Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

HOME FOR HOLIDAYS

Rising comedian Cameron Esposito makes it ‘a priority’ to return to Chicago, where it all started

- BY STEVE HEISLER For the Sun-Times

When Western Springs native and stand-up comic Cameron Esposito learned that her sister would be visiting her folks from Argentina this Christmas, the current Los Angeles resident booked a trip to join in the family fun.

Of course, no reunion in her old town would be complete without visiting old friends, and Esposito made sure to set some time aside for her longtime pal Chicago comedy. She’ll be performing at the Den Theatre Dec. 30 and 31 — long before midnight, because Esposito didn’t want to disrupt New Year’s Eve plans or, even worse, become them.

“I don’t actually think that stand-up and heavy drinking mix in the way that some people may [pretend] that they do,” Esposito says. “As a comic — trial by fire — you get really good at keeping people’s attention as much as you can; at this point, I’m not necessaril­y choosing to do that anymore.”

Understand­able, especially because Esposito’s time for standup shows is even more rare as of late. Her trip home occurs during a break in shooting the ABC drama “A Million Little Things,” on which she plays the love interest of main character Katherine (Grace Park). She can also be found in a guest spot on the ABC crime procedural “The Rookie: Feds,” the forthcomin­g second season of the Prime Video romantic comedy “With Love” and on hundreds of episodes of her superlativ­e LGBTQ-centered podcast, “QUEERY.”

Esposito, who uses she/her and they/them pronouns interchang­eably, says she could not have imagined her identity driving so much of her career, largely because, when she was grinding the Chicago comedy scene in the mid-2000s, there was a lack of LGBTQ representa­tion both on television and in live comedy.

Performing in Chicago at local showcases like the Lincoln Lodge, Chicago Undergroun­d Comedy and Comedians You Should Know — and later starting the popular Cole’s Wednesday night open mic — meant accepting that she likely would be the only queer-identifyin­g comic and the only (or, rarely, one of the only) female comics on the bill.

Though she faced abuse and harassment from other comics,

Esposito says the deck was actually stacked in her favor. “I have always felt that I had more faith in my comedy than some other comics because I was going to be one of the first people talking about that life experience [onstage],” she says.

That self-confidence propelled her to Los Angeles in 2012, where Esposito cultivated a fanbase that felt more authentic to the kinds of experience­s she wanted to talk about onstage. At the time, social media was democratiz­ing the ability for comics to carve their own niches, and while this ability was only in its nascent stages, Esposito says she noticed developing trends that carry through to recent Chicago transplant­s.

“Thinking about Ziwe Fumudoh [of Showtime’s ‘Ziwe’] and Sarah Squirm [aka Sarah Sherman on “Saturday Night Live”] or, really, anybody who is emerging now, it’s truly an era of [doing] what works for you,” Esposito says. “It’s a massive difference from [the mid2000s] of, ‘Plug yourself into the machine.’ Now it’s, ‘How can the machine plug into you?’ ”

After collaborat­ing with her then-spouse, stand-up comic River Butcher, on the 2016 Seeso television show “Take My Wife,” Esposito made the 2018 special “Rape Jokes,” earning accolades for its blunt honesty and deft use of humor in sharing her personal experience with sexual assault. A writer for Daily Beast was in the audience for the recording, and hailed the special as “the first great stand-up set of the #MeToo era.”

When Esposito wanted to bring “Rape Jokes” to Chicago, the Den Theatre was eager to run the shows and gave her a spot in its smaller theater. Due to the success of that run, she says, the Den decided to fully enter the stand-up space.

“In Chicago, I still feel a connection to the scene because there is a lasting legacy there for me that I feel proud of,” Esposito says. “In a lot of [its stand-up venues and showcases], my being a woman and my being a queer person contribute­d to what made the show so good. I feel jazzed that they continue to have success, and I make it a priority to come back and play those places.”

 ?? WME ?? Don’t count on ringing in the new year with comedian Cameron Esposito when she performs Dec. 30 and 31 at the Den Theatre.
WME Don’t count on ringing in the new year with comedian Cameron Esposito when she performs Dec. 30 and 31 at the Den Theatre.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States