improviser – AMUSEum https://amuseum-sf.com Mon, 24 Jun 2024 00:14:22 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 memory post-jose-simon https://amuseum-sf.com/memory-post-jose-simon/ Sun, 23 Jun 2024 03:46:29 +0000 https://amuseum-sf.com/?p=3794

LAUGHTER from the HEREAFTER

Jose Simon • 1944 – 2008

Jose Simon

Back in 1975, Jose had a dream. Involving three things he loved – the sounds of people laughing, the spirit of celebration, and his adopted home, San Francisco – Simon began pushing the idea of a free outdoor daytime comedy “concert.” The vision became reality in 1981, when the first Comedy Day took place in Golden Gate Park.

Since that time, more than 500 of the world’s funniest comedians have performed free-of-charge for over a half-million people at Comedy Day. It started in the Golden Gate Park Music Concourse (affectionately known as the Band Shell), moved to the Polo Fields in 1986 to accommodate larger crowds and, for the past few years, has found a home in Sharon MeadoBorn to a show business family, he immigrated to San Francisco from Mexico City in 1959. Within a couple of years of arriving, he began performing with bands in North Beach and eventually joined SAPO, for which he was later inducted into the Kings of Latin Rock.

In the early 1970s, on his way to a rehearsal, Jose was introduced to a world that became his second passion: improvisation, through the legendary Committee, directed by Del Close. It was there where he first met another aspiring comedian, a guy by the name of Robin Williams, as well as John Cantu and Frank Kidder. John was a great comedy writer whose energy fueled Comedy Day, and Frank started the very first SF International Stand-Up Comedy Competition.

The seed was planted, and today, 27 years later, Jose’s spirit lives on not only at the five-hour funfest, but also through the comedy workshop outreach program conducted at Bay Area public schools throughout the year.

Believing in the healing power of laughter, Jose Simon was first and foremost an innovator. He was instrumental to the escalation of stand-up comedy in the city that is now considered the cradle of civilization for the genre. The Innovator Award will allow us to memorialize Jose’s legacy with the purchase of a bench in the park that was so near and dear to his heart. Thank you for your consideration.

My memory of Jose…

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

A story about Jose…

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Once Jose and I were…

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Saw Jose at Bimbos…

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Contributing your memories to other's pages is much appreciated

Memorial Story
  • The Memorial Story form will whisk your story to Google to store it once you click the Submit button.
  • If there is a member of the community we have left out, please alert AMUSEum about the omission.
]]>
memorypost-denise-schultz https://amuseum-sf.com/memorypost-denise-schultz/ Sun, 26 May 2024 01:31:43 +0000 https://amuseum-sf.com/?p=2447

LAUGHTER from the HEREAFTER

Denise Schultz • 1952 – 2008

Denise Schultz

There was no better sound than her knowing laugh. The one that let you know she thought whatever you were saying was funny, which coming from her was no faint praise. She knew her funny. The same laugh, that also signaled she knew where you were going with ‘it’. You could hear it coming with her breath, just a nanosecond before the laughter left her throat and hit your ears. She always got the joke, even the feeble or unformed ones. Years of improv had trained her to anticipate it at the threshold, before it dashed through the door and caught you unawares. Actually her talent was inherent. Improv may have honed the quick wit she was blessed with, but her level of skill was certainly natural born. To put an even finer point on it, most of the time, she probably knew the punchline of my stories before I did… and had a capper ready, to plop like a cherry on top! Quite a gracious fit for an improviser, waiting politely for your delivery, so she could counter with her own perfected bon mot. What a thrill she was to work with, what a joy that she was just as giving off stage. Here’s the thing, most performers are a bit self-centered & selfish. (a bit?) It’s part of the job description. Denise was above all that. Not only did she have funny down cold, but she coaxed the funny out of you in that playful way of hers. She was always up for a little of the old back and forth, the wordplay, even a sarcastic remark or two. (or two?) All in the service of letting the big laughs rip and fill the room. Denise was always my best audience and I flatter myself to think I truly tickled her with my silliness from time to time. I know the music of her giggle, her throaty guffaw, and even the supportive snicker will not fade away soon. I hold them too dear. 

– Jeannene Hansen, fellow improviser, friend and cohort

]]>