Notes
Monica Grant - Bio: Charming, witty and clever, Monica Grant's music runs the gamut from beautiful acoustic folk to side-splitting, intelligent comedy songs and parodies. From her iconic parody of Ferron's Shadows on a Dime, to the masterfully written and hauntingly performed title song to her album The Heart of It, Grant never fails to touch her audience and to entertain memorably. Known for her lovely ringing alto, Grant, a lesbian and a Long Island native, was based in the San Francisco Bay Area for most of her performing career. A longtime singer-songwriter, musician, comic, producer and actor, she has authored and starred in two award-winning theatre pieces, released three recordings on her label, Gans Productions, and founded and produced the monthly First Fridays Women's Salon and Open Mic in Sebastopol, California. Grant won the Dramalogue Award for Outstanding Performance in 1997 for the one-woman show that she wrote, produced and starred in: Women Who Run With Swine, Myths and Stories of a Lesbian Gal, which toured the U.S. throughout '96 and '97. In 1997 she then wrote her two-woman hit show Goddess on a Payroll (see review below), which she also produced and starred in, touring the fringe festival circuit from 1998 to 2000. Through her production company Gans Productions, Grant has released three recordings: Harbor Girl, Parodisiac, and The Heart of It. A tour through all three gives the listener a hint as to why Grant is so well loved and admired by her fans and industry insiders alike. Monica Grant - Industry Reviews: The Heart of It Backed by a full band for her 1991 release, this SF Bay Area singer/songwriter/guitarist/humorist serves up a righteous helping of her original witty, heart-ful, and honest songs. - Ladyslipper, All Music Guide Simply Divine 'Goddess on a Payroll' serves up smart sketch comedy By Daedalus Howell PHILANTHROPIST Andrew Carnegie was once asked how he could afford to pay his staff so well. He replied, 'I can't afford to pay them any other way.' Those interested in entertainment beyond the stock options often offered by local theater can't afford to miss Goddess on a Payroll, which cashes in it's run at the Romantic Tea Room this weekend. Featuring the awesome talents of comediennes Monica Grant and Teresa Chandler, Goddess on a Payroll (admirably directed by Stephen Drewes from an original script penned by Grant) is such a knee-slapper that your patella will crumble. Two parts literate sketch comedy and one part seriocomic 'Portrait of the Artist as a Young Lesbian,' the show delivers from the moment the vivacious Grant squawks out a couple of notes of Gershwin on her enviro-horn (a garden hose affixed to a funnel). In under 90 minutes, Grant and Chandler (sounds like a Golden Age comedy duo if there ever was one) rifle through a piquant cavalcade of sketches, monologues, and songs expertly crafted by the Dramalogue-winning Grant. It's hilarious lifestyle humor and obvious appeal to a specific fan-base (hardly a Y chromosome could be found in the audience on opening night) notwithstanding, Goddess on a Payroll is not a 'special interest' show, and Grant and her cohort are not 'niche' performers. The show is ultimately an examination of love and loss, relationships and art that will appeal to audiences of all persuasions. That Grant is able to create simultaneously a very personal yet universally appealing show testifies to her estimable talents as a writer. Among her standout sketches is a brilliant (nay, divine) parody of the '70s prison documentary Scared Straight. Redubbed Scared Single, the skit features two hard-boiled lesbians 'doing 25 to life in bad relationships.' Booked on such charges as 'assault with a deadly ego and accessory to drama' as well as 'martyr in the first degree,' these hardened gals are easily as fierce as anyone from Scorsese's stable of goombahs. They take several comic turns while tough-talking preventive counseling to the audience. And the skit clo