With insider confidence, frum comedians have the last laugh
Imagine a four-minute scene built around a man trying to open a jar of pickles. He wedges it against a curtain and the curtain collapses. He slams it against a cabinet and the cabinet falls apart. He bangs it into a wall and a chunk of sheetrock explodes outward. The tension keeps building as the audience leans forward, waiting for resolution. Eventually, another character enters the wrecked room, notices the jar of pickles, twists the lid once, and opens the jar effortlessly. That’s the joke. But the real punchline is that Ari Abramowitz can hold an entire audience in suspense over something as trivial as an unopened jar of pickles, and make it feel like high drama.
Part performer, part director, part storyteller, and part professional chaos organizer, Ari Abramowitz has spent years building theatrical experiences, each on a level bigger than the one that preceded it. He produces live storytelling programs with slides, sound effects, and dramatic staging for shuls, camps, and family events, while also creating filmed and recorded content for kids through projects like Ari and Friends on Mostly Music, Ropogos on Toveedo, and the English-language camp film Echoes of Faith. His newest venture, Kling, is a subscription phone line delivering stories and entertainment to children (currently in Yiddish, with plans for English).
What makes Ari unusual isn’t just that he creates content. It’s that he treats imagination like a communal activity, something meant to be shared, built together and experienced live. Give Ari a few props, a handful of volunteers and minimal adult supervision, and he’ll build you a universe.
One thing you learn quickly talking to Ari Abramowitz is that he takes jokes very seriously. And his approach to writing comedy is straightforward: Just start writing. He doesn’t begin by deciding where to begin, he begins by beginning.
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