The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, September 12, 2014 - 5A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Friday, September12, 2014 - SA 'I just came back for the Pizza House. Birbiglia brings '19 The Jokes to AA I wish I could swear in this show' The Thirteenth Doctor: A more mature 'Who' Comedian to display classic, personable style By ALEX BERNARD Daily Arts Writer In 2008, Mike Birbiglia's one- man show, "Sleepwalk With Me", opened off-Broadway Mike Birbi- to stellar reviews, The glia: Thank New York God For Times call- ing it "simply The Jokes perfect" and Sunday, Sept.14 Time Out New The Michigan York naming it the "show Theater of the year." 8p.m. Four years later, Birbiglia directed the film version, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival - winning an Audience Award and becoming one of the year's top three most critically-acclaimed comedies on Rotten Tomatoes. In 2011, his second one-man show, "My Girlfriend's Boy- friend," opened off-Broadway, ran for four months and won the Lucille Lortel Award for Out- standing Solo Show. Following the run, Birbiglia has performed the show in more than 70 cit- ies worldwide, including per- formances at the Sydney Opera House, London's Soho Theatre and Carnegie Hall. Most notably though, when filming in Ann Arbor several years ago, Birbiglia ate at Pizza House for the first time and now says, "It was one of my greatest food memories of my life." On Sunday, Mike Birbiglia willcome to The Michigan The- ater for his brand new show, "Thank God For Jokes," and he believes this could be his best stand-up yet. "My goal was to set out to write the funniest show I could possibly write," Birbiglia says. "So it's extremely dense with stories and jokes and lines about how sometimes jokes can get you in trouble, but ultimately, they make you feel closer to people and, in my opinion, are worth it." Past shows of his have been driven by a single story or event that encapsulates the entire act, but Birbiglia says "Thank God For Jokes" diverges from this method. "After "Sleepwalk With Me" and "My Girlfriend's Boyfriend," which are both very story-driv- en things, I wanted to make a show that was just the funniest show I could create ... In the pro- cess of doing that, what emerged was this through-line about jokes and basically how much jokes mean to me." "In some ways, jokes are like a language." Birbiglia contin- ued. "They're like a way that people communicate with other people who have a good sense of humor. In some ways, my shows are kind of like a series of inside jokes between me and the audi- ence." It's this intimate, personable style that distinguishes Birbiglia from other comedians. "TIME Magazine" calls him a "master of the personal, embarrassing tale," and "The New York Times" describes him as a "supremely enjoyable monologist." Birbiglia insists it's all about honesty. "(The style)'s not something that comes to my mind as much ... I'm just trying to be true to myself when I write. I'm trying to get to the bottom of what's under every story ... I follow the muse of'Why."' Obviously, Birbiglia's style has turned some heads and captured audiences' attention. In the past few years, he's made more than 40 network television appear- ances, including interviews on Letterman, Conan, Kimmel, Seth Meyers and "The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon." He's featured on the New York Times Bestseller List and, just this past year, played Patrick in the much-beloved "The Fault in Our Stars." In August, Birbiglia even secured a role on season three of the hit Netflix show, "Orange Is the New Black." Yet he insists that the added attention hasn't changed his day-to-day life, especially his interactions with strangers. "A lot of times, I'll meet some- one and they'll say 'You're a comedian?' And I'll say, 'Yeah.' And they'll say, 'You think you're gonna make it?' And then I'm like, 'Well, I think I already have."' Tickets are still available, so reach into your wallets, grab your parents' credit card and come on down to see a rising tal- ent and one of the most unique voices in comedy today. By DREW MARON Daily Arts Writer He emerges from the TARDIS, a little blue box we're all more than familiar with ... but some- thing's changed. Who is this bit- ter old Scottish man with "attack eyebrows" and a haggard face? This isn't the Doctor we know and love? Where's the fez and the flirt- ing with companions? Where's the wacky sense of wonder? What happened to "Doctor Who?" The answer is simple, brilliant and found ina move that is really making me miss Steven Moffat already: "Doctor Who" got old. Fifty to be precise, making him the oldest science-fiction fran- chise of all time - beating out both "Star Trek" and "Star Wars." For the first time in the series' history, the actor and the show itself are the same age. Actually, Peter Capaldi, number thirteen of the Doctors (but Malcolm Tucker in the hearts of any fans of "The Thick of It") is fifty-six but the specificity isn't what's important here. Most of the time, the Doctor's "regeneration" protocol is an easy ploy (to those non-Whovians, the Doctor never dies, but rather is mortally injured and regenerates himself to have a new physical form; in other words, same guy, different face). Oftentimes, the executives of "Doctor Who" sim- ply used it as a way for the show, and character, to outlast the actors. But now, it actually means something: the Doctor, after fifty years on screen, is finally showing his age. Not to say he's not the same Doctor. The wit, wonder, genius and personality is still all there. But now, with Moffat almost done with "Doctor Who," it seems he's leaving his final dent in the series'l we don no one the got good-n dIe-age moral c no mat Stev tor in: not en it's hat replaci tle anx controt maturi ish cul tional p there a A who m andba But exceed He's potenti Moffat televisi and I'n he's go TARDI detract Moffat overly eral la are less tor Wh bish.A othert fat has approa work a ing on long-running history. Yep, are richly drawn, doing much 't know how he did it with more than providing target prac- else noticing, but he made tice for the Doctor's witticisms. od Doctor a wisecracking, Moffat has often been reviled atured and brilliant mid- for some of his female characters, d Scotsman with a bit of something I find just ridiculous. utrage and a love of truth, I can't think of a better subver- ter how much it hurts. sion of a classically subordinate en Moffat made the Doc- character than the recent rev- to himself. Okay, that's elation of Mary Moorston's past tirely accurate. But still, on "Sherlock." Nor can I think rd to imagine whoever's of a more fitting "Doctor Who" ng the Moffnot to feel a lit- spin-off than lizard humanoid ious. The man has stirred Lady Vastra, her wife Jenny and versy no doubt for truly their butler Strax solving crimes ng the Doctor from a Brit- in Victorian London together as t favorite into an interna- was seen in "Deep Breath" (and phenomenon, and of course major props for the kiss scene ire some people out there between Vastra and Jenny; a scene which has unfortunately been censored in several coun- =kter Capaldi tries). Clara as well, a character some might have thought a tad too conventional for the Doctor's lovely assistant, is seen growing out of her shell and into someone almost tragic in her affection for a man who aged from twenty to fifty in the span of a day. iss the days of shaky sets "Doctor Who" is the best kind d graphics. of science-fiction. Sure, it involves the Moff did something an alien dinosaur rampaging ingly important as well: through Victorian London, but it reaffirmed the literary does so in a way that's about who al of the series. Steven we are. This season asks the ques- is easily one of the best tion "If you were to continuously on writers in the business rearrange yourself for an eternity, anxiously awaiting what would you even still remember ing to do after he's left the who you were at the beginning?" IS for good. Some of his The Doctor, Clara, friends and ors have complained that finally Moffat, himself, all bring 's storylines have been their A-game in delving into such complex or that the gen- ideas and questions in a way that, ck of week-by-week plots quite frankly,.has simply never sening the quality of "Doc- been done to such an extent and 1o." These claims are rub- on a program as big as "Doctor swith "Sherlock" (Moffat's Who." Doctors might change, television creation), Mof- writers go and time might be succeeded in taking the forever in flux; as of right now, ch of a serial novel or prose though, I'm very much enjoy- nd applying it to storytell- ing the present state of "Doctor the screen. His characters Who." Bey's HBO takeover By GRACE HAMILTON Daily Arts Writer What is it about Queen B that commands the world's attention? She's got the package no doubt; beauty, poise, talent and charisma. But there's something beyond the average celebrity checklist that has taken her to superhuman sta- tus on a global scale, blowing away audiences both up close and at a distance. This summer, Beyonce expand- ed her reach even further into daily life. On June 29th, "Beyon- ce: X10" premiered on HBO, a ten-episode series of four-minute concert videos. The videos are all from her most recent Mrs. Carter Show World Tour. For those of us who don't get the pleasure of being there in person, the videos can feel like a backstage pass. It's striking to observe how even at the most minute level, no detail goes unplanned. Several of the videos show the faces of crying fans. I wouldn't pin myself as a diehard fan; however, I was surprised to find myself blown away by her VMA performance. The X10 videos are a little taste of the same magic, the rising action to her VMA climactic finish, which caused Twitter to explode with praise. Beyonce's concerts are a spectacle. The dancers alone war- rant a stage of their own. Her con- fidence is a tight wrapping paper to the little gift of each performance. And we are equally wrapped up in her. Shemakessure we can't forget her when she leaves the stage, and how could we anyway? Beyoncd has become more than an artist at this point. She is HBO Who wearing a bike helmet? Beyonce a cultural icon, dominating social media, fashion, news, lunch-break discussions, and even politics. She has grown into a symbol of any- thing and everything pop culture. Minus the important questions regarding the feminist nature of her work and general discourse around female artists, Beyonc6 has left essentially zero room for controversy or criticism in her work. And should you have criti- cisms and choose to make them known, you would be faced with a violent army of fans commit- ted to showing you the error of your ways. I made the mistake of sharing with my coworkers that "I didn't love 'Drunk in Love.'" After being scolded, they directed me to "The Beygency" SNL skit, in which people expressing the same ambivalence about the song are punishedby a 1984- like, all know- ing police. Whoops. Point being, and jokes aside, to slander Beyonce is an offense to most, such is her standing in the world today. The woman is a model of hard work. In her last short episode, her ethic comes through beyond the glamour and the glitz: "Real- ize the things that make you pas- sionate, that you stay up for, that you work for." I don't know about you, but I'm still working on that one. Watching someone get it right might be where the tears come from. The X10 HBO series helps us see why she's more than just the package. Fortunately, or unfortu- nately, I'm not sure if I can put it into words.