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Andrew Dice Clay Schedule COMEDY Tickets
COMEDY Tickets
EVENTS->COMEDY
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Andrew Dice Clay Tickets
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For Andrew Dice Clay Schedule Schedule or Andrew Dice Clay Schedule tickets availability click above link
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The Andrew Dice Clay schedule can be dificult to keep up with.
View the events as we get them. Many event dates will be announced well in
advance and are subject to change. In any event The Andrew Dice Clay
schedules will be updated regularly. On the day of any Andrew Dice Clay
events, you may call 281-447-1579 for a schedule of times and events
performing. Times are also subject to change. Visit our site frequently as
new events are posted daily as we get them. If you dont see an event you are
looking for please give us a call and we will research the event further for
you. On the night of any Andrew Dice Clay event, Northside tickets will
usually stay late to help or answer any questions. If you have some new
helpful information about the upcoming Andrew Dice Clay Schedule, We would
like to know about it.
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Andrew "Dice" Clay (born Andrew Clay Silverstein on September 29, 1957 in Brooklyn, New York) is an American comedian and actor. Notorious for his highly profane comedy, his popularity and success peaked during the late 1980s and early 1990s. Clay has worked on various show business projects to this day with a more modest degree of success. Rick Rubin was quoted on the "E! True Hollywood Story: Andrew Dice Clay" as saying to the effect "What's the bad news? That he's making seven figures in Vegas?", a reference to Clay's popular Las Vegas Strip comedy shows. He was ranked number 95 on Comedy Central's list of the 100 Greatest Standups of All Time.//As Andrew Clay, he made sitcom appearances on M*A*S*H and Diff'rent Strokes. He then landed roles in movies such as Making the Grade, starring Judd Nelson (1984) (playing a character named "Dice"), Pretty In Pink (1986) (credited for the first time as Andrew "Dice" Clay). As Andrew Dice Clay, he also had a regular role on Crime Story from 1986–1988. This was followed by a series of less-notable films. He eventually turned from acting towards stand-up comedy, focusing on the character "Dice" as in Pretty in Pink. Possibly named after The Dice Man, a novel by Luke Rhinehart, the persona was that of a highly racist, homophobic woman-hating street-wise Brooklyn tough.Unlike comics such as Lenny Bruce, Sam Kinison or Bill Hicks, who would use their aggression as a tool for political or social commentary, Clay's seeming intent was simply to be as shocking as possible. His material consisted of profane, sexist routines emphasizing women as sex objects, featuring his purported sexual prowess and his total self-involvement, as well as extremely offensive racist comments aimed mainly toward Asian and Arab people. At its best, Clay's overbearing character hovered between a performance-art rejection of stereotypical misogynism and a celebration of pure excess (similar to the old joke/new film The Aristocrats). However, at its worst the material was simply insulting, and detractors, fans and comedians alike seemed to have had a hard time separating character from reality
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