Alex Edelmanhas built quite the reputation over the last few years, with sold-out comedy shows andknock-em-deadlate-night performances, honing material for aBroadwaydebut that does his reputation proud.
Just For Us, opening tonight at Broadways Hudson Theatre and running through Aug. 19, might seem as unlikely as the WTF story that forms the basis of Edelmans performance.
A stand-up comedy routine without the usual visual and special-effects embellishments that accompany trips to Broadway,Just For Uslands on the theatrical stage with no need for anything but sheer story-telling bravado, energetic direction (by the late Adam Brace, with Alex Timbers credited as creative consultant)and a terrific yarn.

Alex Edelman, ‘Just For Us’Matthew Murphy
Related Stories
Writers Guild Of America West Staff Union Wins Voluntarily Recognition, Moves To Negotiate First Contract
Broadway Box Office Settles At $47M After Record-Breaking Week; ‘Good Night, And Good Luck’ Top Earner At $3.9M
The story Edelman tells inJust For Us a story Edelman assures us is true finds the Jewish comic, raised Orthodox, still observant, attending a smallish White Supremacist neo-Nazi gathering in a Queens apartment.
Why hes there and what he hopes to accomplish is the stuff of the show, but basically he was invited by mistake and decides to take the subway ride from Manhattan to Queens as a goof, or out of curiosity, or in the egotistical confidence that this very likable guy could win over a few hearts and minds with humor and affability.
Watch on Deadline
What Edelman doesnt say is that he probably knew the meeting would make a great story and fine material for a this stand-up routine.

And it does.
What begins as a lark, albeit one with jitters, turns ugly fast, though Edelman finds the humor throughout, from the benign-seeming, vaguely grouchy, jigsaw-puzzle-playing old lady who serves as the meetings door greeter, to the attractive young woman that Edelman quickly and foolishly hopes might be a rom-com meet-cute match.
Natural storyteller that he is, Edelman uses the unlikely anecdote as a winding roadmap, with excursions through his Orthodox Jewish upraising an extended riff on his familys sole attempt at a Christmas.celebration is a highlight and to his ongoing struggles with what it means to be Jewish, what it means to be white (despite what those Queens antisemites say) and whether empathy has, or should have, limits.
A raconteur whos honed this material to a flawless conversational eloquence, Edelman has a remarkable ability to walk right up to the abyss, peer in and walk away with jokes to tell jokes that neither diminish nor romanticize what hes seen.
Among the teachings of his Jewish upbringing is empathy, and even sitting outnumbered in that racist, antisemitic gathering he struggles to remain true to those values.
That struggle provides Edelman with a mighty intellectual conundrum, a worthy and funny debate of the heart and a show that can stand proud on Broadway.
One final note: Brace, Edelmans director and longtime collaborator, died following a short illness just last month at the age of 43.Just For Uswould have been his Broadway debut, and now stands as a fitting and loving tribute.
Title:Just For UsVenue:Broadways Hudson TheatreWritten And Performed By: Alex EdelmanDirector:Adam BraceCreative Consultant:Alex TimbersRunning time:75 min (no intermission)