Toronto Star

Canadian comedian Dave Broadfoot dies

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Canadian comedy pioneer Dave Broadfoot, who was considered a national treasure for his political satire on the CBC’s Royal Canadian Air Farce, has died at the age of 90.

“We are all deeply sad,” Lucy Stewart, producer of Air Farce, said Wednesday in confirming his death.

“He was a Canadian icon in comedy,” added Gerry Dee, star of the CBC sitcom Mr. D. “He was a name synonymous with Canadian comedy and paved the way for a lot of us to make that leap into comedy.

“He was just someone that was relatable. He just had that appeal, that lovability that attracted people to his comedy.”

Broadfoot was born in Vancouver on Dec. 5, 1925 and began acting shortly after serving in the navy during the Second World War.

In the 1950s and ’60s, he appeared on the small screen in The Wayne & Shuster Show, The Ed Sullivan Show, The Big Revue and Comedy Cafe. He also appeared on CBC Radio with Funny You Should Say That.

Broadfoot also toured in revues across the country, the U.S. and England.

It was in 1973 that Broadfoot began his 15-year-run on Air Farce, where he entertaine­d audiences with memorable characters including Sgt. Renfrew of the RCMP who “never gets his man” and a hockey-playing dunce named Big Bobby Clobber.

Broadfoot won numerous honours, including a Juno for comedy and a Governor General’s Performing Arts Award. He was also named an officer of the Order of Canada.

“(In Canada) you can be the biggest success ever and still have a very, very small bank account because that’s the way we are,” he said in 2003.

He also remarked on receiving an honour from the same government he often poked fun at. “We’re mature enough that we can make fun of each other and still have great respect and honour each other.”

In 2004, Broadfoot joined a troupe of younger performers for a show tour of Canadian military sites in Afghanista­n.

 ?? DOUG GRIFFIN/TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? Dave Broadfoot joined the CBC’s Royal Canadian Air Farce in 1973, kicking off a 15-year-run on the show.
DOUG GRIFFIN/TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO Dave Broadfoot joined the CBC’s Royal Canadian Air Farce in 1973, kicking off a 15-year-run on the show.

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