Brownstein: Terry and Ted return to brighten up newly relaunched Just for Laughs

Radio stars Terry DiMonte and Ted Bird once hosted one of Just for Laughs’ most popular series. The newly relaunched fest has brought them back.

The newly relaunched Just for Laughs has reached into the festival’s glory days of yore to bring back the hosts of one of the event’s most popular and enduring series, the Montreal Show.

For 18 years, local radio legends Terry DiMonte and Ted Bird — who had brightened up the lives of Montrealers in tandem as morning-show announcers on CHOM and Mix 96 — were at the helm of this JFL staple showcasing an array of up-and-coming local wits.

But for the last 18 years, one of the biggest complaints from JFL aficionados was the absence of both the Montreal Show and its popular hosts. Now the situation has been partially rectified: DiMonte and Bird are back and will be hosting the first Comedy Nest Presents the Soda Series, Friday at 7 and 10 p.m. and Saturday at 7 p.m. at Club Soda.

In addition to bringing back the likes of serial JFL visitors Bobby Slayton, Dane Cook and Iliza Shlesinger — the latter two who are performing free outdoor concerts on, respectively, Saturday and Sunday at the Quartier des spectacles — the festival also arranged for the return of DiMonte and Bird.

This new series won’t entail a singular focus on Montreal standups but will rather serve as a showcase for stellar comics from around the continent like Nathan Macintosh, Erin Jackson, Moody McCarthy, Vladimir Caamano, Brandon Ash-Mohammed and hometown jokester Gino Durante.

Two men laugh as they sit at tables in an empty club while a third man stands near them
Comedy Nest owner and comedian David Acer, right, cracks up veteran Montreal radio personalities Ted Bird, left, and Terry DiMonte at his club in Montreal Tuesday July 23, 2024.Photo by John Mahoney /Montreal Gazette

“This feels just so good and so right,” says DiMonte, holding court with Bird, Durante and Comedy Nest co-owner David Acer inside the comedy club. “There was something about the Montreal Show back then. There were much bigger names in town at the festival back then, but that show had its feet planted in the city and gave rise to some incredible careers for locals. Now many of those comics can hold their own with the best anywhere in a series like this.”

“It’s fun to get up any time on stage, especially with Terry, and back then, it was really good for us as a morning radio show for our brand,” adds Bird, who has been dabbling in standup himself over the last few years.

Acer is thrilled to have landed DiMonte and Bird as hosts as well as to have orchestrated this inaugural series for JFL.

“Club Soda is an iconic venue in Montreal, which has been strongly associated with the English side of the Just for Laughs Festival,” says Acer, also an acclaimed comic and magician. “We are very proud to present this series, which necessitated a venue the size of Club Soda to accommodate the expected crowds.”

Acer had very little time to program the series but has nonetheless put together a surprisingly impressive lineup rather quickly.

Headshots of six comedians
Comedians at the Soda Series include (top, from left) Nathan Macintosh, Erin Jackson, Moody McCarthy, (bottom, from left) Vladimir Caamano, Brandon Ash-Mohammed and Gino Durante.Photo by Montreal Gazette files, Getty Images, handouts

Durante’s forte is also observational comedy.

“Yes, it took a bankruptcy to bring Terry and Ted back,” a deadpan Durante quips, in relating the fall and new rise of Just for Laughs and the return of the two hosts.

DiMonte notes that in addition to locals, the Montreal Show also attracted some notable comics from outside.

“Jerry Seinfeld popped by one night to try out some new material. Not to take any credit, but his career really took off after that show,” DiMonte muses.

Despite the crash of the original JFL, Acer insists these have actually been boom times for comedy here.

“The Comedy Nest programs 52 weeks a year. And it’s not just us. There’s now lots of comedy events going on around town,” he says. “There is a new wave of standup in Montreal right now in a range of styles we haven’t seen in over 20 years. I think we’re experiencing a bit of a renaissance.

“We didn’t have any inkling about the challenges the festival was facing and were just as surprised as everyone about what happened. But there is now an electricity about this summer’s festival and even more so for its future.”

Two men smile for the camera with the Comedy Nest stage behind them
Veteran Montreal radio personalities Ted Bird, left, and Terry DiMonte at the Comedy Nest in Montreal Tuesday July 23, 2024.Photo by John Mahoney /Montreal Gazette

Bird concurs: “Everyone loves to laugh. And standup comedy is still the best bang for your entertainment dollar … not even close.”

Adds Acer: “Standup comedy has an ability to be incredibly relevant, topical and immediate. And that’s something no other art form shares in these volatile times.”

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