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COMEDY COURAGE
COMEDY COURAGE TM
Canada's 1st & Largest Comedy Benefit Concert
In Support of Mental Health Wellness

"Helping Our Mental Health Community Help Themselves Through
LAUGHTER, COMEDY & COURAGE"
Janice Bannister   Donations  Mission Statement

2012 TEACHER/MENTOR AND COMEDIC HOST

   We are excited to have Janice Bannister with us this year. Janice is a stand-up comic, a corporate speaker on Laughter Wellness, and she is former Psychiatric Nurse. She is the winner of the “Best New Female Comic” and “Best Comic with a Day Job”. She has performed at the Vancouver Comedy Festival, and is a regular at Lafflines Comedy Club.
Janice is the owner of Laughter Zone 101, a company that teaches stand-up comedy to teens and adults, and brings Laughter Wellness Workshops, for better mental health, to businesses and corporate events.
Janice says, “I am thrilled to be involved in Comedy Courage, as the Comedic Mentor and Instructor. I am a huge advocate for reducing the stigma around mental illness through the looking glasses of humour, and the best way to do that is to share our stories and issues with the community we live in. Laughter is such a powerful healing tool, and with collaboration and support of a group, that is the best therapy there is.
See you at the BIG SHOW!”

Students take a crack at a stand-up comedy

By Mario Bartel - New Westminster News Leader
Published: February 24, 2011 10:00 AM
Updated: February 24, 2011 12:05 PM
 

When Janice Bannister first got on stage eight years ago, she was terrified.
She had just graduated from a stand-up comedy course at Langara College and her first gig was a showcase for the grads at a restaurant on Commercial Drive.
She must have made an impression; the producer of a women’s comedy show invited her back to perform her set the next week. Again the butterflies tickled her tummy. But when she saw there was hardly anyone seated in the small cabaret, they almost flew up and out of her throat.

“There’s nobody here,” she whispered in a panic to the producer.
But she went on anyway, and hasn’t looked back. Now she’s showing the way to other hopeful comics.

After working the local scene for a couple of years, Bannister decided her funny bone was best cracked by teaching others to be funny. She studied the nuts and bolts of running her own business at Douglas College, launched Laughter Zone 101, and for six years, has been passing on her insight and experience to new generations of stand-up wannabes, the past two terms at a night course at New Westminster secondary school.

“People are too straight,” says Bannister. “Comedy is about stepping out of your comfort level.”

Trying to lighten it up

At 81 years old, Georgie Cole’s comfort level is well established. The Burnaby resident says she’s always been confident and outspoken. She took public speaking courses when she was younger, but wants to add more levity to her volunteer duties as an emcee at seniors’ and church functions.

Which is why she’s in a classroom at New West secondary on a Monday evening with about a dozen other would-be comics from White Rock to Matsqui, laughing uproariously at some jokes, squirming uncomfortably at the raunchier bits and nervously reviewing her own lines scrawled onto 4-by-6 index cards.
“I’m not into smut,” says Cole.

On this night, halfway through the eight-week course, each student is to perform a five-minute set they’ve been writing and honing since the first class. Comedy is hard work.

“It’s tough to get the jokes short and snappy,” Cole says. “I feel like I need a preamble to explain them.”

An experienced comic can write 10 bits to get two good ones, explains Bannister. “Editing is very important. For every 20 minutes of blah blah blah, you might get five minutes of ha ha ha.”
She coaches her students to draw from their own lives and observations to build their bits, then add a twist at the end.

“The hardest thing to learn is you don’t need to make stuff up,” says Bannister. “Truth makes the best comedy.” Want fries with that?
 

Greg Fawcett’s real life job is acting, he tells the class at the opening of his five-minute set. “You’re probably asking yourself where you’ve seen me before,” he tells his audience, sensing their quizzical looks as they try to place his face. “I’ve done TV shows, bit parts in some movies. I’ve served you a latté at Starbucks.”
Fawcett says comedy is a “new muscle” for him to exercise, different from acting in a controlled environment like a soundstage.

“Here you’re dealing with an audience, there’s pressure to deliver,” says Fawcett. “It’s a different anxiety.”

Bannister says people sign up for her classes for all sorts of reasons. Some want to get more comfortable on stage; learn how to lighten the tone at business meetings; explore a life-long fascination with comedy; cross stand-up off their “bucket list.”

‘You can be whoever you want to be’
Zoe Clemens, 77, is tapping into her inner performer. She says she’s been entertaining people since she was two years old. She’s been a clown, done showcases at the Confederation Seniors Centre in North Burnaby, and currently belongs to a seniors’ cabaret group in North Vancouver.

“When you’re on stage, you can be whoever you want to be,” says Clemens, who’s taking Bannister’s class for a second time.
She always carries a notepad, jotting down observations and ideas as they come to her. Much of her material comes from her childhood on the Prairies.

“Everyday stuff is the funniest,” says Clemens. “You never know what’s going to make people laugh.” Making the audience feel good Which is just what Bannister tells her students as she deconstructs their sets through the second half of the session, and then sends them on their way to further tighten their material for the next week’s class.

“People just want to feel good,” says Bannister. “When you’re up on that stage, the audience is just thanking themselves they’re not up there.”
Just as she did, graduates of Bannister’s class will perform at a special showcase at Lafflines on March 10.
For more information, go to Laughter Zone 101



Very Special Thanks to
SHELLEY ECKSTEIN
Our Event and Volunteer Coordinator
and all of her wonderful volunteer teams including:

STAPLES DISTRICT MANAGER -
VICTOR CHIMA
STAPLES GENERAL MANAGERS -
KJ DARWAL, RANJ SEHDEV, RITA HARDEN,
DELMAR KYLLO, ANDREA BACKMAN
STAPLES STORE VOLUNTEERS -
SAMMY GREFFORD, WAYNE VAN DER WESTHUIZEN,
JAMES SUTTON, KIM MEYER

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