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Mitzi Shore

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Full Name
  
Mitzi Saidel

Spouse
  
Sammy Shore (m. ?–1975)

Nationality
  
American

Occupation
  
Comedy club owner

Name
  
Mitzi Shore


Mitzi Shore Mitzi Shore Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Born
  
July 25, 1930 (age 93) (
1930-07-25
)

Known for
  
Co-Founder and Owner of The Comedy Store

Similar People
  
Pauly Shore, Sammy Shore, Don Ward, David Letterman, Mitzi Gaynor

Organizations founded
  
The Comedy Store

Children
  
Pauly Shore, Peter Shore

Mitzi Shore, Owner of L.A.’s Legendary Comedy Store, Dies at 87


Mitzi Shore (née Saidel) (born July 25, 1930) is an American comedy club owner. She founded the Los Angeles comedy club, The Comedy Store in 1972 and became owner two years later. Through the club, she has had a huge influence on the careers of up-and-coming comedians for decades. Mitzi also founded Comedy Channel Inc. in 1982.

Contents

Mitzi Shore mitzi shore Tumblr

Mitzi shore top 22 facts


Biography

Mitzi Shore httpspbstwimgcomprofileimages1416649088mi

Her former husband, Sammy Shore, is also a comedian. The couple have four children: Peter, Scott, actor Pauly and daughter Sandy.

Mitzi Shore The Comedy Store 40th Anniversary Celebration

Shore's ownership of the Comedy Store has long been a source of contention between members of the Shore family.

Mitzi Shore Robin Williams39s Message To Mitzi Shore YouTube

Mitzi Shore currently suffers from Parkinson's disease. Her financial affairs are managed by her designated trustee, her son Peter Shore.

The Comedy Store

Sammy Shore and Mitzi Shore co-founded the Comedy Store in 1972. Mitzi is credited for naming the club. When Sammy and Mitzi divorced in 1974, Mitzi acquired complete ownership as part of their divorce settlement. Sammy Shore was later quoted in 2003 by the Los Angeles Times as explaining that he "relinquished control of the club to lower his alimony payments".

Mitzi's contribution to the club's ongoing survival and day-to-day management extended far beyond a lucky inheritance. Shortly after she took full control, Mitzi was able to obtain a significant cash loan from comedian Shecky Greene to help ensure continued operations (comedy clubs have never been viewed as sound investments by traditional creditors).

Now-famous comedians like Robin Williams, Jerry Seinfeld, Garry Shandling, Freddie Prinze, Jay Leno, David Letterman, Chevy Chase, Sam Kinison, Marc Maron, Andrew Dice Clay, Jim Carrey, Joe Rogan, Joey Diaz and Carlos Nunez have all worked at the Comedy Store for Mitzi Shore.

1979 strike and picket

Shore refused to pay comics who performed in her club, insisting that the venue was a sort of "college of comedy" where comedians learned their craft rather than a money-making enterprise. However, in 1979, after the club had been extensively expanded, comedians began to insist that they be paid for their work. Shore refused and the performers picketed the establishment in what became a bitter six week strike action. Among those involved in leading the strike were Jay Leno, David Letterman (the club's emcee), and Tom Dreesen. After several months of picketing, and an incident in which Leno was injured by a car attempting to rush the picket line, Shore relented and agreed to pay comics $15 a set. (Still $15 a set as of 2017, pay was never raised.) The settlement set a precedent that resulted in New York City comedy clubs beginning to pay their talent as well, and other comedy clubs across the country followed suit by paying comics to perform too.

Belly Room

Mitzi's bookings were as non-traditional as her financing. As early as 1978, Shore had converted the upstairs section of The Comedy Store into the "Belly Room": a 50-seat audience for which she exclusively booked female comedians. At the time, professional comedy was very much a "boys' club", and bookings for female comedians were rare; opportunities for women to perform their own stand-up material under the same roof as the most popular comics in the country was unheard of.

Mitzi's liberal risk-taking with booking talent has continued for decades. In the 1990s, once female comics had become more established, Shore continued to cross boundaries with her audience by creating specialty nights for Latino, and gay and lesbian performers.

Comedy Channel Inc.

Shore owned and operated Comedy Channel Inc. since 1982 - a company established to create and sell video tapes of performances at The Comedy Store.

In 1989 HBO launched their (ultimately ill-fated) premium cable service "The Comedy Channel". Shore's suit claimed HBO's service was an "indirect unauthorized use" of the name and trademark "Comedy Channel". Mitzi Shore retained counsel James Blancarte and sued HBO for copyright infringement.

Depictions in media

Tom Hanks' Playtone Company is in pre-production of a movie based on Mitzi Shore's life and impact on American comedy.

The character Goldie on the Showtime TV show I'm Dying Up Here is loosely based on Mitzi Shore.

References

Mitzi Shore Wikipedia