Three comedians come together for a great night of stand-up skewed toward the Boomer Generation! Richard Stockton, Dan St. Paul and Will Durst!
Will, Richard, and Dan have been around awhile and lived a little. The irony here is that not only have these comedians gotten older, they’ve gotten better! In fact, they are at the top of their game. They just now prefer to perform to audiences who sit on comfortable theatre seats and don’t need to text every three minutes. They like folks who appreciate the value of a granite counter top or being able to sit through a musical presentation rather than stand for three straight hours. Hence the Boomer Humor Show was born, to appeal to those folks who value laughing heartily for 105 minutes and getting home at a decent hour.
Richard Stockton is a nationally touring comedian with many appearances on national television and radio and a NeuroLinguistic Programing teacher who focuses on blasting through the fear that blocks you from being all you can be. He says that if you are not living your own dream, then you are living someone else’s. His tales of transformation appear regularly on NPR stations. He will show you how to see things with a different perspective so you can use your fears to move you forward.
Will Durst’s acclaimed tribute to the history, growth, joys, achievements, frustrations, fashions and looming doom of the Baby Boom Generation. Ably assisted by his trusty overhead projector, Durst explores the Boomers’ revolutions, evolutions and still vibrant role in today’s youth-obsessed society, which they invented, for crum’s sake. It’s a celebration of the maturation of the Boomer Nation and as an extra, added, special treat- the Meaning of Life.
Dan St. Paul has been chronicling his life on stage for 30 years. After turning fifty, he discovered that his body is changing (“I’m a cylinder now. I can where a belt anywhere on my body.”). His memory and eyesight are degenerating (“I have eight pair of reading glasses and I have no idea where they are.”). Raising a teenager is challenging (“I have a bumper sticker that says ‘My Son’s Just Getting By At Hillsdale High’.”).