Stand-up comedian Carie Karavas releases first TV stand-up special

·

Greek-American Comedian Carie Karavas is off and riffing on her first TV standup special, “Men, Flaws and Menopause,” shot at The Argyle Theatre in Babylon and premiering Thursday, Jan. 23 on the streaming service Crackle. She gets her licks in with Ikea, Home Depot and taking care of hundred-year-old relatives as well.

“David Ozer heard about me,” Karavas, 54, says of the CEO of Crackle’s sister company, the production house Landmark Studio Group, “and somehow we got in touch with each other and he came to The Brokerage [comedy club in Bellmore] with his wife and friends to see me perform and that was it. He was like, ‘Wow, I think you’re great. Let’s do this.’ And that changed my whole everything.”

Karavas got her start in the mid-1980s with a standup class that culminated in students performing at the famed New York club The Comic Strip.  She was hopping between coasts in those days, learning film and TV makeup in Los Angeles and then working in that field. “Then in 1990, I said, ‘No more makeup, no more anything but comedy.’ And that’s what I did. I became a comic full-time in 1990.”

Along the way, she followed in her restaurateur family’s footsteps and opened two outposts of a Greek café, Gyrolicious, in East Meadow and Jericho. She left that line of work two years ago since between it and the comedy, she says, “I found myself having no life and my children were growing up alone.”

She has two kids, one in high school and one in junior high, with husband Tsambikose “Sam” Volonakis, originally from the Greek island of Rhodes, raised in Queens, and since 1999 employed by the Long Island Rail Road. He and Karavas married in 2005, and despite his wife’s routine on the standup special, Volonakis in person seems perfectly nice, perfectly normal-looking and a perfectly good sport.

Sourced by: Newsday

Share:

KEEP UP TO DATE WITH TGH

By subscribing you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

Latest News

Unley event honours Greek language as cornerstone of identity and heritage

The Greek Australian community gathered in South Australia for an afternoon tea this past weekend to mark UNESCO World Greek Language Day.

Pan-Macedonian Association of Melbourne re-elects leadership at AGM

The Pan-Macedonian Association of Melbourne and Victoria held its Annual General Meeting (AGM) on Sunday, 15 March 2026.

Canberra Greek community hears proposal to transfer St Nicholas Church land to Archdiocese

Around 200 community members gathered in Canberra to discuss a proposal that could see St Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church become a Cathedral.

Eugenia Mitrakas on rebalancing the scales for women and migrants

The scales of justice are not just a phrase — they are a powerful symbol rooted in Greek thought and part of our shared Hellenic heritage.

Sydney honours Eleftherios Venizelos with solemn 90th anniversary memorial

On Sunday, March 15, there was a solemn memorial service to mark the 90th anniversary of the great statesman, Eleftherios Venizelos.

You May Also Like

Greek grandmother speaks out after being charged with drug trafficking offences in SA

82-year-old Evdocia 'Effie' Phelivanidis has denied she knew of any cocaine at her home in Adelaide, South Australia.

SYRIZA sends message of thanks to Greek diaspora for protecting La Trobe Greek Studies program

The Radical Left Coalition (SYRIZA) have sent a letter thanking Greek diaspora organisations for acting quickly to save the La Trobe Greek Studies Program.

Maria Sakkari advances to Wimbledon second round with straight-sets win

Maria Sakkari is through to the second round of Wimbledon after defeating Russian opponent Anna Blinkova 6-4, 6-4 in 78 minutes on Court 8.