The Palm Beach Post

Comedian jumps to aid during show

- By Alex Horton Washington Post

They ruin shows. They divert from meticulous­ly calibrated jokes. The response to them is often so brutal and hilarious that heckler takedowns is itself a comedy subgenre.

Ken Jeong thought he was being heckled in Phoenix on Saturday when a woman in the third row during his set at the Stand Up Live Comedy Club unmoored the comedian with a disturbanc­e.

The lights came on, and it became clear the woman was having an apparent seizure, an audience member later said.

Then, “The Hangover” and “Community” actor reverted to his dormant profession: doctor.

“He couldn’t see what was going on with the lights. He thought he was being heckled. He was playing with them from the stage for a second,” audience member Heather Holmberg told USA Today. “It was a moment where time stands still. Someone was having a crisis. There was a hush over the room.”

Jeong, an internal medicine practition­er turned Hollywood funnyman, cleared the area and attended to the woman alongside a medic who happened to be in attendance, Holmberg said in a Sunday tweet.

The woman regained consciousn­ess and returned to her feet, and Jeong stayed with her until an ambulance arrived, TMZ reported.

Jeong then returned to the stage after the incident to a round of applause, the entertainm­ent site said.

His representa­tive, Michelle Margolis, declined to make additional comments beyond saying the TMZ story was “accurate.”

At least one audience member thought he killed it. “Great night! He is gracious and grateful … AND flipping funny!” Holmberg said in her tweet.

Jeong received his medical degree in 1995 from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, though he soon began moonlighti­ng as a comic. A break in a comedy contest led him to Los Angeles, where he performed sets after long days in an HMO clinic, The Washington Post reported in 2011.

By then, Jeong transition­ed to acting full time and stole scenes in “The Hangover” series as the flamboyant gangster Leslie Chow. He also starred in the NBC sitcom “Community.” He leveraged his medical experience in a short performanc­e in the film “Knocked Up” and in his own sitcom “Dr. Ken,” which was canceled after two seasons last year.

Jeong does not practice medicine anymore but is still licensed in California, though his certificat­ion expires in July, according to state records.

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Ken Jeong

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