Showing posts with label female christian comedian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label female christian comedian. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 15, 2014

Christian Comedians Need Business Sense Too

Christian Comedian Sally Edwards
Regardless of the type of speaking career that a Christian Comedian pursues, it is essential to develop business skills.  Being the most entertaining or funniest Christian Comedian will not necessarily propel you to a headline spot.  Effective marketing is equally (if not more) important that will make you shine and get you booked often and for increasingly good pay.

Event Planners seek clean comedians who entertain without offending.  That is what will keep the comedy trend in churches thriving.  To recognize this as a new speaker and Christian Comedian is invaluable.  Building a mailing list and a successful social media campaign will connect you to friends, family and fans.  If an event planner sees that you are motivated establish a solid career through online connections, your value has increased tenfold.

Because professional comedians are prone to creativity, they generally focus on writing funny stories. The reasoning is that "funny stories" brings rewards.  I have performed as a clean stand up comedian for over 20 years and I have seen some of the "funniest" never quite make it.  The brilliant comedians can fall by the wayside, appreciated for their genius only by other admiring comedians.  This occurs when business sense does not quite catch up to creative sense.

Last year, I booked an event and I experienced first-hand what event planners see as "value" in a Christian Comedian.  I initially made efforts to create the funniest show possible.  With a limited budget for advertising, I was reliant upon word of mouth and basic internet social media to get the word out in a very short amount of time.  Ironically, the "funniest" no longer had the same value to me when I was on the other side of the booking fence.

The comedians who were most valuable to me were the ones making an all-around effort.  They were contacting friends, making mentions on FacebookStumble UponTumblerDigg and Twitter and writing blogs.  My most valuable act of the year was a new comedian who did a great guest set and invited thirty friends.  He did his homework, created a buzz and got the laughs.  The event was successful and made me understand the true value of a working Christian Comedian.

Friday, December 20, 2013

Teach Yourself to Smile

 
Christian Comedian Sally Edwards with Frank Fontana - radio

 A Christian Comedian Learns to Smile

     As a Christian comedian who enjoys studying human nature, I am firmly convinced that there are two types of people who wander the earth - (1) natural gifted smilers who willingly and effortlessly smile throughout the day and (2) those who don't.   The gifted smilers are the people to whom you are immediately attracted because a big smile is a sign of acceptance. Gifted smilers tend to make friends easily.  They’re most often outgoing and fun extroverts.   Those who are not natural smilers feel like they are smiling, but guess what – they’re not!

     I was not a gifted smiler and my husband, Bert, made it very clear I had to make the effort to learn to smile if I wanted to be a successful performer and an approachable female Christian comedian.  

     Smiling and happiness do not go hand-in-hand. I know many very happy people who don't show their internal happiness through facial expression.  I recognize these people because for twenty-five years, I was one of them. Happy on the inside, I had no idea it wasn’t reaching all the way up to my face.  I really thought I was smiling and I was shocked to find out that I wasn’t.

      My husband, who is also in the comedy business, insisted I teach myself to smile. I began forcibly making myself smile on stage and in the company of friends. It was a major and constant initial effort.  It felt completely unnatural and insincere because I was always thinking about forcing a smile and it seemed contrived.  I felt I was putting on an act and not truly being myself. However, I quickly realized the irony!   If I feel happy on the inside, a smile on my face is actually a truer reflection of my spirit.  It was time to catch up to the gifted smilers and to discover what it felt like to portray true happiness.  The effect was instantaneous!

     I immediately found putting a smile on my face changed my interaction with friends, family, acquaintances and even my
Christian comedy audiences!  As I learned to smile my confidence grew in both my personal life and on stage.  People more willingly approached me and I experienced a notable influx of positive energy.  Smiling also provided a tremendous improvement in communication skills.  Making the effort to smile has made me more comfortable in my own skin.

      Do you know someone at work or in your neighborhood whose expression rarely changes?  Don’t be too quick to judge these people.  They may feel joy on the inside and do not realize they’re communicating gloom and doom on the outside.  A stock line of the
comedy club comic is “Sir, are you having a good time?  …. Then why don’t you tell your face about it!”

     Smiling is a gift from my husband and I am incredibly grateful for his lessons. I no longer envy the natural smilers and their inherited gift. I believe smiling is a genetic blessing and it also can be a learned behavior. How wonderful we can learn to smile as easily as those who are gifted! It is a positive way to live and grow.

     Look in the mirror.  If you’re happy on the inside but you see no smile on the outside, you might want to tell your face about it!

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Christian Comedy - 90 Year Old Grandma Dances to Stage and Diapers Baby Pig

This is the reason why I love performing as a female Christian Comedian.  Here is a video of a 90-year old grandma who was sitting in the audience at my Christian Comedy show in Louisville, KY.  I don't think she ever expected to be the star of the comedy show that night. When I pulled her from the audience to come on stage to diaper a stuffed pig, she grabbed her cane and danced little steps to the stage.  She then diapered that baby stuffed animal like a pro! This senior lady had a positive attitude and lit up the room.

Some Christian women would never see a comedy show unless a Christian Comedian came their church.  I am so happy to be able to share my funny world and laugh with them.


Christian Comedy - Performed Near Louisville, KY





Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Discovering Your Special Gift

I understand it now. I understand how to recognize a unique "gift" within oneself. After years of soul searching I have been able to share my insights with my children and other adults. I find it funny that a personal gift should be so difficult to recognize. To our friends it can be quite apparent. It is best to listen to friends and family as they praise our uniqueness. It is difficult for us to recognize our own gift because we assume everyone shares our talents.

With my own children I was always on the lookout for clues. It was a daily fun exercise to notice repeated patterns of actions or words that were unique to each child. My oldest son, Brendan, was only six years old the first time he asked me, "Mom, what do you think of black holes?" Was I supposed to be thinking of black holes? My heart raced for a correct answer that wouldn't scar him with my lack of knowledge on the subject. Black hole questions were followed by comet and constellation questions. None of my other children were that inquisitive of the night sky. Today Brendan is an astrophysicist.

Our senior babysitter noticed our second son's gift when he was only 11 months old. "This kid is hilarious and he knows just how to make you laugh. He is the funniest baby I have ever seen." Steven established a pattern of making us laugh to tears. Today he lives in Los Angeles and is in an internship program for comedy sketch writing.  Last week, Steven came in first in a stand-up comedy competition at Flappers Comedy Club!

Our youngest, Christine, was a quick study. At nine years old she would take graph paper and draw sketches of the interior of her room. Every piece of furniture was measured and labeled. I said, "Christine, are you doing that for school?" Christine used graph paper for fun! Being a "math-o-phobic", I knew the clues were adding up quickly. Christine is now in San Francisco getting stellar grades. She is majoring in Architecture.

In retrospect I see my own life story was formed by the time I was eight. My parents signed me up for piano lessons and I began to teach myself to sing. I didn't stop singing. I started dancing and twirling and I loved making people laugh with my miniature shows. My older sister started bringing me to audition at community plays. Because of my lack of voice and dance training I did not get the parts. I worried I had no special talent. Fifteen years later, I walked on to the stand up comedy stage of Zanies Comedy Club in Chicago as a new talent. Within minutes I experienced the joy of being on stage and I knew I wanted to make people laugh. I discovered my gift and knew I was home.

Sally Edwards is a professional Corporate Christian Comedian who tours nationally. Sally Edwards' clean comedy has been featured on A&E's "Comedy on the Road" and Showtime's "Comedy Club Network."

Sally Edwards is the president of The Humorous Speakers Bureau in Chicago. For booking information see: http://ComedyBySally.com


Friday, October 18, 2013

Female Christian Comedian - A Sampling of Clean Comedy

When performing as a Christian Comedian, it is important to keep comedy "squeaky" clean.  Christian comedy requires family-friendly premises and punchlines that do not offend regardless of age.  I have pursued Christian clean comedy because it is a challenge. It is important to me that jokes are funny based on their own merit of cleverness and creativeness.  Enjoy!