Autistic Winnipeg comedian creates a stage for neurodivergent performers | CBC News
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Adam Schwartz stands onstage and speaks into the microphone.
“So, I know what you’re thinking. Bald and autistic. He must get so many women,” he says, pausing while the audience bursts into laughter.
“It’s true. I’m pretty autistic.”
The laughter gets even louder, and Schwartz nods in acknowledgement. He’s right at home, onstage telling jokes, living his neurodiversity out loud.
Schwartz, 40, is the founder and artistic director of Neurohilarity. The Manitoba-based arts organization promotes neurodivergent artists by giving them the skills and the stage they need to share their voice, he says.
Schwartz founded it in 2022 after realizing, as an aspiring comedian, that there weren’t enough options in the existing comedy scene.

“I was having a hard time getting enough gigs,” he said. “I was having a hard time fitting in, and so I started producing my own shows.”
Neurohilarity provides a means for Schwartz and other neurodivergent comics to hone their craft in a space they can relate to.
Carole Cunningham is one of those comics.
“Neurohilarity found me,” the 35-year-old says. “It’s about making neurodivergent performers feel included and feeling they have a stage and feeling that their experiences are valued.”
Onstage, the audience clearly values Cunningham’s experiences, as they burst into laughter when she cracks a joke about her credit card skills.
Mission accomplished.

“I would never have been able to express my ADHD and all the struggles I have onstage without Neurohilarity,” she says.
Overall, Neurohilarity has “been amazing for the community,” Schwartz says.
Schwartz shared his Neurohilarity “journey” in a short documentary produced by Jolyne Toderian and Katie-Anne Tanasiciuk, who are student filmmakers in Sisler Create’s post-high filmmaking program.
Meet the filmmakers




More about Project POV: Sisler Create
CBC Manitoba’s Project POV: Sisler Create is a storytelling collaboration that partners filmmaking students with CBC Manitoba journalists to produce short docs. You can see past projects here .
The Winnipeg School Division’s Create program is hosted at Sisler High School and trains post-high students in the creative digital arts. Last fall, CBC journalists taught storytelling to filmmaking students and led producing workshops at Sisler.
Create focuses on education and career pathways into the creative industries. Students can take courses in animation, film, game design, visual effects, graphic design and interactive digital media.