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Saudi student in the US performing sold-out comedy shows, hopes to be next Eddie Murphy
Published in The Saudi Gazette on 04 - 12 - 2015

THEY say that laughter is one of the best things in life. It costs nothing, but accounts for a moment of happiness when all is forgotten, except for the joy of the moment when someone has said something to make you laugh. Often those chuckles will be remembered as the highlight of someone's day. So it should not come as a surprise thousands of people are now making careers out of making other people laugh.
Some of the most famous comedians in the United States all started in small stand up comedy clubs; they include Eddie Murphy, Jim Belushi, Robin Williams, and Chris Rock. These famous names all went on to be major movie stars and make millions of dollars. Now they have 24-year-old Abdullah Al-Kassen of Riyadh following in their footsteps.
After arriving in the United States in 2010, Abdullah is currently studying business at university in New Hampshire. It was when he transferred from Georgetown University in Washington D.C. to Northwest Community College in Fayetteville Arkansas that Abdullah decided to follow his dream of being a comedian.
Speaking to Saudi Gazette. he said, "There's really nothing to do there, so that's when I thought I really needed to study comedy. So I went to a small comedy club to try and improve my English and listen to the way other comedians told their jokes. I really loved being there. Then I told the manager that I could tell a joke in two minutes, and could he please give me a chance to perform. I hadn't told my friends I was at the comedy club, I told them I was at the library as I didn't want my friends to see me messing up. I always told them I was at the library."
Luckily for Abdullah, timing was everything, as a few days later Abdullah was standing on stage on a slow weeknight as the owner of the comedy club, "told me I wasn't good enough to perform on a weekend."
He also couldn't believe that Abdullah was from Saudi Arabia. During his interview with Saudi Gazette, Abdullah said, "Some Americans are amazed when they know that I'm a comedian from Saudi Arabia, and I tell them "yes we do joke and we do laugh too! They can't believe someone from Saudi Arabia is funny and from the Middle East."
His ability to tell a funny story earned Abdullah a call three weeks later when one of the comedians called in sick for his regular weekend performance. Now Abdullah got a break to perform to a packed house, and as luck would have it again, the president of the University of Arkansas was sitting in the audience too. After the comedy routine finished, he invited Abdullah to perform on International Day. When he showed up there were 1,500 people at the venue, including lots of Saudi students. He quickly got more and more invitations to perform at campuses and comedy clubs around the United States, and started to upload shows on YouTube, and his name was appearing all over Twitter, Instagram and Facebook. In big demand, his comedy routines went from three minutes to an hour and fifteen minutes.
Speaking to Saudi Gazette, Abdullah said, "It just feels priceless when you make people laugh. It's a passion I have, and with the encouragement from my close friends who saw that in me, I decided to try out and see how it would go. Fortunately, it's going great so far. The United States is the land of opportunities."
While comedians can make a joke on any subject from what a person is wearing, to the latest decisions made by politicians in office, Abdullah told Saudi Gazette, "My favorite jokes are the ones about my experience with the American culture. The reason it's my favorite because it tells the audience about the cultural differences and that as a foreigner you have to respect other cultures regardless whether you agree with them or not."
There are 26 pages of comedy clubs in the United States listed on Wikipeida, so securing venues to perform in is very competitive. But Abdullah is getting regular bookings across the United States. So far he has performed in Denver, Seattle, Miami, Arizona, California, Virginia, Massachusetts, Washington D.C., New Hampshire and Arkansas.
As he does his comedy routines all across the Untied States, Abdullah says aside from enjoying telling a good joke to crowds of people, he really likes interacting with Americans that come and watch him too. His routines are helping breakdown stereotypes of people from the Kingdom. Abdullah told Saudi Gazette, "Someone in the audience said he's often really sad as he listens to the news and hears about shootings or bombings, but he told me that once he sees me he just sees me as funny. "
But it is not just audience members that are noticing this rising star from Saudi Arabia. It's the stage managers too. "At my last show in San Diego last week the stage manager came over to me and said, ‘Wow, you get this big crowd and make them laugh. It's good you make a joke about your stories and you make people aware of things." Abdullah went on to say, "I want to always show people that there are good ways to talk about bad things and there are always good ways to react well, and how to talk to Americans and to talk about different cultures."
As Abdullah's star continues to rise at sold-out shows in the United States, his comedy "hero" in some ways is Eddie Murphy. "He did stand up comedy and made it big. He's just so good, it's crazy. You feel he's a star. I am so happy to become a comedian, as my dream is to have the biggest audience ever Saudi Arabia. Ten thousand people."
If these past years of success in the United States are anything to go by, it looks like Abdullah is close to achieving his dreams.


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