Lashonda Lester | |
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Born | 1975 or 1976
Detroit, Michigan, U.S. |
Died |
Austin, Texas, U.S. | April 6, 2017 (age 41)
Occupation | Stand-up comedian |
Years active | 2008–2017 |
Lashonda Lester (died April 6, 2017) was an American stand-up comedian from Austin, Texas. Her posthumous debut album, Shondee Superstar, was released by Dan Schlissel's Stand Up! Records in 2019, and was critically praised. John-Michael Bond of Paste magazine called her "a rare talent with a preternatural gift for razor-sharp storytelling." [1] [2] Marc Maron called her a "funny, authentic, hard-working comic who had her own voice... That’s an honest comic. The best kind." [3]
Lester was born in Detroit, Michigan. As a child, she was a voiceover actress in local commercials. She developed an early interest in comedy, memorizing routines by Redd Foxx, Slappy White, George Carlin, and Richard Pryor. [4] She worked various jobs, including as a wrestling promoter and a madam. [5] [6]
Lester moved to Austin in 2004 to work in politics, and began performing stand-up in 2008. [7] [4] She became known for creating and starring in the darkly comic biography series Weird! True Hollywood Tales, which ran for five seasons at Austin's Salvage Vanguard Theater. [8] [9]
She performed frequently on television, including NickMom Night Out in 2013, the PBS series Stand Up Empire in 2016, and Fox's Laughs in 2017. [10] [11] [12] She was one of the top 100 comics on season 9 of the NBC show Last Comic Standing in 2015. [13]
In 2016, Lester won the prestigious annual "Funniest Person in Austin" competition at Austin's Cap City Comedy Club, becoming the first black comedian to win the award. [14] [9] Her win was captured in the 2016 documentary Funniest, directed by Katie Pengra and Dustin Svehlak. [15] In 2016, the Austin Chronicle gave Lester a special award in its Best of 2016 issue, "Best Unstoppable Comedy Dynamo". [16]
Lester was increasingly well known nationally when she died in 2017. [14] She had recently received critical praise for a high-profile performance with Marc Maron and was due to record her first special for the TV series Comedy Central Stand-Up Presents later that year. [6] [17] [18] Several national publications, including Paste and Vulture, published lengthy obituaries after her death. [1] [19]
Lester and her husband, Dana, had a son. [17] [9]
Lester was diagnosed with a chronic kidney disease in 2015, and had been hospitalized prior to her death. [20] She underwent dialysis four times a week, often using the time to write new material. [9]
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Paste | [1] |
Shondee Superstar was well received by critics. Writing in Paste, Bond called the album "a lovely introduction to a voice that’s both purely unique and universally relatable." [1] Valerie Lopez and Lara Smith of Comedy Wham called the album "superb" and praised Lester's "knack for storytelling" and ability to "turn a simple phrase with perfect timing and absolutely slay an audience." [2]