By the time Hasan Minhaj arrives at the Mondavi Center with his acclaimed one-man show āHomecoming Kingā on Jan. 27, he will have performed in more than 30 cities across the country, usually in sold-out theaters.
But the Mondavi appearance will be momentous for the comedian, who is also a regular on Comedy Centralās āThe Daily Show.ā Minhaj ā07 will be returning to his hometown, performing at his alma mater, and his act will be taped for a live comedy special, details of which are yet to be announced.
In āHomecoming King,ā he talks about growing up a child of Muslim Indian immigrants and weaves together themes of race, heartbreak, forgiveness and love. Minhaj combines storytelling with comedy, resulting in a show that is both funny and, at times, serious. It debuted off-Broadway in October 2015.
āNobody shows the real sad ugly nooks and crannies of life and thatās why I still think that being as personal and honest onstage is the most valuable commodity in art,ā Minhaj, 31, said. āWhen someone is really authentic, I think itās something the audience can feel. No matter how flawed that person is, you can still respect that honesty.ā
The tour caps off a big year for Minhaj, who also got married, performed for the president at the 75th anniversary of the USO and headlined the Radio and Television Correspondents Association dinner. The went viral in June when thousands of people saw Minhaj address members of Congress about gun control in the wake of the Orlando nightclub shooting. It was his attempt to address the current state of affairs of this country, he said.
āIām not there to try to skewer people,ā Minhaj said. āIām just trying to come at it with some human empathy. I consider myself to be an angry optimist.ā
2017 promises no slowing down. Minhaj is cast in āRock That Body,ā a movie with Scarlet Johansson; plus, heāll get to work on another one-man show and a book.
Why did you want to hit the road with āHomecoming Kingā?
When we did it off-Broadway, I would go to āThe Daily Showā during the day and then take the train down to the Cherry Lane Theatre at night. I felt like a real New York theater artist. Even though I donāt smoke, I wanted to smoke a cigarette through the streets of the West Village, like, āI am a theater performer.ā But I also felt like the energy of the show was really special. It was one of those things I wanted to share with the rest of the country. I didnāt want it to just end there.

What has been the response to these stories from audiences?
The thing thatās amazed me most is how itās resonated with people who donāt even share my life story or background. Iāve had people tell me stories about growing up and not being able to talk about their sexuality, and there was a moment where they put themselves on the line to someone they loved and they werenāt accepted for who they were. Itās great that it transcends race, class, gender ā all these lines. Everybody has felt like an outsider at some point. Itās ironic thatās what unites us all.
āEverybody has felt like an outsider at some point. Itās ironic thatās what unites us all.ā
Did you feel it was also important to address your advantages?
I acknowledge my privilege within the show: āOh, boo hoo, you poor little brown boy. You couldnāt go to a dance with a white girl? Your life must be so hard.ā I realize that at least my spine isnāt getting shattered in the back of a police wagon. I lucked out. If this is the tax I had to pay for the American Dream, wow, what an easy way to get out. But then I want to balance that with talk about systemic problems or oppression or racism.
Did your parents highlight your opportunities, having immigrated themselves?
Yeah, there are things that I didnāt quite understand. I would butt heads with them when I was a kid. A lot of those themes are talked about in the show. Iām like, āWhy arenāt you letting me go to a matinee movie on the weekend? Let me go to Holiday Cinema, dad!ā He was like, āNo fun, no friends, no girlfriends. You can have fun in med school. I didnāt come this far for you to go see āLethal Weapon 4ā in theaters. You have bigger fish to fry.ā Itās a level of pressure but also privilege to know that you lucked out.

How do you think growing up in Davis influenced your sense of humor or satire?
To me, when you grow up as a minority in a majority culture, I always felt like an outsider. And so whatās really great about comedy is that itās one of the few art forms where you really are an outsider. You are someone observing life from the sidelines and commenting on whatās happening. Itās amazing because I didnāt know when I was experiencing that or feeling that way as a kid that it would be a tremendous tool that would help me become really insightful when I was writing comedy later.
You discovered comedy at UC Davis. How did you make the leap from college student to doing stand-up at night?
It was something I really wanted to do. To me, it felt like I was a superhero. I would put on my costume and go out into the city. By day Iām a political science student, and by night Iām a comedian performing, getting in my Nissan Stanza and hoping my car wonāt break down on the way to San Francisco and doing open mics.