A new comedy club will open in the basement of the Charles Playhouse this fall. The club, called Lil Chuck, will continue a comedy tradition of nearly 50 years in that space.
“It’s a historic venue, first and foremost,” said Norm Laviolette, who will run the club together with John Tobin. The two operate a series of comedy and improv shows in the city, including Laugh Boston and Improv Asylum. “It’s been a performance venue for probably 50 years, if not longer. It’s literally the first comedy club ever in Boston, so it’s got a lot of connections to what we do.”
The
Charles Playhouse was originally built as a church, but its basement
became a comedy club in 1978. Soon after, the space played host to
“Shear Madness,” an interactive “whodunit” play that ran for nearly 40
years. When the show closed in March of 2020, Tobin and Laviolette got
in touch with Broadway in Boston, the company which owns the space.
“The
Charles Playhouse is a wonderful asset that they have there,” Tobin
said. “The appreciation we have for that, and what’s come before us.
We’re going to treat it with extra care, so that when you go into the
Lil Chuck, you’re going to have a real special experience.”
Since
Lil Chuck is first and foremost a theater space, Tobin and Laviolette
are taking a more theatrical approach to comedy. Their first show is
slated as “[expletive]-Faced Shakespeare,” in which the lead actor in a
traditional Shakespearean play gets increasingly drunk as the night goes
on.
“While stand-up comedy is at the core, there’s all kinds of other things,” Tobin said. “You might see a podcast in there.
You
might see some sort of theatrical show. You might see a YouTube star,
or a drag show. Lil Chuck presents us a real unique opportunity, in that
it’s a theater. It was made for comedy performances and for theatrical
performances.”
The name of the club, “Lil Chuck,” comes from an old nickname given to the basement room by staff at the Playhouse.
“The
people inside the building would often refer to the downstairs theater
as the Little Chuck,” Laviolette said. “You have the Charles, which is
the big place, so downstairs is the little one. We said, ‘Let’s keep it
right in house.’ It’s a cute and funny name, and it’s one that everybody
remembers.”
The space
can hold 199 people, and previews begin on October 3. The opening night
of the first show is one week later, on October 10. In the meantime,
Tobin and Laviolette are finishing minor cosmetic renovations to the
bar, restrooms, and actor green rooms.
“It’s going to be spectacular,” Tobin said.
“When
things are going well, people want to laugh. When things are going bad,
people need to laugh. That’s what we do. It is kind of fitting that the
Charles Playhouse was originally a church. Comedy shows are very much a
communal experience.”