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Sam Kinison

 
Who2 Biography: Sam Kinison, Comedian

  • Born: 8 December 1953
  • Birthplace: Yakima, Washington
  • Died: 10 April 1992 (automobile crash)
  • Best Known As: Screaming, round comic who recorded Loud As Hell

1980s comedian Sam Kinison sold out concert halls and earned raves from other comics with an over-the-edge stage act of absurdly angry rants punctuated by loud screams. Raised in Illinois in the family of a Pentecostal minister, Kinison spent some time as a preacher himself before finding his way to stand-up comedy. Kinison was short and rotund and kept his long straggly hair covered by scarves and berets, and in his drug-fueled diatribes he gleefully stomped past the lines of what was considered polite, decent, or otherwise socially acceptable. Kinison showed up on Saturday Night Live, Howard Stern and David Letterman, and was in the movie Back to School (1986, starring Rodney Dangerfield), but controlling his energy and profanity for mainstream audiences proved difficult. He died from injuries after a drunk teenager ran into his car on 10 April 1992. His recordings include Louder Than Hell (1986), Have You Seen Me Lately? (1988) and Leader of the Banned (1990).

Kinison had a hit record with the novelty release of "Wild Thing" (1988)... Six days before he was killed, Kinison married Malika Souiri; his wife was injured in the accident that killed him.

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Quotes By: Sam Kinison
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"I don't worry about terrorism. I was married for two years."

Artist: Sam Kinison
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Sam Kinison

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  • Born: December 08, 1953, Yakima, WA
  • Died: April 10, 1992, Needles, CA
  • Active: '80s, '90s
  • Genres: Comedy
  • Instrument: Vocals, Producer, Main Performer
  • Representative Albums: "Louder Than Hell," "Have You Seen Me Lately?," "Live from Hell"
  • Representative Songs: "Wild Thing," "Rock Against Drugs?," "Jesus the Miracle Caterer"

Biography

Certainly the leader of the metal/decibel comedy scene, beret-wearing Kinison had an up-and-down career plagued by many personal problems. The former preacher was often funny, but he was just as often off the mark, as his albums demonstrate. He's definitely an acquired taste, to say the least. With his sudden death, he never seemed to really reach his potential. ~ Larry Lapka, All Music Guide
Actor: Sam Kinison
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  • Born: Dec 08, 1953 in Peoria, Illinois
  • Died: Apr 10, 1992
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '80s
  • Major Genres: Comedy
  • Career Highlights: Sam Kinison: Breaking the Rules, Saturday Night Live: Sam Kinison
  • First Major Screen Credit: Saturday Night Live: Sam Kinison (1986)

Biography

Pentecostal preacher-turned-outrageous rock & roll-oriented standup comic Sam Kinison had a cult following and a promising career as one of the next comedy superstars that ended in a fatal car crash. After leaving his church, the charismatic, long-haired, and pudgy comic went wild and based his sometimes envelope-pushing monologues on his exploits with drugs, booze, women, and rock music that were punctuated by plenty of profanity and his trademark screams. At the height of his popularity, Kinison was performing with some of the biggest rock acts in late-'80s America, including Mötley Crüe and Ozzy Osbourne. When his fast-lane lifestyle began extracting heavy tolls upon his life, Kinison left the party-animal life, gave up booze and drugs, and settled down with his beautiful third wife, Malika Souiri. He appeared in one feature film, Back to School (1986), guest starred on television occasionally, notably on Saturday Night Live, was featured in cable comedy specials, and co-starred as the unruly manifestation of a yuppie's mid-life crisis in the short-lived sitcom Charlie Hoover. Shortly after the series' cancellation, Kinison was fatally injured and his wife seriously hurt in an automobile crash. It is ironic, with Kinison's efforts to clean up his personal life, that the driver of the car at fault was drunk. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
Filmography: Sam Kinison
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Sam Kinison: Banned

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Sam Kinison: Family Entertainment Hour

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Married... With Children: It's a Bundyful Life, Part 1

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Sam Kinison: Breaking the Rules

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Back to School

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Rodney Dangerfield: "It's Not Easy Being Me"

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Comedy Store 20th Birthday

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Wikipedia: Sam Kinison
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Sam Kinison
Sam Kinison.jpg
Sam Kinison on the cover of Rolling Stone
Born December 8, 1953(1953-12-08)
Yakima, Washington, U.S.
Died April 10, 1992 (aged 38)
Needles, California, U.S.
Medium stand-up, television, music
Nationality American
Years active 1978 - 1992
Genres Black comedy, Satire, Observational comedy, Insult comedy
Subject(s) human sexuality, current events, American politics, pop culture, religion
Influences Lenny Bruce, Richard Pryor
Influenced Bill Hicks, Jeff Duran, Chris Rock, Jim Carrey, Joe Rogan, Tom Rhodes, Dez Reed, Pauly Shore
Website SamKinison.org

Samuel Burl "Sam" Kinison (December 8, 1953 – April 10, 1992) was an American stand-up comedian and actor. Kinison was known for his intense, harsh humor. A former revival-style preacher, he performed stand-up routines that were most often characterized by an intense style, similar to revival preachers, punctuated by his trademark scream.

Contents

Early life

Born in Yakima, Washington, Kinison was the son of Marie and Samuel Kinison, Pentecostal preachers.[1] His father pastored several churches around the country, receiving little income. Sam later attended high school in East Peoria, Illinois. He also lived in Tulsa, Oklahoma for a while with his parents. He followed in his father's footsteps as a Pentecostal preacher before becoming a comedian. Recordings of his sermons reveal that he used a "fire and brimstone" style, punctuated with shouts similar to the ones he would later use in his stand-up routines. He attended Pinecrest Bible Training Center in Salisbury Center, New York.[2] After he and his first wife were divorced, he abandoned preaching and took up comedy as a profession.

Career

Sam Kinison began his career in Houston, Texas, where he performed in small clubs. It wasn't until his appearance on HBO's Rodney Dangerfield's Ninth Annual Young Comedians Special in the summer of 1984 that he became a well known comic. His appearence on the special is widely considered to be his breakthrough performance. Later, during Kinison's appearance on Late Night with David Letterman, Letterman's introduction of Kinison warned his audience: "Brace yourselves. I'm not kidding. Please welcome Sam Kinison."

Kinison played on his former role as a Bible-preaching evangelist, taking satirical and sacrilegious shots at The Bible, Christianity and famous Christian evangelist scandals of his day. Kinison's daring comedy helped shoot him to stardom. On several videos of his stand-up routines, a shot of his personalized license plate reveals the words "EX REV".

Kinison made his big screen debut in Rodney Dangerfield's 1986 film Back to School, playing a short-tempered professor.

Kinison was associated with the Los Angeles rock music scene and was occasionally accompanied by a touring band. He also gained a reputation as having a prodigious appetite for drugs and alcohol.[3]

In 1988, Kinison recorded a novelty version of The Troggs' "Wild Thing", which appeared on his album Have You Seen Me Lately? The record didn't make the Billboard Hot 100, but the video was a hit on MTV, as it featured cameos of Rodney Dangerfield, as well as many well-known rock musicians, including Steven Tyler and Joe Perry from Aerosmith, Slash, Billy Idol, Steve Vai, Dweezil Zappa, Richie Sambora, and Tommy Lee, and a raunchy "roll on the mat" dance with Jessica Hahn. Also in 1988, Kinison appeared in the music video for the Bon Jovi single "Bad Medicine".

Kinison appeared in the memorable episode It's a Bundyful Life: Part 2 (1989) of Married with Children, as Al Bundy's guardian angel, who shows him what life is like without him born. (a take off of It's a Wonderful Life).

During one notable The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson performance, he delivered what began as a straightforward version of Elvis Presley's "Are You Lonesome Tonight", which descended into angry ranting during the spoken breakdown, and then segueing back into a straightforward sung ending.

Some of Kinison's most spontaneous moments came during his frequent appearances on The Howard Stern Show. He made an angry phone call on-air to Bobcat Goldthwait, and he embarrassed comedienne Judy Tenuta to the point of driving her off the show. His most notorious stunt resulted in an on-air feud with Stern: he made an on-air promise to bring to the show members of the band Bon Jovi, with whom Stern was feuding, but they did not show up, nor did Kinison. Stern's reaction was swift and vindictive, and Kinison eventually apologized, but not before comedian Gilbert Gottfried and Stern savaged an emotionally charged phone call between Stern and Kinison, in which both stars used the words "man" and "dude" so often that the playback was used as a bit on the show.

Stern and Kinison eventually made up and paired on Stern's pay-per-view special, U.S. Open Sores. In the mid-1990s, Stern purchased the movie rights to Kinison's biography 'reported[4] that HBO would make Brother Sam with Kinison being played by Dan Fogler.

In 1991, Kinison starred in the Fox Network TV show Charlie Hoover, in which he played the inner voice of the title character, appearing as a 12" man. The show lasted only seven episodes before being canceled.

Death

On April 10, 1992, six days after he married his girlfriend Malika Souiri, Sam Kinison was killed when his white 1989 Pontiac Turbo Trans Am was struck on U.S. Route 95, four miles (6 km) north of Interstate 40 and several miles west of Needles, California, by a pickup truck driven by a 17-year-old male who had been drinking alcohol.[5][6] His wife survived the accident. Kinison was later found to have traces of cocaine, prescription tranquilizers, and codeine in his bloodstream.[7]

Kinison is interred with family members at the Memorial Park Cemetery in Tulsa, Oklahoma. His grave marker includes an unattributed quote, "In another time and place he would have been called prophet."[8]

Cultural legacy

In music

  • Rapper Esham samples Kinison on the song "How Do I Plead to Homicide," included on his album Judgement Day.
  • A rant from Sam Kinison is featured in the song "The Kid Goes Wild" from the band Babylon A.D. The song appears on the Robocop 2 movie soundtrack.
  • Heavy metal band Anthrax sampled one of Kinison's famous screams in their 1987 song "I'm the Man".
  • Toward the end of the Digable Planets' 1993 song "Time and Space (A New Refutation Of)," rapper Doodlebug (Craig Irving) remarks that "My throat doesn't feel like Sam Kinison's must have after a show," a reference to the Planets' smooth and restrained—that is, very un-Kinison-like—style of rapping.
  • Rap group Insane Clown Posse mentions Sam Kinison in their song "Fearless" stating "I'd let Sam Kinison borrow my car if he was still around".
  • Rap group Twiztid mentions Sam Kinison in their song "Meat Cleaver" stating "The bottom line is we twisted like Sam Kinison's back, after the car wreck".
  • 90's indie band The Wonder Stuff dedicated a song to Sam Kinison on their 1993 album 'Construction for the Modern Idiot'. The unlisted 13th track is called 'Something for Sammy '. The song is mainly an instrumental apart for the lyric at the end "There are better necks to break and better cars to crash".

On film and television

Discography

  • Louder Than Hell (1986)
  • Have You Seen Me Lately? (1988)
  • Leader of the Banned (1990)
  • Live From Hell (1993)

Videography

Filmography

TV appearances

References

External links


 
 

 

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Who2 Biography. Copyright © 1998-2008 by Who2, LLC. All rights reserved. See the Sam Kinison biography from Who2.  Read more
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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
Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Sam Kinison" Read more