Dastardly’s Gabe Liebowitz

Maybe Chicago needs a little more Minnie Pearl and Roy Clark. Equal parts Hee Haw and Grand Ole Opry, Catastrophe (tonight at The Hideout) aims to combine Chicago’s off-the-wall comedy culture with its “maverick Americana music scene,” resulting in an “old-timey Western variety show gone awry.” Organized by members of Dastardly, the local country-folk act, the show will intersperse hoe-down jams with comedy from the Puterbaugh Sisters, Mo Welch, Chris Condren, and others. The A.V. Club talked to Dastardly’s Gabe Liebowitz about what’s in store for show-goers, as well as how the whole affair came together.
The A.V. Club: How’s Catastrophe going to be structured?
Gabe Liebowitz: Basically, the concept is that we—Dastardly—are throwing an old-time variety show like the Grand Ole Opry or The Glen Campbell Show. The stage is filled with props like giant cactuses, a tumbleweed, and train tracks. We’re going to have a guy who’s our Ed McMahon…
AVC: Or your Roy Clark…
GL: …Yes, our Roy Clark. His name’s Dickie Fitz. We’re trying to give people an old-time feel, like in the good old days when you could bring your whole family.
AVC: And you’re interspersing music and comedy?
GL: Our material will be dispersed between six guests we bring up, each a different Chicago comedian. During every act, something goes terribly wrong beyond our control and to different levels. A comedian goes on and starts weeping during the set because they just got dumped. There’s a bunch of different levels of catastrophe, and the whole thing may end up a pop icon being murdered at the end.
AVC: Who?