Photo by Sunny Bak; design by Henry Pacheco |
For over 30
years, Monica Palacios has been an important as well as hilarious voice on the
comedic stage. She was the first “out”
Chicana lesbian comic to perform on stage in San Francisco (circa 1982). She is
returning to San Francisco this month to perform her new show, “San Francisco,
Mi Amor!” at the Galería De La Raza on 24th Street, November 20th
and 21st at 8p.m. La Bloga is fortunate to have the critically acclaimed Chicana lesbian writer and performer, Monica Palacios, with us today.
Thanks so much
for being with us today, Monica! Tell us
about your new show, “San Francisco, Mi
Amor!” What’s in store for us?
It is my great
pleasure to be on La Bloga. This new
show that will be presented on November 20th and 21st at
the Galeria De La Raza will be a comedic and dramatic look back at my stand up
comedy life during its early years:
1982-1986. Gay comedy, as it was
called back then was born at the Valencia Rose Cabaret, the first gay comedy
club in the nation. I zero in on this
venue because I performed there on a regular basis allowing my name and
reputation to float around and get noticed.
I talk about being a film student at San Francisco State and how being a
student allowed me to study comedians as I would hang out at the comedy
clubs—taking notes because I knew, one day, I was going to step on a
stage. I share my adventures about me
and my lesbian sister, Eleanor, who I was living with in Oakland at the
time. I talk about co-founding the
comedy troupe, Culture Clash, meeting Edward James Olmos on 24th
street which leads to a Hollywood audition, performing comedy during the AIDS
crisis, trying to pick up chicks at taquerias—and other life-changing
experiences.
You are
returning, as you say, to the “birthplace of your comedy career.” Tell us a little more about your comedy
history.
My comedy
history goes back before I was born. Both of my parents were very funny in
their own right. My father was more the clown where as my mother had a sharp
tongue. It's ironic because my first ten years of life, I was extremely shy but
then in the 6th grade I became a smart aleck--I'm pretty sure it was the
hormones and the vodka in my Cheerios. By high school, I was outright performing
sketches with my friends for class assemblies. I did a stand up comedy routine
for my English class and I knew at that moment that I wanted to be a stand up
comic but as an underage teenager, I couldn't figure out how to get to the
comedy clubs. So I just nurtured that possibility in the back of my head and
soaked up all the comedy I could absorb from the excellent television shows
that were happening during the 70s. My little brother and I were always acting
like we were on stage mimicking what we saw on television or making up our own
talk shows. When I got into college, I started taking classes that supported my
comedy chops and it definitely helped that I was living with my lesbian sister
Eleanor who I think is the funniest person I know. I finally started going to
San Francisco comedy clubs by myself and I would sit and watch these comics for
hours and would always conclude--I'm funnier. Finally I couldn't take it
anymore and I got myself onto an open mic night at The Other Cafe Comedy Club
and I did a solid job. Hooked, I started performing at other mainstream clubs
in San Francisco until I found The Valencia Rose Cabaret, a gay comedy club.
This club truly kicked off my career as a lesbian performer.
And since then,
how has the comedy scene changed for female comics, specifically queer women of
color comics?
Right now what I
believe is happening is--there are more women in general who are performing
comedy, as stand ups, television shows, films. When I first started going to
the clubs in the early 80s, there weren't that many female comics. It was
definitely a man's profession. The women
who were doing daring unapologetic bold material were all the lesbian comics
who came out of the Valencia Rose Cabaret: myself, Marga Gomez, Lea DeLaria,
Karen Ripley, Susie Berger, Linda Moakes and Laurie Bushman. We were doing our
queer lesbian empowering performances long before Ellen DeGeneres came out. And
yes there are more women of color and queer women of color doing their comedy
thing, but there are still waaaaay more men.
Photo by Sunny Bak; design by Mayumi Hokari |
Who are the
comics who have most influenced you and who have been your greatest supporters
along the way?
My true role
models of comedy would have to be my family members. Everybody in my family is
funny. As a child I was able to be the audience for my four older siblings who
would do some kind of performing on a daily basis and I would watch with great
enthusiasm. My father was a self-taught musician and performer and he and my
mother would entertain at our house with singing and comedic
storytelling--mostly in Spanish. My entire childhood and teenage years were
surrounded by this performance element. My family continues to be my biggest
supporters of my comedy career and definitely my Facebook familia.
We all wish you
a fabulous return to the San Francisco stage, Monica. Is there anything else you’d like to share
with our La Bloga readers?
If you can make
my show, I will love you forever. If you
can’t, please tell your peeps. This show
is very special because I’m reuniting with the Galeria De La Raza and Rene Yañez—two
producers who were integral and supportive of my early career in San
Francisco. And it’s a time in my life
and it’s a time in queer history that was very revolutionary—LGBT comics were
out on stage despite the super homophobic atmosphere due to the AIDS
crisis. I will be showing some
historical and hilarious images of this time period that have not been seen
since the 1980s.
So important! Thank you, Monica. Time for all of us to head on over to San Francisco and get a seat at the Galeria De La Raza on November 20th and 21st at 8p.m.! Don't miss this!
BIO: International hip chick, Monica Palacios is the creator of solo shows, plays, screenplays, short stories, stand-up comedy, poems, and essays. Her work focuses on the Latina/o LGBTQ experience. National and international scholars have critically engaged her work in academic journals, books, dissertations, and conference panels. Monica has taught at numerous universities including University of California Los Angeles (UCLA), University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB), University of California, Irvine (UCR), Loyola Marymount University (LMU), and the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. Palacios was awarded a Postdoctoral Rockefeller Fellowship from the Chicano Studies Department at UCSB. She is currently promoting her new solo show: San Francisco, Mi Amor! and her play, I Kissed Chavela Vargas
Check out her website: www.monicapalacios.com
Photo by Sunny Bak |
BIO: International hip chick, Monica Palacios is the creator of solo shows, plays, screenplays, short stories, stand-up comedy, poems, and essays. Her work focuses on the Latina/o LGBTQ experience. National and international scholars have critically engaged her work in academic journals, books, dissertations, and conference panels. Monica has taught at numerous universities including University of California Los Angeles (UCLA), University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB), University of California, Irvine (UCR), Loyola Marymount University (LMU), and the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. Palacios was awarded a Postdoctoral Rockefeller Fellowship from the Chicano Studies Department at UCSB. She is currently promoting her new solo show: San Francisco, Mi Amor! and her play, I Kissed Chavela Vargas
Check out her website: www.monicapalacios.com
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