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Richards apologizes for racial slurs
From Lynn Elber
LOS ANGELES—Michael Richards said Monday he spewed racial epithets
during a stand-up comedy routine because he lost his cool while being
heckled and not because he’s a bigot.
“For me to be at a comedy club and flip out and say this crap, I’m
deeply, deeply sorry,” the former “Seinfeld” co-star said during a
satellite appearance for David Letterman’s “Late Show” in New York.
“I’m not a racist. That’s what’s so insane about this,” Richards said,
his tone becoming angry and frustrated as he defended himself. A clip
from the show played on CBS before the “Late Show” aired Monday night.
Richards described himself as going into “a rage” over the two audience
members who interrupted his act Friday at the Laugh Factory in West
Hollywood. Richards responded to the black hecklers with repeated use of
the “n word” and profanities.
Jerry Seinfeld, who had issued a statement saying he was “sick over this
horrible, horrible mistake” and calling it offensive, was scheduled as a
Letterman guest Monday. He encouraged Richards to make a satellite
appearance to talk about the incident, a CBS publicist said.
Richards deserved the chance to apologize, Seinfeld said on the “Late
Show.” Seinfeld said, “He’s someone that I love, and I know how
shattered he is about” the incident. At one point, however, Richards
grew flustered and expressed second thoughts about appearing on the
“Late Show” when his use of the term “Afro-American” proved funny to
some audience members.
“I’m hearing your audience laugh, and I’m not even sure that this is
where I should be addressing the situation,” he said in a tape of his
appearance shown by CBS to reporters. Richards, 57, who played
Seinfeld’s eccentric neighbour Kramer on the hit 1989-98 sitcom and
whose major credit since was a failed 2000 comedy, hadn’t spoken
publicly about his remarks before “Late Show.” Calls to his
representatives were not returned Monday.
His onstage remarks were condemned by industry colleagues. Comedian Paul
Rodriguez, who was at the Laugh Factory during Richards’ performance,
said he was shocked. “Once the word comes out of your mouth and you
don’t happen to be African-American, then you have a whole lot of
explaining,” Rodriguez told CNN. “Freedom of speech has its limitations
and I think Michael Richards found those limitations.”
His Laugh Factory tirade began after the two clubgoers shouted at him
that he wasn’t funny. Video of the incident was posted on TMZ.com.
He then paced across the stage taunting the men for interrupting his
show, peppering his speech with racial slurs and profanities. Moderating
his tone at one point, Richards tells the audience, “It shocks you, it
shocks you” and refers to “what lays buried.”
While there is some chuckling in the audience throughout the outburst,
someone can be heard gasping “Oh my God” and people respond with “ooh”
after Richards uses the n-word.
Eventually someone calls out: “It’s not funny. That’s why you’re a
reject, never had no shows, never had no movies. ‘Seinfeld,’ that’s it.”
On Monday, about a half-dozen community activists gathered at the club
to denounce Richards’ remarks and demand an apology. “These kind of
comments hurt all of us,” said protester Lita Sister Herron of the Youth
Advocacy Coalition. She called Richards’ comments hate speech. The
protesters also demanded an apology from the Laugh Factory. At a news
conference a short time later, club owner Jamie Masada expressed remorse
and said Richards will not be back at the club until he says he’s sorry.
“This is one thing we don’t tolerate. ... I personally apologize. I
apologize from my heart,” Masada said Monday.
Richards did appear at the club Saturday, without incident, but that was
because he had told the club he intended to apologize, according to a
Laugh Factory statement Monday. Rodriguez, also at the news conference,
said: “I kept expecting a punch line. It didn’t come.”
Veteran publicist Michael Levine, whose clients have included comedians
George Carlin, Sam Kinison and Rodney Dangerfield, called Richards’
remarks inexcusable. Comics often face hecklers without losing their
cool, he said.
“I’ve never seen anything like this in my life,” Levine said Monday. “I
think it’s a career ruiner for him. ... It’s going to be a long road
back for him, if at all.” Daryl Pitts, a Laugh Factory audience member
interviewed by CNN, compared the incident to another recent celebrity
controversy.
“You think about Mel Gibson and what he said, and put that in the
context of this, it’s very upsetting,” Pitts said, referring to Gibson’s
anti-Semitic outburst during his arrest for drunken driving. Scrutiny of
Richards’ remarks likely will continue but won’t match the level
prompted by Gibson’s behaviour because Richards is far less famous,
Levine said. |