Gotham Comedy Foundation

Gotham Comedy Foundation The Gotham Comedy Foundation, Inc. is the nonprofit charitable affiliate of the Gotham Comedy Club. Please go to our website and request a comic or entertainer.

Our goal is to match people who are funny and entertaining with healthcare and social services organizations which have wellness programs. To that end we need standup comics, singers, musicians, puppeteers, clowns, magicians, storytellers and readers who would like to volunteer, from time to time, to work with hospitals, nursing homes, senior centers and social services agencies. If you are interested in joining The Gotham Comedy Foundations' pool of entertainers, please go to our webpage and register.www.gothamcomedyfoundation.org

If you are a hospital, nursing home, senior center or social services agency, you can request us to organize a show for you. www.gothamcomedyfoundation.org

If you wish to make a donation to support the work of the Gotham Comedy Foundation you may do so by going to the donation link at www.gothamcomedyfoundation.org

Thank you for your friendship and support of the Gotham Comedy Foundation. Wellness is a Funny Business!

08/31/2018

6th, Annual NYCSHRM Networking Comedy Show! Come join us.

Bill Drewes honored by New York City SHRM for his years of service at their 5th. Annual Comedy Networking Party at the G...
10/14/2017

Bill Drewes honored by New York City SHRM for his years of service at their 5th. Annual Comedy Networking Party at the Gotham Comedy Club, 9/26/17. Janet Hoffman (l) and Michael Wheeler (r) made the presentation.

John McCaffrey and Stuart Friedman appointed Lifetime Ambassadors of Laughter Sept. 26, 2017
10/14/2017

John McCaffrey and Stuart Friedman appointed Lifetime Ambassadors of Laughter Sept. 26, 2017

NYCSHRM Networking Comedy Show - Sept. 26th  Comedy Club. Please join us. Laughs, Prizes and Contacts
08/04/2017

NYCSHRM Networking Comedy Show - Sept. 26th Comedy Club. Please join us. Laughs, Prizes and Contacts

Join us for our 3rd. Annual Comedy Gala. Monday, May 8th Gotham Comedy Club
04/09/2017

Join us for our 3rd. Annual Comedy Gala. Monday, May 8th Gotham Comedy Club

It's not just about me! -by Joan WeisblattIt never occurred to me that my comedy was for anyone but me. After 30 years a...
12/23/2016

It's not just about me! -by Joan Weisblatt

It never occurred to me that my comedy was for anyone but me. After 30 years as wife, mother, lawyer, inner city kid tutor and ESL tutor, I retired (kept the husband, kids and students) and went to comedy school. It was for me and only for me.

I wrote, went to a lot of open mics to practice and even did some shows. In all honestly, all I wanted was to say my jokes, get some laughs, savor those laughs and get off the stage.

Then Bill Drewes found me on Facebook. I was a fledging comedian and comedy helped save his life after a leukemia diagnosis. We both went to Washington University. Before long, Bill asked me to produce shows for his Gotham Comedy Foundation. He told me that the goal was to raise money to send comedians to nursing homes, social service agencies, hospitals and senior centers to bring laughter to those who need it. All of a sudden, it wasn't just about me anymore.

In addition to producing and hosting four shows a year at the Gotham Comedy Club and The Metropolitan Room on behalf of the Gotham Comedy Foundation, I've produced and performed comedy for some of its community partners including for cancer patients and their families at Memorial Sloan Kettering and at Serendipity, an in-patient drug treatment center in Brooklyn.

Do you know what it's like to make people laugh who have nothing to laugh about? It's amazing! One woman at MSK, masked and hooked up to a chemotherapy IV, laughed her head off and I only know because her shoulders were popping up and down. At another show at Sloan, a family member of the patient came up to me and said, "It felt so good to laugh."

Now it was no longer about me. It was about giving a gift- the precious, priceless gift of laughter.

The Benefits Of Laughter By Matt Nagin Could laughter defeat ISIS? If you were on an operating table, in need of a tripl...
11/27/2016

The Benefits Of Laughter
By Matt Nagin

Could laughter defeat ISIS? If you were on an operating table, in need of a triple-bypass, might you call in a clown? While a P.O.W., undergoing torture, would all your suffering disappear when someone recited a decent knock, knock joke?
A logical person would consider all of the above absurd. Comedy is no panacea. And yet numerous cultures have found an integral place for farce and buffoonery. Chinese Emperors had Court Jesters, Native American Tribes had Tricksters, and in Europe, during The Middle Ages, droll satires were routinely performed by Troubadours. Why? What compels mankind to turn, again and again, to comedy? And what makes laughter a uniquely potent gift?
One reason comedy has had such a historical impact is it provokes reflectiveness, at times even inspiring political change. It is perhaps for this reason that during the 2011 Egyptian Revolution stories abound of protestors in Tahrir Square flashing satirical banners and reciting comical songs (McGraw & Warner). There was political humor in the USSR before the fall of the Berlin Wall (McGraw & Warner). Similarly, in America, during the 2008 Presidential Election, SNL Sarah Palin parodies featuring Tina Fey almost certainly impacted the final results.
What is more laughter seems to have at least a degree of curative potency. In “The Healing Power Of Laughter,” by the HeartMD Institute, Alexander Lowen, the father of bioenergetic therapy, suggests “[laughter is] a way of healing the body through the spontaneous release of energy.” Lowen believes laughter accomplishes all this by releasing tension, promoting respiration, and inducing endorphin release. Another study of cancer patients by Bennett M, Zeller J, et al. at Western Kentucky University suggests humor can be an effective complimentary medicine that often generates “increased immune function (42).”
While I would never wish to be pollyannaish, I can assert, with great conviction, that laughter has had an incredibly healing place in my life. For twenty-six years I’ve suffered with crohn’s disease, a gastrointestinal auto-immune condition that causes frequent trips to the bathroom, abdominal pain, nausea, bloating, joint aches, fatigue, mouth sores, and, at times, may require hospitalization. I’ve been on medicine to control my condition for most of my life and have needed three major surgeries—one of which required getting my stomach pumped via NG Tube after an intestinal blockage before a resection could be performed.
The above struggle as well as other hardships I’ve faced in recent years—
broken ribs after a skiing accident, campylobacteriosis on a Costa Rican expedition, getting hit by a car crossing the street—have hardened me, in a certain sense, and yet I doubt I would have survived any of it quite so intact without laughter.
Laughter gives one perspective. It enables you to see how small your problems are and reminds you what is really important. Comedy can turn a struggle into a gem. A hardship into joy. Comedy, further, prepares you to meet new obstacles with strength, clarity, and focus. I can say, with certainty then, that, in my own life, comedy has been a godsend.
I consider myself extremely fortunate to have met Bill Drewes, the founder of The Gotham Comedy Foundation. Bill’s story of overcoming cancer, in part through watching Marx Brothers movies, resonates with me as it seems very aligned with my own. Bill was nice enough to make me a Talent and Show Coordinator for the Gotham Comedy Foundation, and I had the pleasure of appearing with him on The Dr. Steve Show, a thrilling experience—despite the fact that our segment was sandwiched between an expose on the dangers of the drug molly and an information session on varicose veins.
Whether performing for cancer patients at Sloan Kettering or for the drug rehab residents at Serenity Café, I’ve found my involvement with the G.C.F. to be a terrific opportunity to share my sense of humor with others. I hope this incredible organization continues to grow and prosper, for promoting healing and wellness through comedy is a noble, uplifting mission.
Lastly, I started this brief essay by lightly mocking the idea of laughter curing a severe heart condition or defeating ISIS. But maybe I shouldn’t have. Because the healing power of laughter is considerable. As Mark Twain once put it, “against the assault of laughter, nothing can stand.”

References
1. Peter McGraw & Joel Warner, The Humor Code. Entry 6: Can comedy bring about political change?, Slate. 2014.
2. Dr. Stephen Sinatra, The Healing Power of Laughter. Heart MD Institute. 2010.
3. Bennett M, Zeller J, et al. The Effect of Mirthful Laughter on Stress and Natural Killer Cell Activity. Alternative Therapies. 2003; 9(2):38-43.

A Birth Defect Made Humor & Laughter a Part of My Life                                      By Tim Grill      Laughter t...
11/21/2016

A Birth Defect Made Humor & Laughter a Part of My Life
By Tim Grill
Laughter truly is the best medicine. You can receive it whenever, wherever and however you want, and the best part is. No Co pays afterwards. Laughter and humor have been a part of my life since I can remember, you see, I was born with a disability called Spina Bifida. A birth defect that happens when the bones of the spine don't form properly around the spinal cord. Being born with disability would guarantee me a lifetime of physical struggle as well as emotional struggle (kids can be mean sometimes). But through it all, I always had one thing that came naturally to me, my humor and my gift for making people laugh. I guess it was developed as a defense mechanism at a young age to compensate for my lack of physical strengths, and judging by my high school report cards, intellectual strengths as well. This one gift of humor and making people laugh would be with me my entire life and get me through some of my darkest moments.
I guess I first realized I had a gift for humor during on of my many, many hospital stays in and around the city I was born in, Philadelphia. Being born with Spina Bifida filled my early life with wheelchairs, both of my legs in a cast for months at a time, physical therapy, surgeries (13 to date ) and many years of having to wear the old fashioned braces that were made famous in the movie Forrest Gump. During my long hospital stays, I was always able to make the other kids around me, as well as the nurses and doctors laugh. Nothing made me feel better than getting an old, by the book, doctor with no bedside manner, to crack a smile.
When I was 11, I needed my sense of humor more than ever, after my father was diagnosed with a malignant brain tumor and given 6 months to a year to live. He managed to beat the odds and live 10 years with terminal Cancer, all the while, keeping a smile on his face and laughing every chance he had. Experiencing that solidified what I already knew, and that was, laughter truly is the best medicine.
When I was 24, I started working at Shriners Hospital for Children, where I was also a patient for 18 years. It was here that I started to truly see how powerful humor and laughter could be. Everyday, I would talk to the patients and make them laugh or smile, which always made me feel great. The most rewarding experience came one day when a teenaged boy named Todd was admitted to the hospital to start rehab for a broken neck he received in a car accident. Todd was paralyzed from the neck down and would be confined to a wheelchair for the rest of his life, and he was mad as hell about it. Everyday, I would visit Todd and try to at least get a smile out of him. Some days he would yell at me and tell me to leave. But then one day, I said something to he and a group of other kids, and I noticed he smiled and gave a little chuckle. It made me feel so good that I had finally broken through and got him to laugh. Over the next few months, Todd and I would become good friends and I was able to make him laugh more and more. It was around this time that a lot of the patients, hospital staff as well as some family and friends started telling me that I should try comedy and make people laugh on a professional level. So that is what I've been doing for the last 14 years. I love getting up on stage to make people laugh, and I never, ever take one show for granted.
The greatest compliment I ever received as a comedian was when one gentleman in a wheelchair came up to me after a show one time, and said to me "I haven't laughed, or have had any reason to laugh for a long, long time. But you made me laugh tonight, and for that, I thank you".
That compliment proved to me yet again, that Laughter truly is the Best Medicine.

Comedy Has Taught Me To Love My Disabilityby Pamela RaeIn third grade, I was diagnosed with Tourettes Syndrome, a neurol...
11/14/2016

Comedy Has Taught Me To Love My Disability
by Pamela Rae

In third grade, I was diagnosed with Tourettes Syndrome, a neurological disorder characterized by involuntary movements and noises. In 6th grade, my Tourettes become so severe that I lost control over my entire body. Teams of doctors had no idea what to do with me. At one point, my Tourettes was so severe that I shattered a bone in my neck, from throwing back my head. I was out of school for two years, in and out of hospitals, and on cocktails of medications. My body no longer matched my brain.

People quickly started treating me differently and over time, my identity became “disability” and “other.” I ended up going to an incredible boarding school in Vermont. By the time I got there, I was an ass hole. Not just because of Tourettes. I felt like the world pushed me away so I started pushing it back. I was angry and snarky and had no idea how to channel my lack of identity and my constant desire to say the most inappropriate thing. My boarding school’s motto was that the students were creative and outside of the box thinkers and that we were “square pegs in round holes”. At least, that was our motto until I made shirts that said “put your square peg in my round hole” thus, ruining the school motto in just under an hour.

One day in detention, where I often frequented, the teacher decided to try something new. He took a piece of paper, wrote “things Pam loves about herself” on it and slid in in front of me. Make a list, he said. I remember wanting to badly to have something to add to that list. I remember seeing his face turn to fear as he realized that I truly had nothing about myself that I loved. My school knew they needed to help me find something I loved about myself, so they signed me up for all kids of different programs and workshops. It was one intuitive high school teacher who realized that my quick wit may be suited for stand-up comedy so he signed me up for a stand-up comedy and improv workshop for teens. I felt this incredible connection right away. I remember realizing that on stage, there was no need to hide my Tourettes. It’s part of who I am. After my first workshop, I went back to that sheet of paper and wrote “sense of humor” on it. My boarding school framed it and they put it on my wall knowing even back then that maybe I had found my thing.

I have been doing comedy, not always consistently, since 9th grade. Now, as an adult, along with being a comic I manage a teen and mental health initiative where for our next event, we are pairing teens with professional comics to write jokes about loving their differences as a way for teens to explore what makes them different in a new and positive way.

For me, laughter is not just the best medicine. It is my coping mechanism, my support system, and what gets me out of bed in the morning. Comedy has taught me to love my disability. Tourettes will always be a part of my life, but so will comedy. While sometimes tourettes can be challenging and painful, I acknowledge that my brain has Tourettes and it also allows me to write some dirty, witty, widely inappropriate and funny jokes. It’s not about mocking my disability. It’s about embracing it. I get to see the world differently. Where eye-level of 4 foot 7 and barking, not just at the mailman, is a completely normal (and entertaining) part of my day. I believe that means I won genetic comedy lottery.

Mile Keegan on performing for the Gotham Comedy FoundationYou have certainly heard that “laughter is the best medicine” ...
11/07/2016

Mile Keegan on performing for the Gotham Comedy Foundation

You have certainly heard that “laughter is the best medicine” countless times in your life. While convention medication is still your best bet, laughter has certainly been proven to a great reliever of physical or emotional pain and stress. Laughter serves as a natural distraction for whatever may be ailing you but studies have also shown that laughter can enhance oxygen intake, stimulate the heart and lungs and release endorphin's which are natural painkillers.
Over the past couple of years, I have taken a particular interest in performing stand up comedy in facilities such as assisted living homes, rehab centers and hospitals as these are some of the most rewarding places to do my job as you get to see people enjoy an hour of their day to get their minds off of the difficult situations that they may be going through. It all started when I performed on a Sunday afternoon at a VA hospital in St. Albans, Queens. The audience consisted of about 12 patients who were Veterans of Vietnam and even WWII. They are sick and elderly so they don’t laugh much but I could look around the room and see that they were happy to be there, After the show, I spoke with a veteran of WWII and he repeatedly thanked me for spending my Sunday afternoon there and making him laugh, while I kept telling him that I am the one who should be thanking him. Since then, I have jumped at any opportunity to perform for people who are sick or suffering. Most recently, I was honored to be asked by the Gotham Comedy Foundation to perform stand up on one of their fundraisers and their purpose is to do just this, bring laughter to the sick.
I truly feel that recovery is achieved by healing the body and mind equally. While conventional medicine will help cure the body, laughter is extremely important to relieve stress, improve attitude and provide an overall sense of well being. On several occasions, I have had audience members come up to me and tell me that they are ill and for 90 minutes, they did not think about their illness once. This is why I jump at the opportunity to do fundraisers and shows like this. While working at comedy clubs and casinos pays the bills, these shows are absolutely more rewarding.

Welcome Sandi Webster and Devin Voorsanger our new Lifetime Ambassadors of Laughter appointed at our Fall Benefit Show o...
11/06/2016

Welcome Sandi Webster and Devin Voorsanger our new Lifetime Ambassadors of Laughter appointed at our Fall Benefit Show on Nov. 3, 2016

Al Smith and Janet Riesel appointed Lifetime Ambassadors of Laughter of the Gotham Comedy Foundation 9/6/16
09/09/2016

Al Smith and Janet Riesel appointed Lifetime Ambassadors of Laughter of the Gotham Comedy Foundation 9/6/16

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