
FRI • FEB 23 • 7PM & 9:30PM
Buy TicketsTickets: $90, $72, $54 | Limit 8 tickets per mailing address
DOORS 6PM • SHOWTIME 7PM
LATE SHOW SHOWTIME 9:30PM
The Vogel • Basie Center Campus • 99 Monmouth Street, Red Bank
Over 25 years in comedy, Gary Gulman has established himself as an eminent performer and peerless writer.
A product of Boston, Gulman has been a scholarship college football player, an accountant, and a high school teacher. He has made countless television appearances as both a comedian and an actor.
Gulman has made four masterful TV specials including his most recent universally acclaimed stand-up special for HBO, “The Great Depresh”, a tour de force look at mental illness, which is equal parts hilarious and inspiring. In 2019, he appeared in the international blockbuster “Joker”. He can most recently be seen co-starring with Amy Schumer in the hit Hulu comedy series, “Life & Beth”.
Gary’s first book published by Flatiron Books is titled “Misfit: Growing Up Awkward in the ’80s”, a memoir based on his life from Kindergarten through Twelfth Grade. It was released in September of 2023. Amy Schumer called the book “laugh out loud funny and heartfelt” and MacArthur Fellowship recipient Adrian Nicole LeBlanc found it “exquisite, love-affirming and generous”.
Today, Gulman is one of the most popular touring comics, selling out theaters around the country including the prestigious Carnegie Hall in New York City Gary’s upcoming tour “Misfit: A Gary Gulman Stand Up & Book Tour” will feature material based on his book, but not a repeat of the book. Gary lives in Harlem with his wife.
Presented by Count Basie Center for the Arts
Please note: At the direction of the CDC or local health authorities, the Count Basie Center may at any time institute policies pertaining to COVID-19 transmission, including but not limited to mask requirements. Certain artists and / or touring productions may also require patrons to be masked and / or present proof of COVID-19 vaccination.
Masks are not required to attend performances at Count Basie Center venues, though we welcome their use and respect all patrons who choose to continue doing so.