Kathleen Madigan | |
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Madigan in December 2008 during theUSO Holiday Tour | |
Born | (1965-09-30)September 30, 1965 (age 59)[1] Florissant, Missouri, U.S. |
Medium |
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Alma mater | Southern Illinois University Edwardsville |
Genres | Observational comedy |
Subject(s) | Interpersonal relationships,everyday life |
Kathleen Madigan is an Americanstand-up comedian and TV personality. In addition to her stand-up comedy performances, she is a regular guest on a variety of U.S. television programs.
Madigan was born inFlorissant, Missouri, one of seven children in anIrishCatholic family.[2] Her parents, Jack and Vicki Madigan, are a lawyer and a nurse respectively.[3][4] She grew up mostly in Florissant, a suburb ofSt. Louis,[5] although the family also lived for periods of time inHouse Springs, Missouri, and in theLake of the Ozarks region of central Missouri.[3] Madigan received the first eight years of her education largely in private Catholic schools, although she also attended the public School of the Osage.[3] It was there she excelled as a student athlete, participating in volleyball, track, and basketball.[3] In the latter, she set a record by winning the 1978 Mid-Missouri Hoops Shoot Championship. At the time she was 4' 5" tall and set a record as the shortest person to win the event.[6][7] She shot under-handed, sinking 14 of 15 attempts.
Madigan attendedMcCluer North High School, graduating in 1983.[8] She admitted in a 2012 interview withSt. Louis Magazine, however, that she participated in few activities like float decorating or prom, choosing instead to work at asteakhouse where she could make up to $200 per night.[3] Madigan attendedUniversity of Missouri–St. Louis for two years, but, according to Madigan, all she did was accumulate $7,000 in campus parking tickets.[3] AtSouthern Illinois University Edwardsville, she earned aB.A. in journalism in 1988.[8] While at SIUE, she was in charge of the student newspaper and also served an internship with theSt. Louis Blues professional ice hockey team.[9]
Madigan first took a job in print journalism, working for the St. Louis-areaSuburban Journals newspapers as well as the publications department of theMissouri Athletic Club. At the same time, she performed stand-up during "open mic" nights at St. Louis area comedy clubs. She credits her father, Jack, with encouraging her to try a comedy career.[10] Her growing popularity at these soon led to the offer of a paying job in stand-up fromThe Funny Bone, a nationwide chain of comedy clubs.[3] With a thirty-week booking of guaranteed dates, Madigan gave up her jobs in Missouri. She citesRon White,Richard Jeni andLewis Black among her influences in her early comedy club days.[3]
Among the TV shows and specials Madigan has appeared on areLast Comic Standing,I Love the 90s: Part Deux,I Love the '80s 3-D, andCelebrity Poker Showdown. She also starred in her ownHBO Half-Hour Comedy Special and aComedy Central Presents special. She is a veteran ofThe Tonight Show with Jay Leno,Late Night with Conan O'Brien,Late Show with David Letterman, andThe Bob and Tom Show.[11] She also hosts a radio program,Blue Collar Comedy, onSirius XM Radio.Madigan has twice participated inUSO shows in support of American troops, touring both Iraq and Afghanistan along with fellow comedians.[1] She sometimes writes material for other comedians, as was the case in 2004 and 2005 when she was a writer forGarry Shandling when he hosted theEmmy Awards telecast.[1] In 2016, she made an appearance on Jerry Seinfeld's web seriesComedians in Cars Getting Coffee.[12]
In the wake of her touring stoppage due to theCOVID-19 pandemic Madigan launched her own comedy podcast in August 2020,Madigan's Pubcast.[13] On Saturday, December 19, 2020, she appeared on Byron Allen'sComics Unleashed episode of "Girls Gone Wild" onCBS.
In 1996, Madigan won "Funniest Female Stand-Up Comic" at the American Comedy Awards.[14]
Madigan is single and lives in theOzarks. She also owns a farm in the Midwest and spends "inordinate amounts of time" with her family there.[11] She has four brothers and two sisters.[10] She has often cited her father as a source of her comic material as well as an example of a positive work ethic.[9]