Chris Rock
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Christopher Julius Rock III[5] (born February 7, 1965)[6][7] is an American comedian, actor, screenwriter, television producer, film producer and director. He was voted by Comedy Central as the fifth greatest stand-up comedian of all time.[8]
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Biography
Early life
Rock was born in Andrews, South Carolina. Shortly after his birth, his parents moved to Crown Heights, Brooklyn, New York. A few years later, they relocated and settled in the working-class area of Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn.[5] His mother, Rosalie (née Tingman), was a teacher and social worker with the mentally handicapped; his father, Julius Rock, was a former truck driver and newspaper deliveryman. Both his parents are Christian.[9] Julius died in 1988 after ulcer surgery.[10] Rock has five younger siblings, Andre, Tony, Brian (a minister), Kenny, Andi, and a half-sibling, Jordan. His brothers Tony and Kenny are also in the entertainment business.[11] Rock has said that he was influenced by the performing style of his paternal grandfather, Allen Rock, a preacher.[5][12]
Early career
Rock began doing stand-up comedy in 1985 in New York City's Catch a Rising Star.[5] Rock slowly rose up the ranks of the comedy circuit in addition to earning bit roles in the film I'm Gonna Git You Sucka and the TV series Miami Vice. Upon seeing his act at a nightclub, Eddie Murphy befriended and mentored the aspiring comic. Murphy gave Rock his first film role in Beverly Hills Cop II.
Rock became a cast member of the popular sketch comedy series Saturday Night Live in 1990. He and other new cast members Chris Farley, Adam Sandler, Rob Schneider, and David Spade became known as the Bad Boys of SNL. In 1991, he released his first comedy album Born Suspect and won acclaim for his dramatic role as a crack addict in the film New Jack City. His tenure on SNL gave Rock national exposure, but he was rarely used on the show, save for his recurring Nat X character.
Recurring characters on SNL
- Nat X, militant African-American host of "The Dark Side."[13]
- Onski, co-host of the Yo! MTV Raps parody, "I'm Chillin'" (B. Fats, Onski's fellow host, was played by Chris Farley).[14]
- Kevin Stubbs, game show contestant on "Sabra Price is Right" and "The Bensonhurst Dating Game."[15]
- Buster Jenkins, bow-tied senior citizen, exposing racism during a crime and on "Weekend Update."[16]
- Young Pop, a sailor who saves the day with barbecued meat on "Tales From The Barbecue."[17]
Celebrity impersonations on SNL
- Idi Amin[18]
- Todd Bridges[19]
- Luther Campbell[20]
- Flavor Flav[21]
- Whoopi Goldberg[22]
- Arsenio Hall[23]
- M.C. Hammer[24]
- Michael Jackson[25]
- Eddie Murphy[26]
- Nipsey Russell[27]
- Long Dong Silver[28]
- Jaleel White[29]
Post-Saturday Night Live
Standup success
A frustrated Rock left Saturday Night Live in 1993, appearing instead as a "special guest" star on the predominately African-American sketch show In Living Color. The show, however, was canceled months later. Rock then decided to concentrate on a film career. He wrote and starred in the mockumentary CB4 but the film was not a success. Acting jobs became scarce, and Rock abandoned Hollywood to concentrate on stand-up comedy.[12]
Rock starred in his first HBO comedy special in 1994 titled Big Ass Jokes. But it was his second stand-up special, 1996's Bring the Pain, that reinvented Rock as one of the best comedians in the industry.[30][31] His routine, which featured commentaries on race in America, stirred up a great deal of controversy.[32] Rock won two Emmy Awards for that special. Adding to his popularity was his much-publicized role as a commentator for Comedy Central's Politically Incorrect during the 1996 Presidential elections[30] which earned him another Emmy nomination.[33] Rock also was the voice for the "Lil Penny" puppet who was the alter ego to basketball star Penny Hardaway in a series of Nike shoe commercials from 1994-1998,[30] and hosted the '97 MTV Video Music Awards.
Rock later had two more HBO comedy specials: Bigger & Blacker in 1999, and Never Scared in 2004. Articles relating to both specials called Rock "the funniest man in America" in Time[34] and Entertainment Weekly,[2] respectively. HBO also aired his talk show, The Chris Rock Show, which gained critical acclaim for Rock's interviews with celebrities and politicians. The show won an Emmy for writing. His television work has won him a total of three Emmy Awards and 15 nominations.[33] By the end of the decade, Rock was established as one of the preeminent stand-up comedians and comic minds of his generation.
During this time, Rock also translated his comedy into print form in the book Rock This! and released the Grammy Award-winning comedy albums, Roll with the New, Bigger & Blacker and Never Scared.
He is currently working on his fifth HBO special.[5]
Film and television
It was not until the success of his stand-up act in the late 1990s that Rock began receiving major parts in films. These include roles in Dogma, Beverly Hills Ninja, Lethal Weapon 4, Nurse Betty, The Longest Yard, Bad Company, and a starring role in Down to Earth. Rock has also increasingly worked behind the camera, both as a writer and director of Head of State and I Think I Love My Wife. In the fall of 2005, the UPN television network premiered a comedy series called Everybody Hates Chris, based on Rock's school days, of which he is the executive producer and narrator. The show has garnered both critical and commercial success, and Rock describes it as "honest" and "very working-class, so people can relate."[35]
Academy Awards
In early 2005, Rock hosted the 77th Academy Awards ceremony. The decision to have Rock host the awards was seen by some as a chance to bring an "edge" to the ceremony and to make it more relevant or appealing to younger audiences. During one segment Rock asked "Who is this guy?" in reference to actor Jude Law seemingly appearing in every movie Rock had seen that year and implied Law was a low-rent Tom Cruise (he made a joke about filmmakers rushing production and being unable to get the actors they want: "If you want Tom Cruise and all you can get is Jude Law, wait [to make the film]!") . Nearly two hours later, a defensive Sean Penn took the stage to present and said, "In answer to our host's question, Jude Law is one of our finest young actors." (At the time, Penn and Law were shooting All the King's Men.) Law was not the only actor that Rock poked fun at that evening, however -- he turned the joke on himself at one point, saying "if you want Denzel [Washington] and all you can get is me, wait!" Many critics panned Rock's performance, with some comparing him to David Letterman.[citation needed]
Music videos
Rock's first music video was for his song "Your Mother's Got a Big Head" from his album Born Suspect. Rock also made videos for his songs "Champagne" from Roll With the New and "No Sex (In the Champagne Room)" from Bigger & Blacker. Chris Rock also directed and appeared in the music video for the Red Hot Chili Peppers song "Hump de Bump".
Rock appeared in the Big Daddy Kane music video "Smooth Operator" as a guy getting his hair cut.
He also appeared in Johnny Cash's "God's Gonna Cut You Down", one of the many celebrities seen lip-synching the song.
Comedic style
Rock's subject matter typically involves family, politics, romance, music, class relationships, and race relations in the United States. Though not strictly autobiographical, much of his comic standpoint seem rooted in his teenage experience; his strict parents, concerned about the inadequacies of the local school system, arranged to have the adolescent Rock bused to a nearly all-white high school in Bensonhurst (an Italian-ethnic neighborhood of Brooklyn known at the time for poor race relations). In his memoir "Rock This," the comedian recalls, "My parents assumed I'd get a better education in a better neighborhood. What I actually got was a worse education in a worse neighborhood. And a whole bunch of ass-whippings."[36] The discontinuity between expectation and experience—between what you arrive expecting and what you leave understanding—is one basis of Rock's comic style, and seems to have come to him young.
The comedian has also expressed discomfort with the notion that success in standup comedy—or, indeed, in any aspect of the entertainment industry—should oblige him to serve as a role model. In this position, he finds himself directly at odds with one his comic idols, Bill Cosby. (Cosby has reprimanded Rock both explicitly—for his famous/notorious Niggas vs. Black People track[37]—and implicitly, for heavy use of the word "nigger."[38]) Rock has not wavered from a position explored in his 1996 Roll With The New show, and reiterated in his 1997 memoir: "Why does the public expect entertainers to behave better than everybody else? It's ridiculous...Of course, this is just for black entertainers. You don't see anyone telling Jerry Seinfeld he's a good role model. Because everyone expects whites to behave themselves...Nowadays, you've got to be an entertainer and a leader. It's too much."[39]
Live Earth controversy
At the London Live Earth concert on July 7, 2007, which was broadcast live on the BBC, before introducing the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Rock called the crowd "motherfuckers". Due to the broadcast being at 5:45pm Rock was immediately cut off, and the BBC made several apologies for his use of the word "motherfucker".[40]
Personal life
Rock has been married to Malaak Compton since November 23, 1996. She is the founder and executive director of StyleWorks, a non-profit, full-service salon that provides free services for women leaving welfare and entering the workforce. They have 2 daughters together, Lola Simone, born June 28 2002 and Zahra Savannah born 22 May 2004. Chris Rock has one son from his first marriage, Nazeeri Jafar (born February 8, 1984).[citation needed]
In November 2006, the entertainment news website TMZ.com reported that Rock was filing for divorce after nearly ten years of marriage to Malaak.[41] Two weeks later, however, TMZ reported that Rock had not filed divorce papers, and that it appeared that the couple had been able to work out their differences and stay together. In response to the reports, Rock released a statement to the press denouncing them as "untrue rumors and lies".[42]
Often the subject of tabloids, when asked about paparazzi and the other negative aspects of fame, Rock says he accepts the bad with the good: "You can't be happy that fire cooks your food and be mad it burns your fingertips."[43]
In 2007, freelance journalist and former actress Kali Bowyer filed a paternity suit against Chris Rock, claiming he was the father of her son, and in need of hospitalization.[44] DNA testing proved that Rock was not the child's father.[45]
Rock currently resides in Alpine, New Jersey.[46]
Rock is an avid supporter of the New York Mets baseball team. During the 2007 season he was seen nearly every game on the video screen leading the crowd in a chant of "Let's Go Mets."
On his UK tour, Chris stated, "I live in New Jersey and my house is worth $3 million" USD, and that Mary J Blige, Jay-Z and Denzel Washington all live in his neighborhood.
In 2008 Rock's family history was profiled on the PBS series African American Lives 2. A DNA test shows that he is descended from the Udeme people of northern Cameroon.
Work
Filmography
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1987 | Beverly Hills Cop II | Playboy Mansion Valet | Cameo |
1988 | Comedy's Dirtiest Dozen | Himself | direct-to-video concert film |
I'm Gonna Git You Sucka | Rib Joint Customer | Cameo | |
1989 | Who Is Chris Rock? | Himself | documentary short |
1990 | Saturday Night Live | Himself/Various (1990-1993) | |
1991 | New Jack City | Pookie | |
1992 | Boomerang | Bony T | |
1993 | CB4 | Albert/MC Gusto | also co-writer |
1995 | The Immortals | Deke Anthony | |
Panther | Yuck Mouth | ||
1996 | Sgt. Bilko | 1st Lt. Oster | |
1997 | Beverly Hills Ninja | Joey Washington | |
1998 | Dr. Dolittle | Rodney | voice |
Lethal Weapon 4 | Detective Lee Butters | ||
1999 | Torrance Rises | Himself | documentary short |
Dogma | Rufus | ||
2000 | Nurse Betty | Wesley | |
2001 | Down to Earth | Lance Barton | also co-writer |
AI: Artificial Intelligence | Comedian | voice/cameo | |
Pootie Tang | JB/Radio DJ/Pootie's Father | also producer | |
Osmosis Jones | Osmosis Jones | voice | |
Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back | Chaka Luther King | ||
2002 | Bad Company | Jake Hayes/Kevin Pope/Michael Turner | |
Comedian | Himself | documentary | |
2003 | Pauly Shore Is Dead | Himself | Cameo |
Head of State | Mays Gilliam | also director and co-writer | |
2004 | The N-Word | Himself | documentary |
Paparazzi | Pizza Delivery Guy | Cameo | |
2005 | The Aristocrats | Himself | documentary |
Madagascar | Marty | voice | |
The Longest Yard | Farrell Caretaker | ||
2007 | I Think I Love My Wife | Richard Cooper | also director and co-writer |
Bee Movie | Mooseblood the Mosquito | voice | |
2008 | You Don't Mess With The Zohan | Taxi Driver | |
2008 | Madagascar 2 | Marty | voice |
Discography
Album Information |
---|
Born Suspect
|
Roll with the New
|
Bigger & Blacker
|
Never Scared
|
Television
- 1987 Miami Vice (episode "Missing Hours")
- 1990-1993 Saturday Night Live (cast member)
- 1993-1994 In Living Color (recurring)
- 1995 The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air (episode "Get a Job")
- 1996-1998 The Moxy Show (voice) (uncredited)
- 1996 Martin (episode "The Love Jones Connection")
- 1996 Homicide: Life on the Street (episode "Requiem for Adena")
- 1996 Politically Incorrect (correspondent)
- 1997 MTV Video Music Awards (host)
- 1997-2000 The Chris Rock Show (cast member, writer)
- 1998 King of the Hill (episode "Traffic Jam")
- 1999 MTV Video Music Awards (host)
- 2003 MTV Video Music Awards (host)
- 2004 77th Academy Awards (host)
- 2005-Present Everybody Hates Chris (narrator, creator)
HBO specials
- Uptown Comedy Express (1987)
- Big Ass Jokes (1994)
- Bring the Pain (1996)
- Bigger & Blacker (1999)
- Never Scared (2004)
Books
- Rock This! (Hyperion Books, 1997) - ISBN 0786862890
See also
- Niggas vs. Black People, one of Rock's most famous and controversial bits.
- Bad Boys of SNL
- Live Earth
References
- ^ Album covers featured in the opening credits of Chris Rock: Bring the Pain, HBO, 1996.
- ^ a b c Wolk, Josh (2004-03-19). Chris Rock On Fire. Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved on 2007-10-13.
- ^ George Lopez at MySpace. Retrieved on 2007-10-12.
- ^ Weiss, Rebecca (2007-04-27). Christian Finnegan Chats. The Cornell Daily Sun. Retrieved on 2007-10-15.
- ^ a b c d e "Chris Rock". Inside the Actors Studio. Bravo. 2007-03-13. No. 6, season 13.
- ^ "Chris Rock and American Idol Fantasia's Big News". The Oprah Winfrey Show. 2007-02-28.
- ^ Note: Reliable sources differ on his year of birth. In his book, Rock This!, Rock gives his birth date as February 7, 1966. But Rock stated he was 42 years old on his February 2007 appearance on The Oprah Winfrey Show.
- ^ Stand Up Comedy & Comedians. www.comedy-zone.net. Retrieved on 2006-08-10.
- ^ Cindy Pearlman. "Rolling Rock: Chris Rock Hits His Hollywood Stride", Rolling Stone, January 29, 2001.
- ^ Chris Rock Biography. Yahoo!.
- ^ Kenny Rock at the Internet Movie Database
- ^ a b Bennun, David (2000). Chris Rock. Retrieved on 2007-10-20.
- ^ The SNL Archives: Eight appearances, 10 November 1990—17 April, 1993 http://snl.jt.org/char.php?i=292
- ^ The SNL Archives: Six appearances, 12 January 1991—20 February, 1993 http://snl.jt.org/char.php?i=302
- ^ The SNL Archives: Two appearances, 9 May 1992, 10 October, 1992 http://snl.jt.org/char.php?i=345
- ^ The SNL Archives: Two appearances, 15 February 1992, 13 March, 1993 http://snl.jt.org/char.php?i=343
- ^ The SNL Archives: Two appearances, 28 September 1991, 7 December, 1991 http://snl.jt.org/char.php?i=321
- ^ SNL Achrives/Impression. Chris Rock as Idi Amin, "Ultra Slim Fast," 20 October, 1990; http://snl.jt.org/imp.php?i=788
- ^ SNL Achrives/Impression. Chris Rock as Todd Bridges, "America's Most Wanted," 16 March, 1991; http://snl.jt.org/imp.php?i=846
- ^ SNL Achrives/Impression. Chris Rock as Luther Campbell, "2 Live Crew Party," "The Sinatra Group," 29 September, 1990; 19 January, 1991; http://snl.jt.org/imp.php?i=775
- ^ SNL Achrives/Impression. Chris Rock as Flavor Flav, "MTV Spring Break 2001," 13 April, 1991; http://snl.jt.org/imp.php?i=849
- ^ SNL Achrives/Impression. Chris Rock as Whoopi Goldberg, "Musicians for Free-Range Chickens," 20 April, 1991; http://snl.jt.org/imp.php?i=862
- ^ SNL Achrives/Impression. Chris Rock as Aresenio Hall, "The Tonight Show," "The Arsenio Hall Show," "The Tonight Show," 27 October, 1990; 15 February, 1992; 19 May, 1992; http://snl.jt.org/imp.php?i=794
- ^ SNL Achrives/Impression. Chris Rock as M.C. Hammer, "The Sound of Music," 6 October, 1990; http://snl.jt.org/imp.php?i=786
- ^ SNL Achrives/Impression. Chris Rock as Michael Jackson, "Monologue," "The Dark Side," "SNL Halftime Spectacular," "Beverly Hills Town Meeting," 7 December, 1991;14 December, 1991; 6 February, 1993; 20 February, 1993; http://snl.jt.org/imp.php?i=889
- ^ SNL Achrives/Impression. Chris Rock as Eddie Murphy, "Ignorant Proposal," 10 April, 1993; http://snl.jt.org/imp.php?i=981
- ^ SNL Achrives/Impression. Chris Rock as Nipsey Russell, "Weekend Update," "Charles Grodin," 17 April, 1993; 2 November, 1996; http://snl.jt.org/imp.php?i=984
- ^ SNL Achrives/Impression. Chris Rock as Long Dong Silver, "Clarence Thomas Hearings," 12 October, 1991; http://snl.jt.org/imp.php?i=873
- ^ SNL Achrives/Impression. Chris Rock as Jaleel White, "A Star Is Born," 22 February, 1992; http://snl.jt.org/imp.php?i=906
- ^ a b c Chappell, Kevin (May 1997). Chris Rock: hot comic is on the roll of his life. Ebony. Retrieved on 2007-10-20.
- ^ AllMovie.com review
- ^ Chris Rock: The funniest man in America?. The Guardian (2001-06-01). Retrieved on 2007-10-20.
- ^ a b Chris Rock: Bring the Pain (1996) (TV) - Awards
- ^ Handy, Bruce (2001). America's Best Artist's and Entertainers. Time. Retrieved on 2007-10-20.
- ^ Icon Chris Rock. Maxim (April 2007).
- ^ Rock, Chris. "Rock This," Hyperion, 1997, p. 46. Rock explains, "I got bused from Bed-Stuy to a white school in a poor white neighborhood: Gerretson Beach, Brooklyn... What I actually got was a worse education in a worse neighborhood..."
- ^ Sweeney, Kathy. The Guardian (UK). "Wind Them Up and Watch Them Go," 1 June, 2001: "Bill Cosby may have publicly reprimanded him for satirizing black Americans, but Rock is having the last laugh." http://film.guardian.co.uk/interview/interviewpages/0,,499318,00.html
- ^ Morano, Marc. CNSNews. "Bill Cosby to Blacks," 2 July, 2004. ""When you put on a record, and that record is yelling 'nigger this' and 'nigger that' and cursing all over the thing and you got your little six-year-old and seven-year-old sitting in the back seat of the car—those children hear that... That's all minstrel show stuff. I am tired of it."
- ^ Rock, Chris. Rock This; Hyperion, 1997, p. 16.
- ^ "Chris Rock defends Live Earth swearing: Comic is critical of climate change show despite being host"; nme.com; July 7, 2007.
- ^ Chris Rock Files for Divorce. TMZ.com (November 3, 2006).
- ^ Rock Slams Break-Up Rumors. Hollywood.com (March 2, 2007).
- ^ Everybody Loves Chris.
- ^ Paternity Papers Agsinst Comedian/Actor Chris Rock Filed In Bulloch Court
- ^ "DNA test clears Chris Rock in paternity case, lawyer says," Associated Press on CNN.com, 7 Aug 2007.
- ^ Century, Douglas (February 11, 2007). Alpine, N.J., Home of Hip-Hop Royalty. The New York Times. Retrieved on 2007-10-16.
External links
- Official website
- Chris Rock's Stand Up Comedy Acts a small video collection
- Chris Rock at the Internet Movie Database
- The Comedy Festival in Las Vegas
- Everybody loves Chris
Preceded by Dennis Miller Ben Stiller Jimmy Fallon |
MTV Video Music Awards host 1997 1999 2003 |
Succeeded by Ben Stiller Marlon Wayans and Shawn Wayans no host |
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