Arts & Entertainment SERIOUS ABOUT COMEDY I ON THE COVER Ben Konstantin finds life after layoff in a comedy career. Photo by Ang le Ba an 1 Bill Carroll Special to the Jewish News T he economic downturn cost him his job as senior art director at a premier advertising agency, but Ben Konstantin of Oak Park is getting the last laugh. Today, Konstantin, 44, is a full-time comedian riding a wave of popularity among comedy audiences nationwide. Appearing at comedy clubs and festivals locally and around the country, he is earn- ing a decent living in his second career. Local audiences will get a chance to check on Konstantin's progress when he stars in Ha!liday Laugh-A-Palooza, a mini comedy festival featuring a mix of local and national comedians, at the Palace of Auburn Hills on Saturday, Dec. 19. Performing along with Konstantin will be nationally known comics Dan Grueter, Bill Squire, Dwayne Gill (also a Michigan State Police sergeant) and master of cer- emonies Joel Fragomeni. "I'll perform about 35 minutes in the Laugh-A-Palooza, with about seven to eight minutes on the Jewish perspective of things:' says the tall, slender Konstantin, sipping coffee after his daily workout at the Jewish Community Center of Metropolitan Detroit. "I do mostly observational humor about people sweating the small stuff in life, getting annoyed and angry about daily happenings. "For example, when I was working in an office, I got an e-mail feeler for a new job opening and I answered it. Turns out, the feeler came from my own company — and they rejected me!" Early Years Growing up, Konstantin didn't show an inclination for standup comedy. He was shy in public, although he was a practical joker among his close friends and, as a camp counselor — at Camp Sequoia in Rock Hill, N.Y., and Camp Tanuga in Kalkaska, Mich. — often enter- tained his bunk kids. A graduate of Oak Park High School, he attended Michigan State University sort of quiet outside of the and transferred to Wayne State Ben Konstantin: "My family. But he was a very University in Detroit, where he comedy emerged in my cartoons and other talented illustrator who did earned a degree in fine arts/ humorous drawings in outstanding portraits;' they painting. Exhibiting a strong my early years." concurred. talent as an illustrator and "People who didn't know desiring to build a portfolio for Ben well when he was future employment, Konstantin growing up are often surprised to find out went on to study at Detroit's Center for what he's doing now:' says his sister, Lynne Creative Studies, specializing in commer- Konstantin of West Bloomfield. "He came cial graphics and illustrations and earn- off as reserved, and he wore glasses, so ing a second bachelor's degree in graphic everyone thought he was very studious. communications/commercial art. "But he always had it in him — he just "I guess my comedy emerged in my cartoons and other humorous drawings in took a while to get to the point of being comfortable, then really letting go, on my early years:' he recalls. "I would draw stage. I think that's part of what he loves comic strips and sell them to friends. I about doing it now, that many people would amuse them by basing the comic expect one thing of him, and surprise! strip characters on my classmates and And, she adds, "he always was drawing other people I knew. I still draw a lot in my really funny caricatures and comic books spare time now" His parents, Bill and Miriam Konstantin — even in elementary school. He still does them for my kids." of Oak Park, agree they didn't foresee his Konstantin hit a roadblock as a stu- future as a comedian, other than a few dent when he developed attention deficit youthful appearances at Congregation Shaarey Zedek of Oakland County, where Last Laugh on page 46 the family belongs. "Otherwise, he was December 17 x 7009 43