in the house. Dave Coulier was also an early resident, and Yakov Smirnoff moved in in 1980. The place was famous for its all-night parties and heavy consumption of cocaine and alcohol. Bill Hicks moved there in 1980 when he was 18 and running away from his parents to pursue his career as a comedian. Many of those comedians developed their style while residing there. Sam Kinison was a pillar there, and Jim Carrey turned his act around in this house. Mitzi Shore had a plan to cash in on the house's unique atmosphere, and even shot a 12-minute pilot around 1987 starring Daphne Davis, Nancy Redman, and Tamayo Otsuki. In 1988, because of the debauchery that had been going on for years, Mitzi Shore kicked everybody out of the house and turned it into a recovery house. By the early 1990s, Her son Pauly moved into the house, and by the end of the 1990s, the house was sold. [19]

Notable alumni

Signed photographs of past performers at The Comedy Store Signed photographs at The Comedy Store.jpg
Signed photographs of past performers at The Comedy Store

Knoedelseder, William (2009). I'm Dying Up Here: Heartbreak and High Times in Standup Comedy's Golden Era (1st ed.). New York: PublicAffairs. ISBN   9781586483173. — "A history of the young comedians coming to Los Angeles in the 1970s and performing at the club."

Docu-series

A docu-series based on The Comedy Store debuted on Showtime in October 2020. [29]

Each episode is an hour long and breaks down a different time period throughout the existence of the Comedy Store. The director, Mike Binder goes on a podcast with a different comedian to set the tone and help provide the narrative of each episode.

Episodes

No.TitleDirected byOriginal air date [30] U.S. viewers
(millions)
1"Saw You Last Night on the Tonight Show"Mike BinderOctober 4, 2020 (2020-10-04)N/A
2"The Comedy Strike"Mike BinderOctober 11, 2020 (2020-10-11)N/A
3"The Wild Bunch"Mike BinderOctober 18, 2020 (2020-10-18)N/A
4"Joe Rogan Returns"Mike BinderOctober 25, 2020 (2020-10-25)N/A
5"The Birth of a Bit"Mike BinderNovember 1, 2020 (2020-11-01)N/A

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References

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  7. 1 2 Dunham, Elisabeth (21 May 1987). "Laughing on the Outside : Rival Comedy Clubs Get Serious in Quest for Patrons". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 24 November 2020. Up the Ventura Freeway in Universal City, the Comedy Store at the Sheraton Universal Hotel is definitely more glamorous. The room underwent months of remodeling that transformed it from a dark cocktail lounge to the Valley counterpart of owner Mitzi Shore's Sunset Strip club....Tension between the club owners stems from a 1979 strike of Los Angeles comedians against the Comedy Store's "no-pay policy." Until that time, neither Shore nor Friedman paid comedians a salary. The theory was that comedians should almost be paying the owners for the exposure the clubs provided. When the comedians' strike began, the Improv was closed for fire-damage repairs. Therefore, the strike focused on Shore, not Friedman.
  8. Wyma, Mike (11 January 1991). "Cantina Hoping Comedians Can Shtick It Out". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 24 November 2020. Nevertheless, the Valley hasn't been particularly hospitable to comedy. The Improv and the Comedy Store have closed branches here in recent years, and a host of nightclubs and restaurants seem to drop comedy nights as soon as they start them.
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  12. Crumpler, David (2012-11-05). "Louie Anderson makes people laugh, and people make Louie Anderson laugh". The Florida Times-Union. Retrieved 24 November 2020. Every comedian talks about what appearing on Johnny Carson did for their career. Was there a literally next-day kind of difference in your career? Yep. I got hired the next day at The Comedy Store at The Dunes Hotel in Vegas. The next day NBC called about a holding contract with the network. The offers just kept coming in. But soon I was the opening act for The Commodores in Vegas. There's no platform like 'The Tonight Show' that can do that today.
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  26. The Comedy Store (23 February 2019). "Thank you Brody for sharing your Comedy and positive energy with us for so many years. You made late nights so much fun, pushing boundaries, being different, and never doing the same show twice. Joke writing, crowd work, drums, baseball. We love you forever Brody". Twitter .
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