Tig Notaro - Happy To Be Here - 2x LP Vinyl

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SKU:c0015830 ,UPC:

Info

SKU:
c0015830
UPC:
705438092817

Specifications

Batch, Album, Artist, Format,

Specifications

Album:
Happy To Be Here
Artist:
Tig Notaro
Format:
12" Vinyl
UPC:
705438092817

Description

Tragedy and resilience have marked Tig Notaro’s stand-up career as much as her deadpan delivery and delightfully serpentine storytelling. In 2012, her breakout year, Notaro was reeling from the death of her mother, a breakup, and a cancer diagnosis when she took the Largo stage in Los Angeles. She introduced herself to the audience with signature terseness and captivating honesty: “Good evening. Hello. I have cancer.”

What followed was not only a set for the ages but also the next stage of Notaro’s career. She’d been doing stand-up for years, but her performance at the Largo led to the release of her first album, Live, a book deal, and an HBO comedy special. Notaro went on to develop her first TV series, the effortlessly charming One Mississippi, with Diablo Cody. All of those projects are tinged with sadness, but heartbreak is just one of the hallmarks of Notaro’s work. She’s also an exceptionally gifted storyteller, capable of creating distinct characters and tying together the most disparate of threads in just minutes. Never has that quality been more on display than in Notaro’s new special, Happy To Be Here, which is an hour of joy, triumph, and the subversion of expectations.

Notaro directed the intimate and deceptively spartan special, which was shot in December 2017 at Houston’s The Heights Theater. Her introduction—“Happy to be here”—seems miles away from her stunning Largo opener, but it’s just as honest. The comedian is clearly excited to be performing in Texas after 10 years, having grown up in the town of Spring. But Notaro’s also reveling in married life and parenthood, which she explores in bits about late-night conversations with her wife, actor-writer Stephanie Allynne, and the antics of their twin sons. There are jokes about temp jobs and communicating with cats and being misgendered, delivered in typically wry and observational fashion. But Notaro is all smiles throughout, frequently bantering with the audience. There’s a lot of interaction with the crowd, but her rhythm remains unbroken; Notaro just works the occasional gasp of shock or skepticism into her act.