Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Though he makes a living on the corporate circuit, John Di Domenico hopes winning a Donald Trump impersonat­or contest can help him sell tickets as himself.

Donald Trump impersonat­or hopes winning contest is ticket to being himself on stage

- MIKE WEATHERFOR­D

IT’S “like shooting fish in a barrel,” John Di Domenico says of doing comedy for an audience predispose­d to loving him.

He’s not talking about the President Donald Trump impersonat­or contest he won last month at the Laugh Factory comedy club in Los Angeles.

Even though Di Domenico had what his alter ego might call a “y-u-u-ge” head start — he’s imitated Trump since 2004 — he says the competitio­n was fierce, and judges including “Saturday Night Live” veteran Darrell Hammond faced a tough decision.

No, Di Domenico is talking about life as a corporate entertaine­r, versus his former life in comedy clubs.

His appearance on “The View” and other exposure emerging from the contest obscure the fact that Di Domenico didn’t really need to win it. He makes great money (in the $10,000-$15,000 range for a custom 35-minute show and meet-and-greet, he says), and about 75 percent of it comes from performing at corporate meetings, trade shows and convention­s. (And for the other 25 percent, he counts voice-over work and television spots on the likes of “Conan,” not just places where folks buy a ticket to see him.)

Di Domenico, 54, moved to Henderson in 2011 but travels

“Everything with Trump is branding,” from his hair to his tie, Di Domenico says. John Di Domenico

25 to 30 weeks a year entertaini­ng corporate clients. The rest of them come here, to this convention mecca. In their world, he says, “if you’re doing it properly, you should be able to go in and just kill.”

By that he means, “Do your homework, know everything you can about the group, write a killer script and then go in and knock it out of the park,” he says. “My mantra is this is not about me, it’s about them. I’m there to entertain that group.”

Limo life

Di Domenico remembers his first corporate gig in 1997. The Philadelph­ia native was versed in sketch comedy and stand-up — Trump is one of some 20 costumed impression­s he does — but “driving all over the Northeast doing comedy, getting 50 bucks here, a hundred bucks there.”

Life on the road “was just kind of brutal. It was insanely lonely.”

But then a company flew him in for a gig, “and for the first time in my life someone was at the airport with my name written out (for the limo).” Then they rang his nice hotel room and asked if he had time to attend the “production meeting.”

Production meeting? Huh? It turned out to be people with Broadway credits wanting to light him properly. It wasn’t long before he decided, “This is what I want to do. I want to be in a nice hotel, getting paid well and doing comedy in front of a great audience.”

“It took me about three years to figure it out, how to get in. But then I just made the shift,” he says. “It’s been great, because it has kind of insulated me from the ups and downs of being a regular actor. The corporate world is always having to do a meeting.”

Honest laugh

The late impression­ist Danny Gans was Las Vegas’ prime example of an entertaine­r who was cleaning up on the corporate circuit but crossed over to start anew as a ticketed act on the Strip.

“You can be the biggest star in the corporate world, but it doesn’t translate over to anything else,” Di Domenico explains.

Di Domenico is friends with juggler Jeff Civillico, the best current example of an entertaine­r bent on conquering both worlds. Why do they bother? “It’s important as a performer not to be shooting fish in a barrel,” Di Domenico says. “You want to get in front of a real audience, (one) that’s totally diverse.”

Earning a laugh from a comedy club audience that paid for tickets is “like a heroin rush,” he says. “There’s no group think. You’ve got to turn an audience around. A very disparate audience.”

That’s why Di Domenico didn’t think twice about entering the Trump contest at his own expense. The winner was promised the hosting job for a Laugh Factory webcast called “Real News/ Fake News” and a chance to perform live in Laugh Factory clubs, including the one at the Tropicana.

He dreams of opening a show as Trump, then quickly removing his $4,000 wig and scrubbing off the orange makeup he spent an hour to apply while the other stand-ups do their set, then coming out again to show off his own bald pate.

That’s right. Di Domenico won a Donald Trump impersonat­or contest for a chance to be himself.

“No one knows who I am,” he says. “No one knows my sensibilit­ies.”

 ?? Las Vegas Review-Journal Mike Weatherfor­d ?? John Di Domenico has suited up as Donald Trump for years. Winning an impersonat­or contest may lead to more public shows after years in the corporate world.
Las Vegas Review-Journal Mike Weatherfor­d John Di Domenico has suited up as Donald Trump for years. Winning an impersonat­or contest may lead to more public shows after years in the corporate world.
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 ?? John Di Domenico ?? John Di Domenico has been impersonat­ing Trump since “The Apprentice” days but says he tries to be more accurate than Alec Baldwin on “Saturday Night Live,” because he must sustain the impression for a full half-hour versus a short sketch.
John Di Domenico John Di Domenico has been impersonat­ing Trump since “The Apprentice” days but says he tries to be more accurate than Alec Baldwin on “Saturday Night Live,” because he must sustain the impression for a full half-hour versus a short sketch.
 ??  ?? Donald Trump impersonat­or John Di Domenico moved to Southern Nevada in 2011 but works mostly on the road.
Donald Trump impersonat­or John Di Domenico moved to Southern Nevada in 2011 but works mostly on the road.

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