| Cutline: Edgy, topical style overflowing with manic energy Tim Lowing rants about problems with government, the state of the world, and the nasty business of comedy
"It was like it needed to happen. It was a good kick in the ass." Thats how Vancouver comic Tim Lowing describes his not-so-positive Funny Fest experience this past June in Calgary.
Not too long into the festival, Lowing confesses that he felt it was everything he had walked away from last year when he went out on his own. He contends that after being lured to the festival by the pleas of a friend, he soon encountered the sort of broken promises and inequities that he feels plague this nations comedy industry.
Lowings disillusionment with the Canadian comedy scene has been building for a long time, prompting him to take the unusual step of going without an agent and handling virtually every aspect of his comedy career on his own. His upcoming performance in Calgary is a deal he struck himself while in town for Funny Fest.
For a guy whos only 26 years old, Lowing has already racked up a huge number of performances, mostly due the fact that he started performing at just 16. "I started in Winnipeg in 1994," he says. "I got a job by fluke, checking coats at the local club. Next thing you know I was onstage."
During almost a decade in the comedy biz, Lowing has developed an edgy, topical style overflowing with manic energy. Onstage, he rants about problems with government and the state of the world with the sort of everyman honesty and passion you get from co-workers over after-work beers on a Friday night.
Offstage, however, the number one target of his venom is definitely the mainstream comedy world, which he calls "a very insecure and incestuous little business."
"Coming to Vancouver really taught me that," says Lowing, who moved there in 1998. "I cant tell you the number of showcases I have not been included in because I dont fucking hang out (with other comedians)."
He adds that the experience opened his eyes to who he was really dealing with and how little they were really going to do for him.
"This is definitely a me-first business. Theres like this nepotism and careerism where someone is always willing to take a run at you to get a gig. What were talking about is really 50 bucks at the end of the day."
"Fifty bucks" refers to the sort of difference in pay one comedian may get over another by landing a superior or headlining spot in a comedy showcase.
As a result of his disillusionment, Lowing has gone absolutely independent a decision he says was due in no small part to problems he has encountered with agents. He left Yuk Yuks last September because he felt they had failed to handle a show in Whistler properly, ending a long association with the comedy club chain headquartered in Calgary that had featured him as a headliner in markets all over the country many times over.
Now Lowing is the sole proprietor and employee of BML Productions, which handles all his showbiz dealings. He has big aspirations for his fledgling enterprise, including the promotion of a documentary film he is now shooting about his going-it-alone adventures.
Even with all his complaints about the business of comedy, Lowing doesnt envision packing in his stand-up career anytime soon. "Years from now, I hope that I am still doing stand-up and performing live," he confesses. "I really get up for it."
If Lowing is indeed doing comedy many years from now its almost a sure bet he will only be doing it on his own terms.
Tim Lowing performs live at 8 p.m. on Saturday, July 26 at the Engineered Air Theatre. |