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LIC Comedy Club ‘The Creek and the Cave’ Shutters After 14-Year Run

The Creek and the Cave, located at 10-93 Jackson Ave (Google Maps)

Nov. 13, 2020 By Michael Dorgan

The Creek and the Cave, a staple venue in the Long Island City comedy scene, has shut permanently after a 14-year-run.

The much-lauded comedy club and restaurant, located at 10-93 Jackson Ave., has closed for good, its owner Rebecca Trent announced on social media Thursday.

“The Creek and the Cave is not going to reopen. I simply wasn’t in a strong enough position going into the pandemic to sustain ‘the Creek’ without going into insurmountable debt,” Trent wrote on Twitter.

Trent, in her social media post, wrote that the business was not equipped to deal with the burden of the coronavirus lockdowns and said she was left with no choice but to close.

She noted that the dated premises needed too many repairs and an infusion of cash to stay afloat.

“We had some interested investors, buyers, and ideas. But when it came down to it, the renovations would have been too expensive on a building that’s already crumbling,” Trent wrote.

The club was known for its loose atmosphere and for providing an open platform to up-and-coming artists to cultivate their craft. The Legion of Skanks podcast was also taped at the venue.

Many renowned artists have performed at the club including Saturday Night Live Weekend Update co-host Michael Che, 2018 White House Correspondents’ Dinner featured performer Michelle Wolf and the comedic twins the Lucas Brothers.

Comedian Colin Quinn used the club’s stage to develop his one-man Netflix show called “Unconstitutional,” and labeled the venue as “legendary” on hearing news of its closure.

James Adomian, who is best known for his impersonations of George W. Bush and Bernie Sanders, took to Twitter yesterday and credited Trent and the Creek and the Cave for saving his career.

“I washed up there ten years ago with nowhere else to go, like some idiot in a fairy tale,” Adomian tweeted.

“Rebecca fixed my wings and helped me fly again and crash again and soar through the crashes,” he wrote.

The outpouring of affection for Trent and the club flowed across social media last night and a GoFundMe page has been created to help Trent cope with the financial cost of closing the business.

The page, which was set up by Victor Varnado, asks artists and former customers to show Trent their appreciation for her generosity down through the years. The page has raised more than $6,000 from 72 donors.

“From her annual self-funded community Thanksgiving dinners to providing free stages to develop new shows, free studio space for podcasting, an annual awards show recognizing burgeoning comics, to even letting many artists who were down on their luck live in her home, Rebecca has tried her best to take care of all of so many of us,” Varnado wrote.

“Let’s take care of her for a change, ” he wrote.

The Creek and the Cave is the second city comedy venue to succumb to COVID-19 lockdowns this year after the iconic Dangerfields in the Upper East Side of Manhattan shuttered permanently last month.

Trent continued to provide platforms to artists this summer by helping to put together a series of successful outdoor popup shows at the Plaxall Gallery. She teamed up with Michael Che and Culture Lab LIC to host the shows which drew large, socially-distanced crowds.

email the author: news@queenspost.com
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