The Prince George Citizen

Louis-Dreyfus presented with lifetime award

- Ashraf KHALIL

WASHINGTON — After a 35year acting career and with two iconic television characters to her name – Elaine Benes of Seinfeld and foul-mouthed Vice-President Selina Meyer – Julia Louis-Dreyfus has been honoured with the Mark Twain Prize for lifetime achievemen­t in comedy.

On Sunday night at Washington’s Kennedy Center, the 57-yearold actress received a stream of testimonia­ls from celebritie­s including Jerry Seinfeld, Stephen Colbert and 2010 Mark Twain recipient Tina Fey, touching on the multiple aspects of her career.

“We both started comedy in Chicago,” said Fey, paying tribute by tracking the similariti­es between their lives.

“We both moved on to Saturday Night Live. We both lost our virginity to Brad Hall,” referring to Louis-Dreyfus’s husband and former SNL castmate, sitting next to the honoree. Fey praised the “secret precision” of her comedy and her willingnes­s to make her Seinfeld character so flawed.

“Julia let Elaine be selfish and petty and sarcastic and a terrible, terrible dancer,” Fey said. “Julia’s never been afraid to be unlikable – not on screen and not in person.”

Louis-Dreyfus is the 21st Mark Twain recipient, joining a list that includes Richard Pryor, George Carlin and Carol Burnett. Bill Cosby, the winner in 2009, had his award rescinded earlier this year after he was convicted of three counts of aggravated indecent assault.

Seinfeld, while on the red carpet before the ceremony, recalled first meeting Louis-Dreyfus during an informal audition. His iconic sitcom, Seinfeld, was still in the planning stages and producer Larry David knew Louis-Dreyfus from their time together on Saturday Night Live.

“We had just two short pages of script, and we sat down to read the dialogue together,” Seinfeld said. “As soon as she opened her mouth, I knew she was the one.”

Seinfeld also credited Louis-Dreyfus for having the confidence and strength of personalit­y to hold her own on what he called “a very male show.”

That confidence was evident very early for Louis-Dreyfus, who said she knew as a young child that she had a gift for comedy.

“The first time I really knew was when I stuffed raisins in my nose and my mother laughed. I ended up in the emergency room because they wouldn’t come out!” Louis-Dreyfus said before the ceremony.

Comedian Kumail Nanjiani grew up in Pakistan and never saw an episode of Seinfeld until he immigrated to the U.S as an adult.

“But I became a huge fan as soon as I moved here,” he said. The co-writer of the movie The Big Sick recalled her iconic, slightly convulsive “Elaine Benes dance” on the show, which he credits to Louis-Dreyfus’ gift for physical comedy.

“There are some comedians who think physical comedy is beneath them,” he said. “But she was just fearless and ego-less.”

At the end of the night, Louis-Dreyfus accepted her award with an extended comedic bit and a few shots at new Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh.

A native of the Washington suburbs in Maryland, Louis-Dreyfus is a graduate of the elite Holton-Arms school, alma mater of Christine Blasey Ford, who accused Kavanaugh of assault.

Louis-Dreyfus make a veiled but unmistakab­le reference to Ford’s testimony-framing it around her performanc­e in high school of the play Serendipit­y.

“I can remember every single aspect of that play that night, so much so that I would testify under oath about it,” she said, to a round of laughter and applause. “But I can’t remember who drove me there or who drove me home.”

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