Newsletter Signup
Stay up to date on all the latest news from Boston.com
By Lauren Daley
Ms. Pat, Saturday, Feb. 24, The Wilbur, 246 Tremont St., Boston, $35-$40
Ms. Pat’s bread and butter is turning lemons into lemonade.
Growing up in inner-city Atlanta at the height of the crack epidemic, Patricia Williams (aka “Ms. Pat”) bared all in her 2017 memoir, “Rabbit: The Autobiography of Ms. Pat,” co-written with Jeannine Amber.
Her mom, she writes, was “an alcoholic single mother with five kids. She could barely read and only knew enough math to play the numbers and count out the exact change to buy herself a couple of bottles of Schlitz Malt Liquor and a nickel bag of weed. Almost none of my relatives … graduated high school.”
She learned to pickpocket. She was sexually abused, she writes. Williams fantasied about a different life while watching “Leave It to Beaver.” She writes:
“In my house, my mother would get drunk off her gin, whoop me with an extension cord, call me ugly … [TV] doesn’t show what it’s like for girls like me … one minute you’re a 12-year-old looking for attention, then suddenly you end up pregnant at 13 …”
By 15, “I was a single mom with a seventh-grade education, no job skills, no money, and two babies under the age of 2.” She sold crack cocaine, was shot twice, “beaten with a roller skate, locked behind bars … nearly got my head blown off … Somehow I survived.”
More than surviving, Williams turned her struggles into comedy gold.
She’s out to prove there is no struggle you can’t laugh at, as she said in a recent interview with Boston.com.
Her stand-up bits might talk about selling crack cocaine, lunchtime in juvenile hall, keeping a pistol and drugs in a diaper bag.
So when Ms. Pat appears at Boston’s Wilbur on Feb. 24 — arriving with two TV shows and a memoir that was a finalist for both an NAACP Image Award and a 2018 Southern Book Prize under her belt — she’s calling it, aptly, the “Ya Girl Done Made It Tour.”
For a more PG-13 flavor of Williams’ stand-up (her Netflix special is definitely rated R) take this bit from her 2015 appearance on Comedy Central’s “This is Not Happening”:
She tells the crowd about selling crack cocaine in her Cadillac: “I always had to keep a client in the car with me because I was 16 years old with a learner’s permit and I didn’t want to risk the chance of losing my f— permit.”

When a “rival” spits on her car, threatens her life and returns with a gun, she grabs her pistol, but the safety is on. (“If your s— on safety, you’re not in a shootout any longer. You’re being shot at.”) So she takes off running. Bleeding, Williams thinks she cut her chest on a fence. A friend calls 911. (“The EMT guy tried to take my bra off … and he’s struggling like hell.”) Turned out she’d been shot. The bullet exited through her nipple, the EMT tells her. “Like a bullseye?” she asks. She recounts, deadpan, that the doctor later told her: “Well, ma’am, you’re really lucky. Because if you were an A-cup you would have died.”
Three seasons of her Emmy-nominated BET+ sitcom based on her life, “The Ms. Pat Show,” are now streaming — for a sense of her raw storytelling, its first Emmy nod was for Outstanding Direction for an episode where Pat confronts the man who abused her as a teenager. She’s also got a new courtroom-style show a la Judge Judy, “Ms. Pat Settles It,” and podcast, “The Patdown with Ms. Pat.”
We caught up with the busy Williams ahead of her Boston stop to talk Boston seafood, laughing at adversity, and why she’s glad Tom Brady left the Pats.
Ms. Pat: Just life. What I’ve gone through. Real personal story. That’s what I always bring. I think it’s been a year since I went to Boston. I love Boston.
I hate to say this ’cause I’m fat but there’s this restaurant called Neptune. I love that place. I’m so fat I’d be there before they open in the morning because the line is so long.
That’s the only one I ever go to.
No, no, no, this is season four, girlfriend! Then I’m going into the second season of “Ms Pat Settles It.” So I’m excited.
It’s personal. It’s real. It’s 90 percent of my life. The most exciting thing is that we’re nominated for two Emmys — and we’re on BET+. So the first time BET+ ever got an Emmy nomination [is] from “The Ms. Pat Show.”
It was [at] FOX, Hulu didn’t pick it up, and we went over to BET+. And I’m glad we went there because it allowed me to be Black. [laughs]
You know, just so I can tell the stories the way I want to tell ’em.
I was able to tell a story about getting an abortion. I was able to tell a story about a bad relationship. About me [formerly] being a drug dealer. The audience loves it because they finally got a mother on TV who represents mothers like me. They always put mothers on TV that act like we’re perfect. We’re cursed. We’ve been to jail. We’ve made mistakes. I think I’m the first mother on TV that ever admittedly says, “Hey, I got a background.” They keep us in the kitchen cooking.
I hear all the time, people come up to me, “Oh my God, Ms. Pat, you remind me of my aunt, you remind me of my mom.” So I feel like a family member to the people who watch the show.
Yes, that was also a really nice boost to my career. Didn’t win — got put off on my birthday — but it was a really nice boost. It was an experience. I [was] just hoping that people will remember who I am. So I did it, and went on to the next step. Everything to me is just a piece of the puzzle.
I was offered a show later on, after doing Marc Maron and Joe Rogan podcasts. I got into podcasting. I just always tell younger comics, just gotta keep going, everything is a piece to the puzzle. Even “The Ms. Pat Show” — that’s not my end-all. “Okay, I got a show, I accomplished something.” No. You gotta keep going.
I’ve always just been an honest person. When I’m honest about what I’ve been through in life, people can connect because they feel like I’m telling their story. I ain’t no counselor. I’m not out here trying to heal anybody. But I did learn along the way: when you don’t dwell on anything that you don’t have control over, it can make your life a lot easier.
[My standup] is dark, it’s funny, it’s life. I talk about what I go through on a daily basis. And that’s how I come up with a bit. Something I saw my grandkids do; something my [family] did, what I experience. If it sparks, I turn it into something, if not, I keep it moving.
Richard Pryor. I like Kevin Hart. I like Wanda Sykes. But my favorite is Richard Pryor because I’m a storyteller.
Oh, no. I learned about him once I got in the business. I didn’t even know he was a comedian. I thought he was a damn movie star.
She did a wonderful job. That was the first one — I’m looking forward to doing another, I hope.
No. I don’t let them tell me what I can do. I’m [51]. If you don’t want it, you don’t want it. I’m at the point in my life where [I can say], “you don’t have to take it.”
Getting renewed.
We have a ball doing it, we do it in front of a live studio audience in Atlanta. So just continuing to get renewed and get nominated for awards, those are my favorite moments.
And it didn’t happen in Atlanta at all. They usually shoot them in LA, they don’t shoot them in Atlanta. So we went to Atlanta and built a whole multi-camera scene.
I’m a comedian. It really is exactly what a comedian needs.
I’m blessed and thankful for the TV show, but I love stand-up because that’s how I got here. That’s what I own. That’s what I can control. The network owns “The Ms. Pat Show.”
A caseworker told me I should give it a try, that I was funny. I gave it a try, and here I am 20-something years later.
I never looked at myself as being funny. I looked at myself more as just saying what was on my mind.
I did. I got told that a lot.
Dave Chappelle. I don’t watch a lot of comedy like I used to when I first started because I’m so busy. But you always see comedians doing well — Kat Williams — you hope to reach those levels.
I was just telling my story on the podcast and a writer heard me and said you should have a [book] — and honestly, this is how these things happen in my life — she took me in, I got a book deal, and we wrote “Rabbit.”
Oh, yeah. It was very emotional. But it was also a very healing process for me. I was able to tell stories that I don’t tell on stage — I was able to put those stories in the book. And people related with them even more.
You don’t have to dwell on stuff you don’t have control over. Take the pain in your life and laugh at it.
Thank God ya’ll don’t have Tom Brady anymore. I can like being in Boston. Massachusetts was a heartbreak for a long time. I’m a crazy Falcon fan.
Interview has been edited and condensed.
Lauren Daley can be reached at [email protected]. Follow her on Twitter/X @laurendaley1.
Lauren Daley is a longtime culture journalist. As a regular contributor to Boston.com, she interviews A-list musicians, actors, authors and other major artists.
Stay up to date on all the latest news from Boston.com
Stay up to date with everything Boston. Receive the latest news and breaking updates, straight from our newsroom to your inbox.
To comment, please create a screen name in your profile
To comment, please verify your email address
Conversation
This discussion has ended. Please join elsewhere on Boston.com