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D. L. Hughley

 
Black Biography: D. L. Hughley

comedian; actor

Personal Information

Born Darryl Lynn Hughley, on March 6, 1964, in Los Angeles, CA. Son of Charles Hughley, an airlines maintenance worker, and Audrey Hughley, a homemaker; married LaDonna, 1986; children: Tyler, Ryan, Kyle.

Career

Stand-up comedian, actor. Sales clerk, sales manager, Los Angeles Times, 1981-91; appeared at venues nationally as a stand-up comedian; appeared on HBO's Def Comedy Jam; first host of Black Entertainment Television's Comic View; appeared in Double Rush, CBS, 1995; actor, writer, co-producer, The Hughleys, ABC, 1998--.

Life's Work

Comic actor D.L. Hughley (pronounced HEW-glee) has been considered an overnight sensation since his ABC sitcom, The Hughleys, became an instant hit in 1998. However, since 1991, Hughley has been a stalwart of the African American comedy circuit. As he watched fellow performers such as friend, Chris Rock, begin to achieve wider success, Hughley admitted that he occasionally lost his focus. But Hughley's perseverance ultimately paid off, and he earned offers for two HBO comedy specials, and a spot as the first host of Black Entertainment Television's Comic View.

The Hughleys, however, provided his big break. The show is based on Hughley's own life experiences as an upwardly mobile, young African American man who moves his family to a largely white suburb. Reviews of the show have been positive, and ratings have remained high. Jet reported that The Hughleys was "the most-watched show with Black audiences and in the Top 20 for all audiences." Joy Bennet Kinnon noted in Ebony that, "a year after its debut the show was ABC's highest-rated new show and had won a nomination for a People's Choice Award."

Precarious Road to Success

Darryl Lynn Hughley was born March 6, 1964, in Los Angeles. His mother, Audrey Hughley, was a homemaker and his father, Charles Hughley, worked as a maintenance employee for Delta Airlines. Growing up in the Compton area of Los Angeles, an environment that did not emphasize the potential rewards of achievement, Hughley quickly fell through the cracks. He was a class clown, he explained to Ebony, "because I felt intimidated and didn't know the answers." Sucked into gang life by the age of 12, Hughley was a member of the notorious Los Angeles gang, the Bloods. He was kicked out of high school in the tenth grade and never returned. Of his gang membership, Hughley told People Weekly, "I watched people do a great deal of physical harm to each other." He added, "You know its wrong, but you don't have the courage to be different." In the early 1980s, a gang incident gave him the courage he needed to break away. Hughley's cousin, a member of the rival Crips gang, was killed and his body dumped on his mother's doorstep. In a 1997 interview with the Ann Arbor Michigan Daily, Hughley said, "It was a terrible thing. And what was even worse was that he was in a rival gang.... So I couldn't even go to his funeral, or I might've been shot." Fearing what the future might hold, Hughley explained to People, "I was afraid I'd do something you can't walk away from." Finally realizing that he wanted to be a productive member of society, he quit the Bloods.

Hughley went to work in the circulation department of the Los Angeles Times as a telemarketer, where he met his wife, LaDonna. The couple married in 1986 and had three children, daughters Tyler and Ryan, and son Kyle. Hughley's telemarketing job with the newspaper eventually evolved into a position as circulation manager. Referring to his job with the Los Angeles Times, Hughley told Newsweek, "I worked there ten years, had all my kids there, bought my house there and used all their medical insurance until I left to do...[comedy]. Most people had odd jobs trying to make it. I had a real job."

Turned to Comedy

Although Hughley was earning a steady income as an assistant circulation manager, the family was faced with a financial crisis when LaDonna experienced complications during a pregnancy. "The rent check bounced," Hughley told People in 1998. "We had no food in the house, and the electricity was cut off. I remember thinking, 'I will never let this happen again.'" Hughley recalls the date he first ventured out on stage in search of an audience: February 14, 1988. "There was no turning back," he told the Michigan Daily, "When they put that microphone in my hand, I knew stand-up would be my life."

After three years of local engagements, Hughley quit the Los Angeles Times to pursue comedy on a full-time basis. He was asked to host auditions for HBO's One Night Stand series, and appeared on HBO's Def Comedy Jam. Hughley's second HBO special, according to Ebony, "was nominated for a CableACE Award for Best Comedy Special and became one of the cable network's highest-rates specials ever." In 1995, he was cast as Marlon on the doomed CBS series, Double Rush.

Over the next few years, Hughley continued to work the comedy circuit, routinely selling out venues throughout the United States. He rose through the comedy ranks with comedians such as Kennan Ivory and Damon Wayans, Martin Lawrence, and Chris Rock. Hughley watched with envy as his colleagues achieved movie deals and greater fame. "I wondered what I was doing wrong," he told Jet. "I wondered what I was doing or not doing to get invited to the party. It was tough to stay focused."

Hughley continued to work hard, and he was eventually able to move his family from Baldwin Hills to the upscale West Hills neighborhood in 1996. For the first time in his life, he was living amid white people. This situation provided comic opportunities for Hughley. In 1997 Hughley, along with his agent, created a comedy showcase to which they invited executives from all of the major television networks. The material in the showcase consisted of stories from Hughley's real-life experiences in the suburbs. The comedy showcase was a tremendous success, and Hughley was offered several opportunities to create a new television show.

Scored a Hit

When The Hughleys debuted on ABC in 1998, it was an instant hit. Hughley wrote seven of the first season's 23 shows, and served as co-executive producer along with Chris Rock and Matt Wickline. Although there were allegations of racism in some of the scripts, Hughley dismissed these concerns. "Some white people think I'm a racist. Some Black people think I'm a racist," he told Jet. "But I'm not doing the show from anybody else's voice but mine. I hope people understand that I'm telling it the way I see it. It's just my experience." Hughley credited the show's success to the fact that it focuses on family issues and concerns that are universal. As he told Ebony, "Every group has its own idiosyncracies, but at a certain point we are all human. We all have the same aspirations.... We all want to keep our cable on. We all want our kids to eat. My comedy is very 'relatable'--that's one of the greatest things I've ever been told."

In addition to acting, writing, and producing, Hughley enjoys spending time with his family, swimming, and listening to jazz. He also continued to pursue other projects as well, releasing a comedy album in late 1999, and touring through the end of the century with the top-rated "Crown Royal Kings of Comedy Tour." Hughley is both exhilarated and grateful for his success. "I'm truly blessed," he told the Michigan Daily. "I love what I do. I've been all over the world, and I've even performed before [President] Bill Clinton. How can I not like what I do? There's nothing better."

Further Reading

Periodicals

  • Ebony, September 1999, p.158.
  • Entertainment Weekly, September 11, 1998, p.48.
  • Jet, December 7, 1998, p.54.
  • Newsweek, October 26, 1998, p.73.
  • People Weekly, November 9, 1998, p.117.
  • Rolling Stone, February 4, 1999, p.69.
Other
  • Additional information for this profile was obtained from the Internet Movie Database at http://us.imdb.com; The Michigan Daily Online at http://www.pub.umich.edu/daily/jan/01-31-97/arts1.html; Vegas.com Live at http://www.vegas.com/live/transcripts/hughley_transcript.html; and the WCHS-TV8 website at http://www.wchstv.com/abc/hughleys/dlhughley.html

— Ellen Dennis French

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Artist: D.L. Hughley
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  • Active: 2000s
  • Genres: Comedy
  • Instrument: Main Performer, Performer Representative Album: "Notes from the GED Section"

Biography

D.L. Hughley's success story is one that runs parallel to many African-American entertainers of the 20th century. Born in one of the roughest, impoverished, and crime-filled areas of the nation (south central California), Hughley led a life of juvenile delinquency and ultimately ended up a member of one of the most infamous gangs in the area. It was only after the loss of a family member that he began to turn his life around, which ultimately led him to the stage and standup comedy. After a successful stint on various club circuit tours and BET comedy specials, he teamed up with Cedric the Entertainer, Steve Harvey, and Bernie Mac for the legendary Kings of Comedy tour, which won critical acclaim and eventually was adapted into a Spike Lee film. Subsequently, ABC awarded him with his own show, The Hughleys, which lasted for several seasons. He has also starred in several movies, and Comedy Central released his first audio CD in 2004. ~ Rob Theakston, All Music Guide
Actor: D.L. Hughley
Top
  • Born: Mar 06, 1963 in Los Angeles, California
  • Occupation: Actor, Writer
  • Active: 2000s
  • Major Genres: Comedy
  • Career Highlights: The Original Kings of Comedy, The Brothers, The Hughleys
  • First Major Screen Credit: The Hughleys (1998)

Biography

As an advocate of black comedians' talent, D.L. Hughley worked to support their careers, leading by example. After years of experience in the standup circuit, Hughley took on the role of host of BET's Comic View in 1992, in addition to various other television appearances on comedy programs and sitcoms. He was born on March 6, 1963, named Darryl Hughley, and raised in Southern California, where he would spend the majority of his performing life as well. On February 22, 1986, he wed his wife LaDonna, with whom he had three children.

Once Hughley had gained some attention as a standup comedian, he appeared on an HBO special, which led to his status as host of Comic View. In 1995, he played Marlon on the TV series Double Rush, and starred in his self-monikered sitcom The Hughleys as himself in 1998. The following year, he performed the voice for the Gadgetmobile in the live-action film Inspector Gadget (starring Matthew Broderick), inspired by the 1980s cartoon series of the same name.

He appeared in the Spike Lee documentary The Original Kings of Comedy, which also featured several other accomplished black comedians including Steve Harvey, Cedric the Entertainer, and Bernie Mac. In 2001, Hughley expanded his performance horizons with his role in the dramatic comedy The Brothers, a film by Gary Hardwick exploring the realms of friendship and marriage. ~ Sarah Sloboda, All Movie Guide
Wikipedia: D. L. Hughley
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D. L. Hughley

Hughley at The Huffington Post Pre-Inaugural Ball in Washington, D.C. in January 2009.
Born Darryl Lynn Hughley
March 6, 1963 (1963-03-06) (age 46)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Occupation Actor/Comedian
Years active 1991–present
Spouse(s) LaDonna Hughley (3 children)

Darryl Lynn "D. L." Hughley (born March 6, 1963) is an American actor and stand-up comedian. He is perhaps best known as the star of the ABC/UPN sitcom The Hughleys, and as one of the four comedians featured in the Spike Lee film The Original Kings of Comedy. He was the host of CNN's D. L. Hughley Breaks the News, a short-lived comedy talk show. He is currently a correspondent for The Jay Leno Show, and a local radio personality in New York City.

Contents

Personal life

Hughley was born in Los Angeles, California, the son of Audrey and Charles Hughley, who was a Delta Air Lines maintenance worker. He is a former Bloods gang member.[1] Hughley is married with his wife, LaDonna and they have three children: Ryan, Tyler and Kyle.[2] Hughley has discussed his son's asperger syndrome on several occasions.[3]


Career

From 1992 to 1993, Hughley was the original host of ComicView, the stand-up comedy program on BET. During 2005, he had a short-lived talk show on Comedy Central called Weekends at the D.L.. He is a member of The Original Kings of Comedy, and has also had roles on Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip, and on NBC's Scrubs as Turk's brother. He was the host of the 2008 BET Awards. He also attended the funeral of one of his best friends and fellow King of Comedy, Bernie Mac. At the service, he gave a tearful speech during the eulogy.[4]


CNN

Hughley with Robert De Niro in January 2009.

Hughley was selected to host and write a comedic news-show on CNN which covers global happenings in politics, entertainment, sports and pop culture[5], titled D. L. Hughley Breaks the News, which aired its premiere episode on Saturday, October 25, 2008 at 10 p.m. EDT on CNN.[6] On March 9, 2009, CNN announced Hughley would be ending the show due to a desire to work in Los Angeles and be closer to his family. He plans to continue his work with CNN as a Los Angeles-based contributor for the network.[7] According to Dr. Boyce Watkins, a frequent CNN contributor, "DL effectively took the amazing campaign of Senator Barack Obama and turned it into a modern day minstrel show."[8]

Radio

Recently, Hughley began a career as an on-air radio personality. On July 20, 2009, The D.L. Hughley Morning Show premiered on WRKS (more popularly known as 98.7 Kiss FM), an urban adult contemporary station in New York City. His co-hosts include former BET news correspondent Jacque Reid.[9] Airing from 6-10 am, the show places Hughley in direct competition with his fellow "King of Comedy" Steve Harvey, whose nationally-syndicated Steve Harvey Morning Show airs in New York on WBLS (Kiss FM's longtime rival).


Filmography

Year Film Role Notes
1999 Inspector Gadget Gadgetmobile Voice
2000 The Original Kings of Comedy Himself
2001 The Brothers Derrick West
2001 Inspector Gadget 2 Gadgetmobile Voice/Video
Chasing Papi Rodrigo
Scary Movie 3 John Wilson
2004 Soul Plane Johnny
2005 Shackles Ben Cross
2006 Cloud 9 Tenspot
The Adventures of Brer Rabbit Brer Fox Voice/Video
2008 Spy School Albert

References

External links


 
 
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Black Biography. Contemporary Black Biography. Copyright © 2006 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "D. L. Hughley" Read more