Call & Times

Fred Armisen is ready for whatever’s next

- By ANDY HOGLUND

WASHINGTON — Backstage at the Lincoln Theatre, Fred Armisen is downplayin­g his knack for accents. “I probably have a while to go before I’m really trained enough to know where people are from,” he says, after asking if I’m from Baltimore. (I grew up in Laurel, Maryland, less than 20 miles from his impressive guess.)

He says he can do five New York accents, as well as the Midwest, Chicago and Southern California. “The South is very hard,” he says. “I can do three versions of it.”

Onstage minutes later, he demonstrat­es each with almost preternatu­ral command, launching into the difference­s among the various provincial accents in Canada, and explaining how the D.C. dialect is unique from the cadence found in Maryland and Virginia. Then he begins taking requests for which regions to try next.

His talent appears effortless – even casual – despite undoubtedl­y reflecting years of skill-polishing effort.

Armisen’s sold-out show, “Comedy for Musicians but Everyone Is Welcome,” updates his Grammy-nominated Netflix special, “Standup for

Drummers,” with new jokes and more guitar. And this particular performanc­e brings his career full circle.

The comedian, best known for his roles on “Saturday Night Live” and “Portlandia,” first performed in the District of Columbia at the original 9:30 Club in 1988. He was a musician then, playing with his friend Damon Locks, who grew up in Silver Spring. They eventually moved to Chicago, forming the post-hardcore band Trenchmout­h. But the group’s links to the area’s undergroun­d scene remained “because we idolized D.C. music so much – or copied it. We wanted to be part of that – (at the venues) d.c. space, 9:30 Club and a church we’d play with (local punk band) Nation of Ulysses.”

Back then, travel and accommodat­ions consisted of “vans all the way and sleeping bags,” a far cry from the luxurious tour bus currently parked behind the venue.

Armisen’s transition from music to comedy wasn’t entirely planned; a short film he made 20 years ago changed the trajectory of his career. “Fred Armisen’s Guide to Music and SXSW,” in which he trolls the Texas festival’s attendees, was “the turning point when I really started doing comedy instead of music.”

“I went to the festival thinking, ‘What do all these people know about making it in the music business? Why are they having all these meetings and speeches about how to get booked on the radio?’” Armisen said. “The irony is they were right, and I was wrong. Because I went to SXSW, my career got started.”

The short, which went viral before viral became a corporate comms objective, now feels like it’s part of a late ‘90s time capsule – complete with a cameo from Janeane Garofalo. It’s like something that might’ve been shot for Big Brother magazine. But Armisen’s early comedic chops are on full display.

He spent the next several years honing his craft on television, including appearance­s on HBO’s “Reverb,” “Late World With Zach” (starring Zach Galifianak­is) and “Late Night With Conan O’Brien.”

But it was when Armisen began on “SNL” in 2002 that his career really took off. During his last few years on the famed late-night sketch show, he pulled double duty as he co-created and filmed the cult-favorite and Emmy-nominated series “Portlandia.” And after leaving “Saturday Night Live” in 2013, his comedy résumé remained impressive­ly dense, with appearance­s ranging from a weird turn as Robert Durst on the comedy “Unbreakabl­e Kimmy Schmidt” to voicing several of the characters on the puberty-centric animated series “Big Mouth.”

Last year, he starred alongside his friend and fellow “SNL” alum Maya Rudolph in the critically acclaimed “Forever,” which he says will not receive a second season, calling it “a finished piece.”

And he’s gearing up for the Season 3 premiere of “Documentar­y Now!,” his Emmy-nominated IFC mockumenta­ry series with Bill Hader and Seth Meyers, which starts Feb. 20, nearly 2½ years after the second season’s conclusion.

What started as a side project for Armisen has morphed into another tenant of his offbeat brand: “We love it, but it’s not some little show. We have to travel to places, and really get into it, build whole worlds and film styles,” he said, explaining the delay. And he hedges on a fourth season: “It’s always going to be a maybe.”

Armisen’s constant output can appear dizzying. At his core, he is still the hustling teenage punk auditionin­g for CBGB. At 52, he is insistent this approach to work does not inhibit his happiness or stability.

“I try to kill my schedule. I try to kill every month, every week. I just want to get through the year by doing too much,” he said.

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