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Jimmy Kimmel Opens Las Vegas Comedy Club, Surprise Lineup Includes Sarah Silverman


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Kimmel, who grew up in Las Vegas and made his entertainment debut as a radio DJ at University of Nevada, said that his greatest wish was to give local kids an opportunity to explore the profession close to home — something that wasn’t available to him.


Surrounded by friends and family, Jimmy Kimmel hosted the grand opening of his comedy club at Las Vegas’ Linq Promenade Friday night. Invited guests were treated to a surprise lineup at Jimmy Kimmel’s Comedy Club that included Sarah Silverman, Chris Tucker, Pete Holmes and Kimmel’s sister Jill. 


Longtime warm-up guy Don Barris opened the show and Gina Brillon closed it.


"It's so exciting to be doing this," Kimmel said to the crowd under the marquee lighting as hundreds of fans gathered. "This is something I never imagined would happen growing up in Spring Valley, which is now Chinatown, only about two miles from here. My wife is here, Cleto, my best friend [and bandleader is here]. We grew up across the street [from each other]. We spent a lot of time on this very Strip torturing tourists and now we can welcome them into this club. It's quite a wonderful. When we open this club, hopefully it will be around for many, many, many years after my death."


Later, Kimmel said that he called on many of his colleagues during the design process to ensure that this was the type of club where comedians would want to perform.


"If you're not a comedian, you might not understand the subtleties that make a room bad, fair, good, or great, but what I did was I had very detailed conversations with other comics. I asked them, ‘What do you look for? What makes a room great?’ A lot of them had the same answers, and I tried to come up with all the best suggestions and integrate those into this club. That's the sound, the seating arrangement, the height of the stage, the height of the ceiling, the way the food is served," he says. "We have no utensils in this club, so you won’t hear noise when people are eating. Our servers have been trained to serve in the least intrusive way possible. These are all boring things to the general public, but to comedians they're meaningful."


JKCC is split between two levels. Audiences enter the ground floor space which resembles a comfy parlor with a large bar, merchandise space and a memorabilia from Kimmel’s career including puppets from Crank Yankers, the neon sign from the Man Show, photos with his Live guests like David Letterman and books by fellow comedians such as Howard Stern, Kevin Hart, George Carlin and Don Rickles, who Kimmel holds in highest regard.


"The best [comedy show I ever saw in Las Vegas] was Don Rickles. It was later in his life and I think he was at The Orleans, but it was a lot of fun, and I got to hang out with him backstage afterward," Kimmel says. "To see him do a full show is something that I always wanted. I'd watch him on Johnny Carson when I was a kid. Growing up here, I was too young to go to a show like that, so to come back as an adult and to be able to see him and to drink vodka with Don afterward was a real thrill."


And since nothing goes better with comedy than cocktails, libations at JKCC are themed after references to Jimmy Kimmel Live and his hometown with names such as Guillermo, Cleto, Top of Sahara and Jerry’s Towel — a reference to beloved UNLV Runnin’ Rebels basketball coach Jerry Tarkanian. 


Upstairs in the club, there is row seating in front of the stage, and tables of varying heights in the middle and back for food service.


As the city’s residency market becomes more and more flooded with live music, Wynn Las Vegas has recently had tremendous success with sell out nights booked by AEG from the likes of Chris Tucker, Sebastian Maniscalco and Jo Koy. Tucker now lives in Las Vegas and Koy also grew up there and owns a restaurant on the westside. JKCC will take advantage of the boon and introduce audiences to a true comedy club setting — one that doesn’t currently exist like it does in Los Angeles or New York.


"The thing about a comedy club is you've got a different comedian headlining every weekend, and they're different types of comedians—they have different audiences," Kimmel says. "I don't think we will cater to one particular audience, but our goal is just to get the funniest people possible, new comedians, veteran comedians, and bring them together here. Really, we're not looking to reinvent the wheel, we just want to do it in the best possible scenario. And I feel like this club is hopefully perfect for comedians and for audiences."


Kimmel, who grew up in Las Vegas and made his entertainment debut as a radio DJ at University of Nevada, said that his greatest wish was to give local kids an opportunity to explore the profession close to home — something that wasn’t available to him.


"When I was growing up, really, there weren't any comedy clubs in Las Vegas. You had to go to L.A.," Kimmel says. "I will say my greatest hope for this club is that there'll be some kid who lives in Las Vegas right now who wants to be a comedian, who becomes a regular here at mic night and who then, in 15 years, tells me, ‘I started out at your club,’ and really, that would be very exciting."


So would we ever see a Kimmel residency at one of Las Vegas’ large theaters ala Jerry Seinfeld at Caesars’ Colosseum? For now, he says, that is not going to happen.


"I'm doing a show for 46 weeks a year, so that's not a realistic goal for me. Those few weeks I have off a year, I need to recover," Kimmel says.


Demonstrating that his love for his hometown knows no bounds, Kimmel will also donate all the profits from the comedy club to Las Vegas charities.

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