American stand-up comedian
Tim Harmston is a stand-up comedian from Minneapolis . He competed on Last Comic Standing in 2014,[ 1] and has performed on The Late Show With David Letterman and Comedy Central 's Live at Gotham .[ 2] Star Tribune critic Jay Boller wrote that Harmston combines "the cadence of Brian Regan and the observational absurdism of Jim Gaffigan ."[ 3] He has released two albums on Stand Up! Records , The Most Bees Ever and The Whim of Tim .
Early life
Harmston grew up in Menomonie, Wisconsin .[ 4] He worked in the Chicago film industry before pursuing a career in comedy.[ 5]
Career
Harmston began performing stand-up in 2002,[ 6] and won Minneapolis comedy club Acme's Funniest Person in the Twin Cities contest in 2003.[ 3]
In 2011 Harmston self-released his debut album The Most Bees Ever , which was re-released by Stand Up! Records in 2014.[ 7] Reviewer Richard Lanoie of The Serious Comedy Site called the album "solid stand-up comedy with quite a few particularly original bits."[ 8] Chris Spector of Midwest Record said that Harmston "comes on like a modern Steven Wright."[ 9]
A followup album and video, The Whim of Tim , was released in 2020.[ 10]
Harmston was a contestant on CMT 's Next Big Comic in 2011.[ 11] [ 12] He won a Rusty Nail award at the Aspen RooftopComedy Festival in 2008.[ 13] He originated the idea for award-winning Internet video series Chad Vader: Day Shift Manager .[ 14] [ 2] [ 15]
Personal life
Harmston is married to comedian Mary Mack ; they frequently tour together.[ 2]
Discography
References
^ Carlson Gustafson, Amy (2014-05-19). "Five Twin Cities comedians on revived 'Last Comic Standing' " . Pioneer Press . St. Paul . Retrieved 2020-04-28 .
^ a b c Thomas, Rob (2015-07-14). "Wisconsin husband-and-wife comedians are married to comedy (and each other)" . Capital Times . Madison, Wisconsin . Retrieved 2020-04-28 .
^ a b Boller, Jay (2012-08-21). "Performance: Tim Harmston" . Star Tribune . Minneapolis-St. Paul . Retrieved 2020-04-28 .
^ Anderson, Deb (2009-11-25). "Comedy rocks Mabel Tainter" . Chippewa Herald . Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin . Retrieved 2020-04-28 .
^ "Burnett-Milan hires One World via an Internet creative site for steamy Italian commercial" . Reel Chicago . 2005-04-10. Retrieved 2020-04-28 .
^ Nyhus, Travis (2019-12-23). "Menomonie native Tim Harmston takes stage with wife Mary Mack to raise funds for Dunn County Humane Society in Guffaws for Paws comedy show" . Chippewa Herald . Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin . Retrieved 2020-04-28 .
^ "Tim Harmston, The Most Bees Ever" . AllMusic . Retrieved 2020-04-28 .
^ Richard Lanoie (2018-04-09). "Tim Harmston – The Most Bees Ever" . The Serious Comedy Site . Retrieved 2020-04-28 .
^ Chris Spector (2014-02-04). "Volume 38/Number 95" . Midwest Record . Retrieved 2020-04-28 .
^ "Tim Harmston: The Whim of Tim (2020)" . IMDb . Retrieved 2020-04-28 .
^ Justin, Neal (2011-02-08). "Two Minnesotans vie for national comedy title" . Star Tribune . Minneapolis-St. Paul . Retrieved 2020-04-28 .
^ "The Search For "CMT's Next Big Comic" Begins Today: Twelve Comics Battle For Laughs in Online Competition at CMT.com" . CMT.com . 2011-02-11. Retrieved 2020-04-28 .
^ the RooftopComedy Awards at The Aspen RooftopComedy Festival Archived June 5, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
^ Vincent Terrace (29 January 2016). Internet Comedy Television Series, 1997-2015 . McFarland. pp. 46–. ISBN 978-0-7864-9760-7 .
^ Cassie Parkes (2017-03-24). "Interview: Aaron Yonda Talks Gaming, Filmmaking, and Improv" . Cultured Vultures . Retrieved 2020-04-28 .
External links
Seasons Winners Other contestants