British Columbia

Filmed standup show in Vancouver to feature 9 Indigenous comics

The first Canadian standup feature with an all indigenous casts of comics is being recorded live at the Metro Theatre. Rez Comedy features nine comedians from across Canada.

Live showcase and feature documentary will feature a variety of comedic styles and themes, say organizers

A grid of images containing portraits of nine comedians
Nine Indigenous comedians are set to star in the first all-Canadian and all-Indigenous live comedy showcase. Cast of Rez Comedy clockwise from top left: Keith Nahanee, Brenda Prince, Wayne Alexis, Janelle Niles, Helena Paul, Kevin Shawanda, Denise B. McLeod, Chuck Cease, Drea Omer. (Margin Films)

An all-Indigenous cast of comics from across the country are coming together in Vancouver this weekend for a standup showcase that organizers say is the first of its kind.

Nine comedians are set to star in the first all-Canadian and all-Indigenous live comedy showcase, Rez Comedy, a filmed-for-TV, live standup show produced and directed by Sḵwx̱wú7mesh Úxwumixw (Squamish Nation) comedian Keith Nahanee and fellow comedian Quentin Lee.

Nahanee says the lineup of performers will offer a variety of comedic styles and themes, with some addressing life on reservations and others tackling more challenging matters such as the relationship between Indigenous people and the church.

A man in tuxedo holds an award high up above his head
Squamish Nation comedian Keith Nahanee won a 2024 Canadian Screen Award for Best Comedy Special for his set, Rez Style, on Comedy Invasion. (Margin Films)

"A lot of my stuff is church jokes," he said during an interview with CBC's The Early Edition

A big part of Indigenous comedy also consists of roasting one another, Nahanee added.

"When we sit around, we like to burn each other or bring up old stories from yesterday, 10 years ago...Natives don't forget anything, remember?" 

Nahanee says that while he has to be "very careful" with his jokes, he believes humour is essential for relieving the pressures of daily life.

A comedy showcase featuring all Indigenous stand-up comedians is being taped Saturday night at the Metro Theatre. Keith Nahanee and Cindy Au Yeung, part of the team behind the project, join us to discuss the night and the feature film it will become.

"We go through a lot of stress every day from traffic to work to bills to family ... and grief," he said. "So when you get a hour and a half to two hours of laughter, you get to put that grief down for a bit."

It's a sentiment also held firmly by Rez Comedy producer and editor Cindy Au Yeung. 

"They always say laughter is the best medicine and I really believe in that," she said. "[It] is a little bit of healing as well."

Unique comedy showcase

The film iteration is slated for a theatrical release in Toronto next year, according to a news release.

Au Yeung says making casting decisions for the first all-Canadian and all-Indigenous live comedy showcase wasn't easy.

 "We had a long process...and we went through a lot of interviews and we wanted to select a wide variety," she said.

Two men in tuxedo punching their fist in victory, while one of them holds an award.
Filmmaker Quentin Lee and Keith Nahanee after winning the 2024 Canadian Screen Award for Best Comedy Special for the Comedy Invasion episode, Rez Style, a set written and performed by Nahanee. (Margin Films)

Au Yeung and Lee previously worked with Nahanee on Comedy Invasion, a standup comedy docuseries for racialized comedians.

Last month, the series won a 2024 Canadian Screen Award for Best Comedy Special for Nahanee's episode, "Rez Style," which touched on his family and home life. 

"I didn't have [a] speech ready because I didn't think we were going to win. And once we were called up, I had to wing it," Nahanee said. 

The standup show will be performed and filmed before a live audience Saturday at Vancouver's Metro Theatre.

With files from The Early Edition and The Local Journalism Initiative, North Shore News