USA TODAY US Edition

Cedric the Entertaine­r promises Emmy surprises

The veteran comic presides over a scaled-down ceremony on TV’s big night Sunday.

- Cydney Henderson

When Cedric the Entertaine­r first agreed to host the 2021 Emmys, he instantly thought to himself, “What have I done?”

“The first thing that crossed my mind was when Kevin Hart got canceled for the Oscars,” the 57-year-old comedian says, referring to Hart stepping down from hosting the 2019 Academy Awards after past homophobic comments and tweets surfaced.

“I accepted the job and I was like, ‘Wait a minute, what have I done in the last three months that is going to get me canceled before I even go to work?’”

But the only thing in danger of being canceled was the Emmys, set for Sunday (CBS and Paramount+, 8 EDT/5 PDT) as COVID-19 cases rise across the country. Cedric says the ceremony will move forward as an “intimate” affair with limited nominees and guests in a tent on The Event Deck at L.A. LIVE, behind Los Angeles’ Microsoft Theater.

“It was going to be a much bigger audience there,” Cedric says. “At first, the idea was to really bring it back full steam ahead and now, with the new variant, there’s been some sizing down,”

Although things will look a little different, viewers can expect some surprises, he says.

“As a stand-up comedian, I had to wiggle a few minutes where I can get my jokes off … We got some fun sketches, good musical numbers,” Cedric says.

But don’t expect him to poke fun at stars the way Ricky Gervais and Jimmy Kimmel have done.

“We’ve all been through a lot the past few years,” he says, “So the idea of cynicism and mean-spirited jokes is not going to be what the vibe is at all.”

The comedian aims to bring a “celebrator­y” tone to the Emmys, a night to salute how “TV got us all the way through (the pandemic) with most of us being stuck at home.”

“The idea is discovery, great entertainm­ent and you get to see your favorite celebritie­s go all out,” he says, playfully adding: “Ain’t no telling what (“Pose” star and nominee) Billy Porter is going to have on.”

Cedric, born Cedric Antonio Kyles, 57, has experience as a host, on “Who Wants to Be a Millionair­e” and “Cedric’s Barber Battle,” yet he says it’s “scary” and “tough” to return to the stage amid the pandemic.

“It was kind of a challenge … to get my sea legs back,” he says. “You just don’t take for granted this idea that one can just turn on the switch and go out and entertain people, but I’m really blessed to be able to do it.”

The comedy veteran says he turned to Steve Harvey for advice.

“My good friend Steve Harvey gave me some great advice,” he says. Harvey told him to think of the ceremony in three parts: “Think of the whole thing in a beginning, middle and end… and to make sure to take them to a fantastic ending.”

So prepare to be entertaine­d until the final curtain, because Cedric says he’s not the kind of host to bail on you: “Most times you want to come out, hit your monologue and be like, ‘Alright, peace out. I’m done.’”

But that’s not the case.

“I’ve already been crowned King of the Prom’ without winning an Emmy,” he says. “When you are the host, that is your job to make sure everything is running and having a great time and you are hosting the party.”

Expect a triple dose of Cedric the Entertaine­r on CBS this week. He hosts “The Greatest #AtHome Videos,” a compilatio­n of social media videos created during the pandemic, which airs Friday (9 EDT/PDT), the Emmys on Sunday and the Season 4 premiere of “The Neighborho­od” on Monday (8 EDT/ PDT).

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