Kambri Crews

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Kambri Crews
Crews at the 2012 Texas Book Festival.
Crews at the 2012 Texas Book Festival.
Born (1971-06-22) June 22, 1971 (age 52)
Tulsa, Oklahoma, U.S.
OccupationWriter, producer, publicist
GenreNon-fiction
Notable worksBurn Down the Ground: A Memoir
SpouseChristian Finnegan (2006-Present)

Kambri Crews (born June 22, 1971) is an American comedic

Time Out New York, which called her an "emerging monologist." Crews has also been referred to as a "world-class storyteller".[3]

Career

As a CODA, Crews' storytelling is notable for mixing conventional monologues with the use of American Sign Language; and for finding the humor in even the most hair-raising of childhood memories. Crews' tales typically focus on her childhood in the deep woods of Montgomery, Texas, where she lived in everything from a tin shed[4] to a trailer to the tin shed again.

Crews has performed at most of NYC's top

Risk!, Seth Herzog's Sweet, UCBT's School Night, Liam McEneaney's Tell Your Friends, and the NY/LA comedy show Mortified.[5]

In October 2007, Crews created the alternative performance space

John Oliver, Mike Daisey, Adam Wade and her husband Christian Finnegan. In addition to overseeing the performance space, she owns her PR and production company Ballyhoo Promotions. She is an Executive Producer of the ECNY Awards and served as the Executive Director of Marketing and Publicity for the comedy nightclub Comix NY from the club's inception in September 2006. She resigned from that post in September 2010 when Ochi's Lounge was closed by new owners of Comix and became the comedy booker for the 92nd Street Y's Tribeca location.[6]

Since October 2014, Crews has owned and operated the performance venue Q.E.D. Astoria in Astoria, Queens.[7] The venue has featured Leslie Jones, Kate McKinnon, Pete Davidson, Chris Gethard, Todd Barry, Kevin Allison, Judy Gold, Dave Hill, Ted Alexandro, Judah Friedlander, Christian Finnegan, Jim Gaffigan, Adam Conover, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Gary Gulman, Michelle Wolf, Moody McCarthy, Frank Conniff, Jay Pharoah, Laurie Kilmartin, Ophira Eisenberg, Josh Gondelman, John Early, Hasan Minaj, Morgan Murphy, John Fugelsang, Janeane Garofalo, Mike Lawrence, Aparna Nancherla, Jo Firestone, Tom Scharpling, Myq Kaplan, Baratunde Thurson, Sasheer Zamata, Michelle Buteau, and Mike Doughty.[8]

Personal life

Most prominent in Crews' stories is her father, who was the seventh of ten children of farmers, born completely deaf, and "the black sheep of his very strict Christian family." The summer before Crews entered her senior year at

US Navy with her mother’s legal permission since Crews was under the age of consent.[10]

On June 29, 2002, her father was arrested for the attempted murder of his girlfriend;[11] an act for which he was sentenced to 20-years in a Texas prison, and died on July 10, 2020.[12] Crews' memoir includes prose versions of many of her performance pieces. She also provides updates about her father in her blog, LoveDaddy.org, and an essay about her childhood was published by Hillary Carlip on FreshYarn.com.

She is the great-niece to Medal of Honor recipient John R. Crews.

References

  1. ^ "E-Book Nonfiction Books - Best Sellers - August 23, 2015 - The New York Times". The New York Times. Retrieved 30 March 2017.
  2. ^ "Burn Down the Ground". PenguinRandomhouse.com.
  3. ^ "HyReviews.com: NYC Comedy, NYC Theatre Discounts, Comedy Videos, Jokes, and More". Hy reviews.
  4. ^ n. "Shed". Kambri Crews.
  5. ^ "Mortified: Share the Shame". Get Mortified.
  6. ^ Kambri Crews (4 September 2010). "Tower of Hubris". Tower of Hubris.
  7. ^ "Astoria space offers comedy by night and community center by day". New York Daily News. 19 October 2014. Retrieved 30 March 2017.
  8. ^ "Q.E.D. Notable Guests". Flickr. 10 April 2016.
  9. ^ Love, Daddy Smoking Gun
  10. ^ "Love, Daddy: A Petty Officer & A Gentleman". Love, Daddy.
  11. ^ Ramirez, Jr., D. "Boyfriend Jailed in Knife Attack", Ft. Worth Star Telegram
  12. ^ Woodward, Teresa (July 16, 2020). "Deaf inmate granted parole from Texas prison in June but died before he was released". WFAA. Archived from the original on October 24, 2021. Retrieved September 17, 2022.

External links