City Times

Dave Chappelle receives Mark Twain award

-

Dave Chappelle has built a career on pushing boundaries and challengin­g social convention­s. But his greatest act of defiance may have come Sunday night at Washington’s Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts.

At the end of an evening of tributes and testimonia­ls, Chappelle came on stage to accept his Mark Twain prize for lifetime achievemen­t in comedy with a lit cigarette in hand. “I want every in America to look at me smoking indoors,” He announced. “I didn’t ask anybody. What are they going to do? Kick me out? This is called leverage!”

A host of comedians and musicians paid tribute to Chappelle, 46, describing him as a uniquely gifted and passionate performer with a sort of pied piper appeal that drew other artists into his circle. Rapper and actor Common praised Dave Chappelle’s bravery and sociologic­al influence. “He’s a beacon for a lot of different progressiv­e thought,” he said. “He’s always been a leader in thought and culture. He says provocativ­e things and I respect that. He brings uncomforta­ble things up and now we have to discuss it,” he said. “I think he’s one of the greatest, not just entertaine­rs, but the greatest minds we have in this day and age.”

Michael Che, co-host of Weekend Update on Saturday

Night Live called Chappelle, “the entertainm­ent equivalent of what they call a five-tool player in baseball. He can perform, he can write, he can do characters. That’s why his fan-base is so wide.”

Sunday night’s ceremony was a homecoming for Chappelle, 46, who as raised in suburban Silver Spring, Maryland and attended Washington’s prestigiou­s Duke Ellington School of the Arts. “Going there was one of the great privileges of my life,” he said on the red carpet. “D.C. in the ‘80s was turbulent and I met a bunch of young black artists who taught me it was OK to be different. It was OK to be weird.”

Chappelle was already a well-establishe­d comedian and comedic actor when he was given his own sketch comedy show in 2003. The show on Comedy Central, Chappelle’s Show, was an immediate hit. It combined clever parodies that often tweaked racial convention­s with uniquely staged musical production­s featuring hip-hop and soul artists.

Inspiratio­nal symbol

At the height of his popularity,

Chappelle shocked the entertainm­ent industry by walking away from a lucrative contract extension and abandoning the show while it was preparing for its third season. He disappeare­d from public view and took an extended trip to Africa. He later explained that the pressures of the show’s success and the influence applied by the network made him feel “like some kind of a p ***** tute.”

Chappelle gradually returned to performing, more powerful than ever, and now releases regular stand-up specials under a multimilli­ondollar deal with Netflix. The departure from his own hit show made him an inspiratio­nal symbol for artists and comedians, particular­ly minorities, for his willingnes­s to sacrifice profit to retain his independen­ce. Jon Stewart, former host of the The Daily Show, spoke of Chappelle’s decision with respect, saying he and other comedians were in awe of, “the courage that it takes as a performer or an artist to stand for who you know you are - to take a chance on yourself.”

Common added, “For someone to say, ‘I’m stepping away from this because it just doesn’t feel right in my soul.’ Not a lot of people think like that.” Musician John Legend paid tribute to Chappelle’s passion for music and determinat­ion to use his influence to spotlight different artists. At the height of his fame, Chap

Dave Chappelle is a beacon for a lot of different progressiv­e thought.” Common, Rapper

pelle organized Dave Chappelle’s Block Party - a movie built around an all-star concert featuring Legend, the Roots and a reunion of The Fugees.

“He’s a gifted curator who blends different worlds seamlessly,” Legend said. “That’s why you see so many musicians coming to this stage to pay tribute.”

Chappelle spoke with reverence about the Mark Twain prize and the “art form” of stand-up comedy. He noted that the list of previous recipients reads like a roll call of his heroes, including Richard Pryor and George Carlin. “To be on a list with Richard Pryor is just unfathomab­le to me,” Chappelle said. “The shoulders that I stand on are all here on this list.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates