Kathleen Madigan doesnât go out and seek comedy; it finds her.
âI donât really sit down and write jokes, I just wait for things to happen,â said the 50-year-old comedian, who brings her âMermaid Lady Tourâ to the Rialto Theatre on April 7. âIt seems to have a rhythm of itself and I donât really worry about it.â
Take the current presidential race: Things seem to be happening too quickly for her to keep up with. By the time Madigan writes her jokes, she said, the candidates have done even more insane things.
Especially Donald Trump.
âOh my God, I would have to do cocaine to get as much done as he does in a day,â said Madigan.
Along with pointing out the absurdities of politics, Madigan will bring some religion into her show, which she said will be evenly split between her classic material and new stuff.
Her current favorite joke to tell is a breakdown of the differences between Catholics and Christians.
Though raised Catholic, Madigan has never met the pope. But she knows what she would say to him if she did:
âIâd ask him if anyone calls him Frank,â she quipped.
And she might also talk about Mormons.
In a video available on YouTube, Madigan describes her visit to Salt Lake City, which she said operates a bit differently than Vatican City. On a tour of the cityâs temples, she meets Bob, who has a hard time buying what the Book of Mormon is selling, and isnât afraid to say so.
âThat was all true, every word of it,â Madigan said.
While some of her comic colleagues have turned their laughs into box office success, she has no desire to seek out Hollywood. If someone ever made a movie about her life, however, Madigan thought Emma Stone would be best suited for the role.
âShe seems funny, she seems to have a good sense of humor,â Madigan said. âSome people say I look like her aunt.â
Madigan also would cast Bernie Sanders to play her friend and fellow comedian Lewis Black because theyâre both âvery disheveled,â Madigan commented.
After more than two decades on stage, you shouldnât expect to see any jitters from Madigan. She said she canât remember performing in front of a rough crowd, and she has never been nervous before a show.
âIt would make me nervous if all of a sudden in an airplane, the pilot died, and I had to fly it,â she said. âThat would make me very nervous because very bad things could happen and I know I donât know what Iâm doing. But itâs comedy, nobodyâs going to die here.â



