Dave Chappelle
About Dave Chappelle
This rising black comedian of TV and films has been impressive in his own short-lived TV series "Buddies" (ABC, 1996), and as the comic who is the butt of Eddie Murphy's wrath in "The Nutty Professor" (1996). The son of a Unitarian minister, Dave Chappelle began performing in comedy clubs in his native Washington, DC, at age 14. Within a year, he got a big change--a slot on stage at the famed Apollo Theatre in Harlem, but his performance was met with booing. Still he persevered and became a hit in clubs on the East Coast. By 1992, the wiry, energetic comedian was gaining national exposure with appearance on "Russell Simmons' Def Comedy Jam" (HBO) and "Six Comics in Search of a Generation" (Lifetime). Sponsored by co-host Whoopi Goldberg, Chappelle appeared on the 1994 HBO special, "Comic Relief VI"; at age 20, he was also said to be the youngest comic to have a featured spot. He followed with a guest appearance on ABC's "Home Improvement" in 1995, which was a pilot for a proposed spin-off sitcom. "Buddies", a Disney-produced show that premiered in 1996, teamed Chappelle with the very un-comic Christopher Gartin in a black-white pairing. Despite the quick cancellation of the series, Disney was impressed enough with the ascendant star to offer him a $1 million development deal.
Chappelle broke into features in the uneven Mel Brooks' spoof "Robin Hood: Men in Tights" But it was his turn in "The Nutty Professor" that clinched his screen viability. He went on to a featured role as a wisecracking convict in the box-office success "Con Air" (1997) and was teamed with Tommy Davidson in "Woo" (1998). In an attempt to pay homage to Cheech and Chong, Chappelle wrote and starred in the marijuana comedy "Half Baked" (1998), then lent his distinctive, affable charm to supporting roles in "You've Got Mail" (1998), "200 Cigarettes" (1999) and "Blue Streak" (1999) before reviving his pot-head persona for the dismal revenge comedy "Screwed" (2000) opposite his off-screen friend Norm MacDonald. In the Eddie Griffin blaxplotiation comedy "Undercover Brother" (2002), Chappelle showed his edgier side as the paranoid, white-suscpicious Conspiracy Brother, a taste of the more sharply pointed, politicaly incorrect comedy that characterized his stand-up.
After a 2002 stint as one of the many caller voices on Comedy Central's muppet-y prank call show "Crank Yankers," Chappelle inked a pact with the cable network to write, produce, host and star in his own half-hour sketch comedy series, "Chappelle's Show" (2003 - ). Chappelle made the most of the creative freedom the series allowed, and quickly delivered a show that reflected his sensibilities: hip, edgy and frequently racially, sexually and scatalogically charged; outrageous but rarely offensive due to its intelligence, sharp observations and easygoing humor. Over two 13-episode seasons "Chappelle's Show" quickly garnered a loyal viewership addicted to over-the-top recurring characters like crackhead Tyrone Biggums and Negrodamus, scathing parodies of Rick James, Prince, rapper Lil' John and "The Real World" and wild catch phrases ("I'm rich, beeyotch!"), as well as landing several Emmy nominations. In 2004 Comedy Central signed Chappelle to a $50 million contract for two more seasons, and the comedian was also poised to return to feature films with projects tailored especially to his newly appreciated talents.
However, things quickly spiraled wildly and unpredicatably out of control in the spring of 2005 when, after Chappelle reportedly taped nearly five episodes of his series' third season following a several-month delay due to an undisclosed illness, he became a no-show on the set for several days, prompting Comedy Central to halt production and announce that the comedy would not meet its anticipated May 31 launch. Days after the announcement, it was reported by Entertainment Weekly that Chappelle had flown from Newark, New Jersey, to Capetown, South Africa, on Apr. 28 and voluntarily checked himself into an unnamed psychiatric facility for treatment. Various theories were floated for the comic's apparent meltdown, including creative differences with the cable network over his series' envelope-pushing content, an inability to cope with his overwhelming success and an increased use of recreational drugs (long a staple of his on-screen persona). However, Chappelle insisted that he had merely embarked an a "spiritual retreat" in the wake of continuing creative frustrations and stress resulting from his Hollywood success, denying any drug use and saying that he had only had a 40-minute session with a psychiatrist while staying with friends in Durban in 2006 Chappelle told Oprah Winfrey he'd consider returning to his TV show if Comedy Central meets certain conditions. "I felt in a lot of instances I was deliberately being put through stress," Chappelle said.
| Name: | Relation: | Notes: |
|---|---|---|
| Sulayman Chappelle | son | born c. 2001 |
| Seon Chappelle | mother | born c. 1938; divorced from Chappelle's father in 1978 |
| William Chappelle | father | born c. 1938; divorced from Chappelle's mother in 1978 |
| 1988 | At age 14, began working as a stand-up comic in clubs in Washington, DC (date approximate) |
|---|---|
| 1989 | Booed at his debut at the famed Apollo Theatre in Harlem |
| 1992 | Appeared on "Russell Simmons' Def Comedy Jam" (HBO) |
| 1993 | Film debut in "Robin Hood: Men in Tights" |
| 1994 | Was reported the youngest comic to appear on an HBO "Comic Relief" special |
| 1996 | Co-starred in the short-lived ABC sitcom "Buddies" |
| 1996 | Had breakthrough film role in "The Nutty Professor" |
| 1996 | Signed $1 million deal with Disney to develop projects through his Pilot Boy Productions |
| 1997 | Co-starred in "Con Air" |
| 1997 | Signed production deal with Fox for sitcom |
| 1998 | Acted in and co-wrote the film comedy "Half-Baked", about a group of stoners |
| 1998 | Co-starred in "You've Got Mail" |
| 1999 | Cast as Martin Lawrence's homeboy buddy in "Blue Streak" |
| 1999 | Played the seemingly only cab driver in NYC in "200 Cigarettes" |
| 2000 | Co-executive produced, co-wrote and starred in the HBO special "Dave Chappelle: Killin' Them Softly" |
| 2002 | Co-starred with Eddie Griffin and Chris Kattan in the comedy "Undercover Brother" |
| 2003 - 2005 | Host and writer of the sketch-comedy show "Chappelle's Show" aired on comedy central; left during production of the third season |
| 2004 | Signed a new deal to continue his show on Comedy Central, reportedly worth 50 million dollars to continue hosting for two more seasons; deal fell through when Chapplle left production in the third season with no plans to return |
| 2006 | Produced a mix of his sketch comedy and musical interludes for the documentary/musical "Dave Chappelle's Block Party," which was inspired by the 1973 documentary Wattstax |
Notes
"At first, I didn't realize comedians had 'material'. I just got up there and talked about what happened to me that day. Then I noticed other guys kept repeating themselves, 'Hey! You said that last week!' I caught on pretty fast. Pretty soon I had an 'act', though my stuff continued to be very improvisational."---Dave Chappelle
"Dave Chappelle is one of the great young talents in the comedy world."---former Disney executive Dean Valentine to New York Post, July 8, 1996.
"I figured, let me just cut myself off from everybody, take a minute and pull a Flintstone, stop a speeding car by using my bare feet as brakes."---Dave Chappelle, on his recent retreat from the pressures of Hollywood in People, May 17, 2005.
"I want to tell jokes. I want to have time with my children. I want to entertain people. And at one point, I'll walk away from show business. But I don't want to walk away empty-handed."---Chappelle quoted in Esquire, May 2006.
"I'm working on another sitcom, but this time I'm co-creating it. Hopefully, this will do better than 'Buddies'. If it doesn't, at least I'll like the show. I'll be able to sleep at night, knowing I didn't put another bad black show on the air."---Dave Chappelle in Us, July 1997.
"Whatever the scene is, he embellishes it and makes it better. He's going to be a big star."---Producer Jerry Bruckheimer to Us, July 1997.
Chappelle appeared on "The Oprah Winfrey Show" in February 2006 and explained why he left his show months after signing a $50 million deal for its third and fourth seasons, citing that he felt manipulated by the people around him. "I felt in a lot of instances I was deliberately being put through stress because when you're a guy who generates money, people have a vested interest in controlling you"
Some sources give his birth year as 1973.
The Press announced that Dave Chappelle checked himself into a mental health facility on April 28, 2005 in South Africa; Chappelle denied the claim, saying he was staying in Durban, South Africa, with his friend for what he calls a 'spiritual retreat'; Chappelle did confirm, he was having a hard time living up to the pressures of his own fame, specifically, the pressure of making the third season of "Chappelle's Show"
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Quick Facts
Also known as
AKA : David Chappelle
Born
August, 23 1972 in Washington, DC
Education
- Duke Ellington School of the Arts, Washington, DC
Professions
actor, comedian, producer, screenwriter