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Cedric the Entertainer

 
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Cedric the Entertainer

Cedric Kyles, aka Cedric the Entertainer, was born on April 24, 1964, in Jefferson City, MO. He worked for an insurance agency before he succeeded in comedy. He debuted on television in 1992 and has appeared on a number of TV shows, including The Tonight Show, The Chris Rock Show, Hollywood Squares, and Politically Incorrect. In 1994, he received the Richard Pryor Comic of the Year Award from Black Entertainment Television.

He has traveled across the United States as one of the headliners of the Kings of Comedy Tour and has appeared in several movies, including Big Momma's House, Serving Sara, Intolerable Cruelty, Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events, Barbershop, Welcome Home Roscoe Jenkins and Street Kings. Cedric can be heard as the voice of Carl The Rhino in the animated motion picture Ice Age.

He is the winner of four consecutive NAACP Image Awards for Best Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series for his portrayal of Coach Cedric Jackie Robinson on the WB�s sitcom The Steve Harvey Show.

Last updated: December 15, 2008.

Gale Contemporary Black Biography:

Cedric the Entertainer

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comedian; actor

Personal Information

Born Cedric Kyles c. 1964, in St. Louis, MO; son of Rosetta Kyles; married Lorna Wells, a stage-set costumer, 1999; children: Tiara (from previous relationship) and Croix Alexander (with Wells).
Education: Southeast Missouri State University.

Career

Comedian, actor. State Farm Insurance, Normal, IL, claims adjuster, mid-1980s; began appearing in comedy clubs in St. Louis area; won Miller Genuine Draft Comedy Search competition, late 1980s; toured with Original Kings of Comedy, 1998-99; television appearances: It's Showtime at the Apollo, 1992; Def Comedy Jam, HBO; Comic View, host, BET, 1994; Steve Harvey Show, 1996-; film appearances: The Ride, 1998; Big Momma's House, 2000; The Smoker, 2000; The Original Kings of Comedy, 2000; Kingdom Come, 2001; Dr. Doolittle 2, 2001; Servicing Sara, 2001.

Life's Work

A major television star of the late 1990s and a member of the phenomenally successful Original Kings of Comedy tour, the man known as Cedric the Entertainer was already a familiar figure to African-American audiences at the turn of the century. Early in 2001, with a commercial aired during the Super Bowl and a host of new projects in the works, he suddenly seemed poised on the edge of superstardom. The key to his success was that he combined the cultural strengths of the 1990s black renaissance in comedy with an Everyman quality, shared by only a few comedians, that induced audiences of all kinds to identify with him.

Cedric the Entertainer has often refused to divulge his last name, but he was born Cedric Kyles in St. Louis, Missouri, around 1964. His mother, a school reading specialist, encouraged his talents as a performer--but not, at first, as a comedian. "He was very bent on entertaining with singing and dancing," she told Jet. "He was always singing and dancing in plays. I couldn't nail down the comedic part because that didn't come until later." Despite his large, somewhat rotund physique, Cedric remained a talented dancer with an unexpected gracefulness that some have compared to that of the classic film comedian Jackie Gleason.

Attending Southeast Missouri State University, Cedric pursued his interest in performing with a television major and a theater minor. After graduating, however, he took a job as an insurance claims representative with a State Farm agency in Normal, Illinois. Still a performer at heart, Cedric entered a stand-up comedy competition in Chicago and walked away with a $500 prize. After that, most weekends saw him making the two-hour drive back to his home town for appearances in comedy clubs. At some time during this period, he took the name "Cedric the Entertainer;" he intended it as a reference to his all-around abilities as a performer.

Another first prize, this one in the Miller Genuine Draft Comedy Search, led to wider tours and a realization that life as a comedian was within his reach. Cedric's breakthrough came in Dallas in 1989, when he was in the audience at a Dallas comedy club in which fellow African-American comedian Steve Harvey was a principal player. As the mirthless audience endured an unsuccessful act from a visiting headliner, Cedric decided to ask the house management if he could perform a five-minute set at no charge. His miniature set brought the house down, and Harvey, impressed, brought Cedric back to Dallas to headline his own show.

As a comedian, Cedric was notable for his almost total avoidance of profanity--in stark contrast to the vast majority of other touring comedians, black and white. "If I use a curse word it's because of the character I'm portraying," he explained to Jet. "I use curse words like a Lawry's seasoning salt. It's hidden somewhere inside the joke. I use it as a tenderizer." His humor was in the observational vein popular among other comedians, but his act was distinctive in its use of dance and physical motion and in its gentle spirit, usually devoid of the anger that so often seems to seethe behind the comedian's smile. "I'm a little bit cuddly," he told USA Today. "I'm a Cedi-bear."

That's not to say that Cedric was incapable of comedy with an edge. Perhaps one of his funniest sequences, captured on film in the Original Kings of Comedy concert tour documentary directed by filmmaker Spike Lee, originated while then-President Bill Clinton was beleaguered by questions about his relationship with White House intern Monica Lewinsky. Cedric's routine depicted how a black president might respond to similar questioning. "You gonna ask me about that in front of my wife?" he asks, according to the New York Times, and lunges toward an imaginary reporter.

Cedric first appeared on television in 1992 in a stand-up segment on the It's Showtime at the Apollo program, and later performed on the Def Comedy Jam on cable TV's HBO network. 1994 brought his first ongoing gig when he became the host of Black Entertainment Television's Comic View, succeeding his future Original Kings of Comedy tour-mate, D.L. Hughley. Comic View featured a segment of his own, entitled "Ced's Comedy Crockpot." Harvey emerged as something of a mentor to Cedric, which led to Cedric's receiving a continuing role on the hit situation comedy the Steve Harvey Show. Cedric played a high school coach named Cedric Jackie Robinson.

It was the Original Kings of Comedy tour itself that really cemented Cedric's status as a star in urban America. That tour, which became the top-grossing comedy program of all time and pointed to a pent-up demand for high-quality entertainment among black audiences, featured Hughley, Harvey, and Bernie Mac along with Cedric. Running from 1998 into 1999, the program spawned first a recording, which won a 1999 Grammy nomination for Best Spoken Comedy Album, and then Lee's acclaimed film.

The tour and film also put Cedric on the radar screens of Hollywood talent spotters in a big way. He landed parts in a string of films released in 2001, including Kingdom Come, Servicing Sara, directed by Reginald Hudlin, and Dr. Doolittle 2, in which he was heard as the voice of a bear in a zoo. Cedric also wrote and developed the film Preaching Ain't Easy, which also featured Harvey and Bernie Mac. In 2001 Cedric developed a pilot episode for a series of his own on the WB network in which he would star, as he told the Los Angeles Times, as the coach of "the losingest team in the NBA." He also planned a stage revue that would nurture the careers of young comedians.

Celebrity came to Cedric, not as a result of any of these endeavors, however, but rather from a television commercial broadcast during the Super Bowl in January of 2001. Superbly tailored to Cedric's talents as a physical comedian and to his likeable Everyman persona, the commercial featured Cedric bringing an attractive date home to his apartment. Offering her something to drink, he goes to the kitchen for two bottles of Bud Light beer. Once he is safely out of her sight, he erupts into an enthusiastic dance--but forgets that by so doing he is shaking the still-closed beer bottles. Thus his date is drenched when her bottle is opened.

The commercial was ranked Number One out of 57 ads broadcast during the Super Bowl according to viewer polls. "I definitely noticed a difference in how people respond to me after the Super Bowl when I was out and about," Cedric told the Los Angeles Times. The exposure boded well indeed for Cedric's growing film career--which might, he told the Times, include dramatic roles. "I'd like to try my hand at it, sure," he said. "Just when I start getting to the point of people thinking they know what I do, I wanna flip it on them."

Awards

Two NAACP Image Awards for Best Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series for the Steve Harvey Show.

Further Reading

Periodicals

  • Chicago Sun-Times, February 5, 2001, p. 51.
  • Essence, April 2001, p. 80.
  • Interview, August 2000, p. 57.
  • Jet, September 20, 1999, p. 58; March 12, 2001, p. 58.
  • Los Angeles Times, February 6, 2001, p. F1.
  • New York Times, August 18, 2000, p. E12.
  • USA Today, January 30, 2001, p. B3.
Other
  • Additional material was obtained online at http://www.thewb.com.

— James Manheim

AMG AllMovie Guide:

Cedric the Entertainer

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Biography

A man with a gift for wringing laughter from commonplace situations, Cedric the Entertainer has parlayed a career as one of the top standup comics in America into a steadily growing resumé as an actor in film and television. Born Cedric Kyles in 1964, Cedric the Entertainer adopted his stage name early on in his career; having also worked as a singer and dancer, Cedric wanted audiences to know he was more than just another comedian, though after being named "most humorous" in his high school graduating class, he seemed destined early on to be best known for his wit.

Cedric's career as a standup comic got its first major boost when he won the "Johnny Walker National Comedy Contest" in Chicago. This led to regular gigs at nightclubs in his hometown of St. Louis, and a victory in another Chicago comedy competition. With plenty of experience in the Midwest under his belt, Cedric began touring comedy clubs around the United States, and in 1993, he scored his first regular spot on television, as the host of the BET series Comicview. While touring the Southwest, Cedric dropped by a club in Dallas, TX, where the headlining act was not going over with the audience. Cedric persuaded the management to let him do a set, and his five-minute routine brought down the house. Cedric soon discovered fellow comic Steve Harvey was in the audience. The two rising stars struck up a friendship, and when Harvey scored his own sitcom, The Steve Harvey Show, in 1996, he brought Cedric along to play his friend, Cedric Jackie Robinson. Cedric was a hit on the show, and his work on the series earned him the NAACP Image Award as Best Supporting Actor on a Comedy Series three years in a row.

In 1997, Cedric and Harvey joined forces with funnymen Bernie Mac and D.L. Hughley for a concert tour. Billed as The Kings of Comedy, the tour was a major success, selling out large venues across the country and grossing 37 million dollars over a two-year run. After his success on The Steve Harvey Show and with the Kings of Comedy tour, it was inevitable that Hollywood would come calling, and Cedric scored his first screen role in 1998 in the comedy Ride. The Original Kings of Comedy, a concert film shot by Spike Lee during a tour stop in North Carolina, hit theaters in 2000, and Cedric was also seen that year in the Martin Lawrence vehicle Big Momma's House. In 2001, Cedric scored a supporting role in the comedy-drama Kingdom Come, and did voice work for Dr. Dolittle 2 as well as the animated television series The Proud Family.

As one of the stars of 2002's Barbershop, Cedric showed Hollywood that he could deliver a major box-office hit, and larger film roles soon followed. After a scene-stealing turn in the Coen Brothers' 2003 Intolerable Cruelty, Cedric geared up for what looked to be his biggest year to date. 2004 saw the comedian with starring roles in the sequel to Barbershop, Johnson Family Vacation, and the big-screen adaptation of the classic sitcom The Honeymooners, as well as prominent supporting parts in Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events, with Jim Carrey and Meryl Streep, and Be Cool, the long-awaited sequel to Get Shorty.

When not making people laugh in person or onscreen, Cedric has an interest in charitable work, and in St. Louis he's established the Cedric the Entertainer Charitable Foundation, which helps to fund youth scholarships and family outreach programs in his hometown. ~ Rovi
Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Cedric the Entertainer

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Cedric the Entertainer

Cedric at the Johnson Family Vacation premiere in March 2004
Birth name Cedric Antonio Kyles
Born (1964-04-24) April 24, 1964 (age 48)
Jefferson City, Missouri, U.S.
Medium Film, television, stand-up
Years active 1987–present
Genres Comedy
Spouse Lorna Wells (m. 1999; 2 children)
Website www.ceddybear.com

Cedric Antonio Kyles (born April 24, 1964), known professionally by his stage name Cedric the Entertainer, is an American actor, comedian and director. He is perhaps best known as the co-star of the WB sitcom The Steve Harvey Show, as Eddie in the Barbershop films, and as one of the four comedians featured in the Spike Lee film The Original Kings of Comedy.

Contents

Early life

Cedric was born in Jefferson City, MO and is the son of Rosetta Boyce, a school teacher, and Kitrell Kyles, an employee of a railroad company.[1] His only sibling, younger sister Sharita Kyles Wilson, is an adjunct communications instructor at the University of Missouri in Columbia.[2][3] He was raised in Caruthersville, Missouri, but after junior high school he moved to Berkeley, Missouri. Cedric is a graduate of Berkeley High School in the north east suburbs of St. Louis.[4] He continues his involvement with his high school by awarding a scholarship each year to a graduating senior through his Cedric the Entertainer Charitable Foundation Inc. The foundation's motto is, "Reaching Out...Giving Back." Cedric majored in Mass Communication at Southeast Missouri State University and worked as a State Farm insurance claims adjuster, and substitute High School teacher before becoming a full-time comedian. He is also a member of Kappa Alpha Psi.

Career

He made his first TV appearance on It's Showtime at the Apollo. Soon after, he appeared on HBO's Def Comedy Jam and BET's ComicView, which he would later host for the 1993–94 season. Cedric was one of the Grand Prize Winners of the Miller Lite Comedy Search along with fellow comedian, Bernie Mac. In 1994, Cedric also won the Richard Pryor Comic of the Year Award from BET.

In 1996, Cedric moved into acting, playing Steve Harvey's friend, Cedric Jackie Robinson, on the sitcom, The Steve Harvey Show. His acting career grew and he began appearing in movies, including Dr. Dolittle 2, Barbershop, Barbershop 2: Back in Business, Ride, Serving Sara, Johnson Family Vacation, Intolerable Cruelty, Man of the House, Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events, Madagascar and Be Cool. Cedric was the subject of controversy when his Barbershop character made unpopular remarks regarding Martin Luther King and Rosa Parks.[citation needed] These comments were spoken in character, were part of the script, and he has never apologized for them. In the 2005 animated film Madagascar, Cedric voiced Maurice the aye aye. In October 2005, Cedric joined the Champ Car auto racing series as a part owner. Cedric appeared in the movie Charlotte's Web as the voice of Golly the gander. While his acting career grew, Cedric continued stand-up and traveled the country as one of the Kings of Comedy headliners, with Steve Harvey, D.L. Hughley and Bernie Mac. The act was later made into a film by Spike Lee called The Original Kings of Comedy. Cedric briefly had his own sketch comedy show called Cedric the Entertainer Presents, but it never caught on and was canceled after one season. The show had been renewed for a second season, but Fox canceled it before the season began. He then appeared in the 2003 PlayStation 2 video game Tiger Woods PGA Tour 2004. His most recent HBO Comedy Special was titled Cedric The Entertainer: Taking You Higher. Two of the background dancers from the special were Kamilah Barrett and Sandra Colton, who were also finalists in Fox's So You Think You Can Dance. He also recorded comedic interludes on two mulit-platinum selling albums, Nelly's Country Grammer (2000) and Jay-z Black Album (2003).

Cedric appeared in the 2007 film Code Name: The Cleaner, a comedy in which he plays Jake, a janitor with amnesia who may be a secret undercover government agent involved in an illegal arms conspiracy. He then starred in the 2008 films Welcome Home Roscoe Jenkins and Street Kings.

Cedric at the June 2008 premiere of Get Smart

Cedric appeared as the lead comedian at the White House Correspondents Dinner but jokingly remarked that he was unprepared because he thought that he would follow a humorous speech by President George W. Bush but instead followed First Lady Laura Bush, who he commented was very funny.

Cedric the Entertainer was inducted to the St. Louis Walk of Fame on June 7, 2008. His star is located at 6166 Delmar.[5]

Cedric the Entertainer was the special guest host for WWE Raw on September 21, 2009 in Little Rock Arkansas. During the show, he participated in a wrestling match, defeating Chavo Guerrero by pinfall. The match also featured Santino Marella as a guest referee. Cedric also got help with an unknown wrestler dubbed The Sledge Hammer and Hornswoggle.[6]

In March 2010, Cedric made his directorial debut with Dance Fu, produced and funded independently by his company Bird and a Bear Entertainment with producer Eric C. Rhone. The film starred comedian Kel Mitchell. Cedric made a cameo appearance in the film as a Homicide detective. It was released straight-to-DVD on October 4, 2011.

Cedric was recently seen in the Broadway revival of David Mamet's "American Buffalo," the story of three small-time crooks who come to blows during a plot to steal a valuable coin collection.[7]

In 2003, Cedric was featured in the Korean rap artists Drunken Tiger on their album 'Foundation' on the 17th track '뉘우침' (repentance).

In a June 21, 2011 interview, Cedric confirmed that his latest reality game show, It's Worth What?, was going to air on July 12, 2011 on NBC,[8] however, the start date was delayed by one week to July 19, 2011.

Personal life

He is married to Lorna Wells and they have two children, Croix and Lucky Rose, and an older daughter, Tiara, from a previous relationship.

Filmography

Film
Year Film Role
1998 Ride Bo
2000 Big Momma's House The Reverend
The Original Kings of Comedy Himself
2001 Kingdom Come Rev. Beverly H. Hooker
2002 Serving Sara Ray Harris
Barbershop Eddie
Ice Age Carl
2003 Intolerable Cruelty Gus Petch
2004 Barbershop 2: Back in Business Eddie
Johnson Family Vacation Nate Johnson
Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events Constable
2005 Be Cool Sin LaSalle
Madagascar Maurice
Man of the House Percy Stevens
The Honeymooners Ralph Kramden
2006 Charlotte's Web Golly the Goose
2007 Code Name:The Cleaner Jake Rogers
Talk to Me "Nighthawk" Bob Terry
2008 Welcome Home Roscoe Jenkins Clyde Stubbs
Street Kings "Scribble" (Winston)
Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa Maurice
Cadillac Records Willie Dixon
2011 Dance Fu Detective
Larry Crowne Lamar
2012 Madagascar 3: Europe's Most Wanted Maurice

Television

Television
Year TV Show Role Genre
1987 It's Showtime at the Apollo
1992 Def Comedy Jam
Comic View
1996–2002 The Steve Harvey Show Cedric Jackie Robinson
2001 The Proud Family Uncle Bobby Proud
2002 Cedric the Entertainer Presents
2007 The Boondocks
2008 The Penguins of Madagascar Maurice
2009 Un-broke: What You Need To Know About Money
WWE Raw Special 'Guest Host'
Wild 'n Out 'Special Guest'
Merry Madagascar Maurice
2011 It's Worth What? Host
Take Two with Phineas and Ferb Himself
Hot in Cleveland Reverend Boyce
2012 The Soul Man Reverend Boyce

See also

Preceded by
Brad Garrett
Host of TV Land Awards
2005
Succeeded by
Megan Mullally

References

External links



 
 

 

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$copyright.smallImage.alttext Gale Contemporary Black Biography. Contemporary Black Biography. Copyright © 2006 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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Wikipedia on Answers.com. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Cedric the Entertainer Read more

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