Comedy club
A comedy club is a venue—typically a nightclub, bar, hotel, casino, or restaurant—where people watch or listen to performances, including stand-up comedians, improvisational comedians, impersonators, impressionists, magicians, ventriloquists, and other comedy acts.[1] The term "comedy club" usually refers to venues that feature stand-up comedy, as distinguished from improvisational theatres, which host improv or sketch comedy, and variety clubs (which may also host musical acts).

Audience and performers at a comedy club improv night
Types
    
Comedy clubs are usually broken down by comedians into "A rooms", "B rooms", and "C rooms":
- A rooms usually cater to people with movie deals, people with television shows, and generally well known acts.
 - B rooms are where the best aspects of both A rooms and C rooms meet. Young comics need B rooms as a stepping stone. These are rooms where someone doing a 10- to 15-minute set (hosting/MCing) can be asked, after they've been going up long enough, to do a 20-minute set (featuring) and so on. These clubs also typically allow dirtier material, since they can become established names for "dirty" comedy or shows that usually cover adult themes.
 - C rooms act as "neighborhood" comedy clubs, for the most part. The headliners are not usually very well known or popular, and the audiences are random walk-ins.
 
List of notable clubs
    
- Bananas Comedy Club
 - Carolines on Broadway
 - Catch a Rising Star chain
 - Cobb's Comedy Club
 - Coconuts Comedy Club
 - Comedy Cellar
 - Comedy Club Russia
 - The Comedy Clubhouse (Barcelona)
 - The Comedy Store
 - The Comedy Store (London)
 - The Comic Strip Live
 - Comedy Works in Denver, Colorado, U.S.
 - Dangerfields
 - The Empire in Belfast
 - The Funny Bone
 - The Glee Club chain
 - Gotham Comedy Club
 - Governors Comedy Club
 - The Improv
 - Jongleurs chain
 - The Laff Stop
 - The Laugh Factory
 - Off the Wall Comedy Empire, Jerusalem, Israel
 - The Punchline
 - The Stand Comedy Club in Glasgow, Edinburgh and Newcastle upon Tyne
 - The Stress Factory
 - The TakeOut Comedy Club Hong Kong
 - Yuk Yuk's
 
References
    
- Strauss, Duncan (November 3, 1988). "Comedy: The Clubbing of America". Rolling Stone.
 
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