Gulf News

‘Def Comedy Jam’ revived on Netflix

New series is a celebratio­n of the earlier show’s comedians and its cultural impact

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Russell Simmons says not much has changed for black comics since he created Def Comedy

Jam, the early-’90s HBO series that introduced Martin Lawrence, Bernie Mac, Sheryl Underwood, Cedric the Entertaine­r and many other comics to national TV audiences. It was a weekly showcase for edgy and outrageous comedians at a time when The Cosby Show and its (then) righteousl­y wholesome star Bill Cosby was the mainstream face of black comedy.

TV’s “gatekeeper­s” still tend toward “the most accessible, easy-to-digest” black entertaine­rs, Simmons said, but he’s newly inspired after making Def

Comedy Jam 25, a celebratio­n of the series’ comedians and cultural impact that is now on Netflix.

“I’m very excited after looking at the rough cut,” Simmons said in an interview last week. “I really believe that people are going to have a great time watching and it will revive a few careers.”

He especially wants that for Adele Givens, an original Def Comedy performer who Simmons said “never got a break in Hollywood.”

“This time around, maybe somebody will see her for who she is,” he said.

The 90-minute special interspers­es clips from the original series with live appearance­s by a slew of comedians, including Lawrence, Underwood and Cedric the Entertaine­r, along with Steve Harvey, Tracy Morgan, Craig Robinson, D. L. Hughley, Katt Williams and Dave Chappelle.

A de-facto host of the special, Chappelle hilariousl­y went off-script during the taping earlier this month at the Beverly Hilton Hotel.

“There’s a white-supremacis­t starter kit at Target. Let me get some tiki-torches and khaki pants, I’ve got something going on next week,” he said before spontaneou­sly leading the crowd in the “black national anthem,” Lift Every Voice and Sing. “You can leave this in, too,” Chappelle said. “It’s a reunion. I was drinking backstage.”

Simmons said “pretty much all” of Chappelle’s off-script run made it into the final edit. Rising star Tiffany Haddish said Def

Comedy Jam provided an outlet for female comics that didn’t exist elsewhere. She got her break on the show in 2008.

“It was an opportunit­y for an uninhibite­d female comic to say whatever she had to say,” Haddish said. “Let’s be honest, that’s where you want uninhibite­d people to be: on TV, not at your job.”

The show allowed black comics to “be unapologet­ically and unflinchin­gly who we are,” said Hughley, who hosted the second iteration of Def Comedy Jam in 2006.

Simmons is bringing the series back for a third go in November: All Def Comedy will have a six-episode run on HBO, he said.

The anniversar­y special is like an entree and a retrospect­ive leading into the new season, Simmons said.

“It really inspired me and it reminded me of all these movies in developmen­t and all these people who should be working. Some are famous from Def Comedy Jam and they tour in the black community but haven’t crossed over, which is the case with almost every stitch of black comedy,” he said. “So it reminded me how excited I am to do a new chapter of Def Comedy Jam. There are so many underserve­d comedians who deserve a break.”

 ?? Photos courtesy of Netflix ?? Steve Harvey, Sheryl Underwood, Cedric the Entertaine­r and Dave Chappelle on the show.
Photos courtesy of Netflix Steve Harvey, Sheryl Underwood, Cedric the Entertaine­r and Dave Chappelle on the show.
 ??  ?? (From second left) Melanie Comarcho, Underwood, Adele Givens.
(From second left) Melanie Comarcho, Underwood, Adele Givens.

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