Last updated: 8/15/2008
Margaret Cho was born December 5, 1968 and raised in San Francisco. "It
was different than any other place on Earth," she says. "I grew
up and went to grammar school on Haight Street during the '70s. There
were old hippies, ex-druggies, burnouts from the '60s, drag queens, and
Chinese people. To say it was a melting pot - that's the least of it.
It was a really confusing, enlightening, wonderful time."
Her grandfather was a Methodist minister who ran an orphanage in Seoul
during the Korean War. Ignoring the traditions of her patriarchal culture,
her mother bravely resisted an arranged marriage in Korea and married
Margaret's father who writes joke books - in Korean. "Books like
1001 Jokes for Public Speakers - real corny stuff," Margaret says. "I
guess we're in the same line of work. But we don't understand each other
that way. I don't know why the things he says are funny and the same for
him."
Margaret started performing stand-up at age 16 in a comedy club called The
Rose & Thistle above a bookstore her parents ran. Soon after, she
won a comedy contest where first prize was opening for Jerry Seinfeld.
She moved to Los Angeles in the early '90s and lived in a house with several
other young performers.
I moved out because I wasn't the most famous. If the Manson
Family had come, I wouldn't have been Sharon Tate; I would have been one
of the supporting victims, and who wants that? Janeane Garofalo moved
into my old room. Anyway, 'Cho' written in blood on the wall doesn't look
as cool as 'Garofalo.'
In 1999, Margaret chronicled her experience on the sitcom in an off Broadway
one-woman show called I'm The One That I Want. The show was extremely
well received, toured the U.S, and was made into a concert film and a
best-selling book of the same name. The film, which garnered incredible
reviews, broke the record for the most money grossed per print in movie
history. After the success of her first show, Margaret launched Notorious
C.H.O. in 2001, a smash-hit 37-city national tour that culminated
in a sold-out concert at Carnegie Hall. Notorious C.H.O. was also
recorded and released as a feature film, hailed by the New York Times
as "Brilliant!" Both films were acquired by Showtime Cable Networks
in 2004 and are currently airing on their channels. Margaret embarked
on her third sold-out national tour, Revolution, in 2003. The tour
ultimately grossed 4.4M and was heralded as "Her strongest show yet!"
by the Chicago Sun Times. The concert film premiered on the Sundance Channel
in 2004 and was released on DVD later that year. The CD of Revolution
was nominated for a Grammy for best comedy album of the year for 2003.
In 2004, Margaret took her politically charged State of Emergency
tour through the swing states of the Presidential election. Lauded as
"Murderously funny!" by the New York Times, State of Emergency
eventually evolved into her fourth national show, Assassin. Her
most political and topical work to date, Assassin toured the US,
Canada and Australia and was filmed at the Warner Theatre in Washington
D.C. The concert film premiered in select theatres and on the gay and
lesbian premium channel Here! TV in late 2005 and is now available on DVD.
In addition to her busy touring schedule, Margaret has proven herself
an established writer and blogger; her second book, a collection of essays
on all subjects political and pop, I Have Chosen to Stay and Fight
was published by Riverhead Books, a division of Penguin Group (2005).
She has also completed her first narrative feature; Bam Bam and Celeste,
written by and starring Margaret, premiered at the Toronto International
Film Festival in late 2005 and has since played at the AFI Fest, Frameline,
Fusion, and the London Lesbian & Gay Film Festival.
In 2007, Margaret hit the road with 80's legends Cyndi Lauper, Debbie
Harry & Erasure along with indie faves The Dresden Dolls and The Cliks
to host the True Colors Tour, benefiting the Human Rights Campaign.
A true entertainment pioneer, Margaret also created and starred in The
Sensuous Woman, a live variety show featuring vaudevillian burlesque
and comedy, which she took for an extended off-Broadway run last fall.
This year Margaret returned to her stand-up roots with a brand new tour,
Beautiful, which premiered in Australia at The Sydney Theater in
February. This was the first time Margaret debuted a tour abroad, and
she was honored to be named Chief of the 30th annual Sydney Mardi Gras
Parade while down under! After returning to the US, Margaret embarked
on a nationwide spring tour of Beautiful, and is proud to announce
that the tour has just been extended through the fall. Ticket and show
info is available on her tour
page. In describing what Beautiful means to her, Margaret explains:
I want to explore the nature of beauty. What is funny and scary about
it, why we often don't feel beautiful because our society's standards
are so rigid and unattainable. A DJ once asked me, "If you woke up
tomorrow and you were beautiful, what would you do? If you were, blonde,
blue-eyed, 5 foot 11, and weighed 100 pounds, what would you do?!?"
Well, I probably wouldn't get up in that case, because I'd be too weak
to stand. If that is his only idea of beauty then I feel really sorry
for him. I want everyone to feel beautiful and I want to do it with laughter.
Why not feel good about ourselves?
Thirteen years after her catastrophic foray into television, Margaret
is triumphantly returning to TV on her own terms, in her new Vh1 series,
The Cho Show.
Describing it as a 'reality sitcom,' Margaret says, "It's the closest
I've been able to come on television to what I do as a comic." The
Cho Show follows Margaret, her real parents, and her eccentric entourage
(Selene Luna, John Stapleton, John Blaine, and Charlie Altuna) through
a series of irreverent and outrageous experiences, shaped by Margaret's
'anything goes' brand of stand-up. The Cho Show airs on Vh1, Thursdays
at 11/10c and premieres on August 21. Visit Margaret's tv/film
page for complete listings.
Margaret was the recipient of the first ever Best Comedy Performance award at the 2007 Asian Excellence Awards. She also recently received the First Amendment Award from
the ACLU of Southern California, and the Intrepid Award from the National
Organization for Women (NOW). She has also been honored by GLAAD, American
Women in Radio and Television, the Lambda Legal Defense and Education
Fund, the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force (NGLTF), the Asian American
Legal Defense and Education Fund (AALDEF), and PFLAG for "making
a significant difference in promoting equal rights for all, regardless
of race, sexual orientation or gender identity."
I didn't mean to be a role model. I just speak my truth. I guess speaking
from your heart really creates a huge impact, and if I can encourage
people to do that, then I would love to be a role model. If I could
encourage people to use their voices loudly, then that's my reward.
I don't care about winning an academy award; I don't care about mainstream
acceptance, because it's never going to be what I want it to be. I just
want to do my work and love it.
