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Meow, That's Funny

2006_0829_luckycat.jpgHate your job? Feel like everyone in the office secretly considers you a nutcase? Diana Saez did, so she quit. And now she gets paid for being a nutcase.

These days, she actually likes her co-workers — probably because they appreciate her nutcaseyness. After two years of futzing around in the Washington stand-up scene, Saez and two other locals, John McBride and Jeffrey Adrian, kick-started Lucky Cat Comedy — a fresh group of entrepreneurial stand-up artists holding three shows a month at Cleveland Park's Aroma and open mic nights at Adams Morgan's Rendezvous every Wednesday.

Which means your night could use a rendezvous with Rendezvous. Don’t act like you have something better to do on a Wednesday night. Take some advice from Lucky Cat's MySpace page and embrace "the soothing, womb-like atmosphere" of the hallway-sized upstairs space at the 18th Street bar. Though she’s not trying to give Washington a big ego as a comedy hot-spot, she will fight to the death if you think this city is just an uptight, first-button-buttoned conservative bore. Over the last few years, comedy outlets have cropped up throughout Washington, with DC Standup — who claims to be "Sucka Free since 2003" — leading the pack, and recently adding four new open mic venues, including Café Nema on U Street.

Bet you didn’t realize so many free open mic nights ruled stages after dark — DC Standup hosts seven sessions on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday alone. And you might assume our only claim-to-fame funny men are Dave Chappelle and Lewis Black — both hail from Silver Spring — who have gone onto bigger and better. But you'd be only half right.

Saez firmly believes the next Margaret Cho is "just another bike messenger, political hack or executive assistant" out there doing DC Standup, or gasp, Lucky Cat Comedy at dive nightclubs or any watering hole they can get. Just a few years back, up-and-coming boys Mike Birbiglia and John Mulaney dabbled in the Georgetown Players Improv Group while paying the rent as staid smarty-pants on the Hill. And Saez just knows there are twelve characters at a day job somewhere with "Rendezvous" penciled onto their agendas.

Saez admits her full-time job is less than workplace-appropriate, what with jokes about genital waxing, circumcision and gynecologists who wear inappropriate jewelry. She has no censor — just the way open mic should be. With her upcoming gig at DC Improv on September 26th, she'll take a break from hosting, which she secretly hates. Though feeling like "complete chicken shit" when it comes to taking the stage with the big boys, she has the confidence that at least she won't "go up there and eat watermelon-sized balls."

Introduce yourself to Saez tonight, especially if you’re a "lovable loser, miserable optimist, or girl who [doesn't] piss all over the toilet seat." Or introduce yourself to the audience and be a first-timer on stage.

Rendezvous
2226 18th Street, NW
Every Wednesday 8 p.m. to 10 p.m.
No Cover, $3 Drink Specials

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