Steve Reflects on His Career and on the Passing of His
Pal Bernie Mac

Broderick Steven Harvey was born in Welch, West Virginia on January 17,
1956, although he grew up in Cleveland where he graduated from Glenville
High School in 1974. After brief stints as a boxer and an insurance
salesman, he paid his dues for several years on the Chitlin’ Circuit
honing his craft as a stand-up comedian.
Steve found national fame in 1994, when he was picked to emcee “It’s
Showtime at the Apollo.” Soon thereafter, the versatile funnyman landed
his own sitcom, “The Steve Harvey Show” and went on to enjoy an enduring
career in show business.
In 2000, he crisscrossed the country with Cedric the Entertainer, D.L.
Hughley and the late Bernie Mac as one of The Original Kings of Comedy,
a sold out tour filmed and turned into a phenomenally-popular concert
flick by Spike Lee. A six-time NAACP Image Award-winner, Steve currently
hosts a nationally-syndicated radio show broadcast from New York City.
Here, he talks about his career, the passing of fellow King of Comedy
Bernie Mac, and about Still Trippin’, a DVD of his latest stand-up act
which was recently filmed in front of a live audience in Newark, New
Jersey.
Steve Harvey: The Still Trippin’ Interview
with Kam Williams
KW: Hi Steve, thanks again for the time.
SH: Hey man, what’s happening? How you doing?
KW: I’m fine, thanks. I loved this new
concert film, Still Trippin’ and
I gave it four stars, but I felt that you were just as funny on your
previous DVD, Don’t Trip, which was clean. Why did you add the curse
words back into your act?
SH: Well, you know it’s really not that I added them back in. When I did
Don’t Trip with
Bishop T.D. Jakes, it was really to take me to a place
where I’d never gone in my stand-up before, working spotlessly clean
before a religious organization. I had to write a lot of material just
for that show, and I was very proud of it. It was really a tribute to my
mom because she had passed. Since my mother was saved, she never saw me
perform because of the profanity. So, I wanted to do something to honor
her. That was the one time I worked totally clean, other than on TV and
sitcoms and stuff like that. So, I don’t really know that I added it
back in, but I dug your review though and I appreciate what you said.
KW: But didn’t you become a Born Again Christian after your association
with
Bishop Jakes?
SH: The truth is I’ve always been a Christian. What’s amazing, man, is
that the flaws that come with Christianity are really weird, because
mine have a microphone and a camera attached to them. Most people don’t
have to live under that microscope. I’m still very much a Christian and
have a great relationship with God. I love Him, but one of my flaws is
that I cuss. I’m just being honest with you, man. But I’ll tell you
this, the thing I did with Bishop Jakes, Don’t Trip, is to date my
absolute greatest piece of work. Even as crazy as I am, I have enough
sense to know that.
KW: Yeah, that performance wasn’t just funny, but that finale was very
powerful, spiritually.
SH: I’m even thinking of doing another concert like that as my farewell
DVD, because I don’t know how much longer I’ve got at this in terms of
touring. I’m think 2009 and 2010 could be the farewell tour, because I
kinda want to walk out of the business leaving a legacy behind that I
was clean but a really, really funny guy, before people stop paying to
see me.
KW: You’ve enjoyed so much success in terms of TV, radio, movies and
stand-up, that I don’t think you have to worry about your legacy. I
think it’s already established as first rate.
SH: I appreciate that. A lot of that is going to be up to you guys in
the press and how you write about it.
KW: Speaking of leaving a legacy, you worked with Bernie Mac on
The
Kings of Comedy tour and on television. How did you feel when you
learned about his passing?
SH: Man, that was tough, because I never knew exactly how old Bernie
was. On the Kings tour, we played golf, we swapped cigars, and we told
the funniest stories in the dressing rooms, stuff that you couldn’t say
on stage. But we must have never mentioned our ages. So, it hit me
really hard while I was watching a tribute to him by Larry King, which
we all were a part of, when I saw 1957-2008 on the screen under Bernie’s
picture. It hit home, because I was born in 1957, too, and except for
the grace of God, that could easily have been me. It’s too young to
pass, I think, but Bernie’s time was up. It struck me very deeply when I
saw the dates on the monitor. That’s what hit me the hardest, to realize
how fortunate I am to still be here.
KW: And then, the day after Bernie died, Isaac Hayes passed away. And
both of you were radio show hosts in New York.
SH: Right. And I saw Sam [Samuel L. Jackson] at Bernie’s funeral. And
all three of them were in this movie together.
KW: Soul Men, which opened a couple of months later.
SH: It was kinda weird that Bernie and Isaac Hayes had passed, and Sam
was living. It must have been pretty tough for him and it probably had
him thinking about a lot of things. I’m pretty sure he didn’t feel like
promoting the movie. It was tough, that whole run right there. ’08 was a
stressful year, man.
KW: I want to talk a little about your new DVD. I thought that bit you
did about the homely women in that polygamous cult in Texas, comparing
them to Aunt Bee from Andy of Mayberry and Jane Hathaway of The Beverly
Hillbillies was hilarious. How do you come up with your material?
SH: When you do radio, you’re kept abreast of all these news stories. On
the air you have the FCC restrictions, but when you get to the concert
stage it’s weird, because I have the same subjects, but I’m just free to
adjust my timing, and to add facial expressions which reflect my thought
processes. In actuality, when you hear these news stories as a stand-up
comedian, you see them totally differently. For instance, I see these
women, and I’m asking, “Wow! Why would anybody want eight of these as a
wife?” I’m looking at their outfits, and I’m going, “Man, these ain’t
the most appealing-looking outfits.” Nobody says, man, these chicks are
hot. If I had four of them…” Instead, everybody’s looking at them and
asking, “Who the hell does their hair like that?” And then, how do you
get away with just loading these women’s kids on a bus? Ain’t nobody
trying to turn the bus over?
KW: [LOL]
SH: Come on, man! See, my gift is in pulling out the absurdity of a news
event.
KW: And how about the riff you did about the female astronaut arrested
in adult diapers?
SH: Nobody can actually plan on driving and just urinating. That cannot
be your plan. How pissed off are you? When you stop for gas, that might
be a good time to unload yourself. Why would you sit there, when you’ve
wet your pants? Now we have some other problems because your urine at
this age is very different.
KW: [LOL]
SH: See, what I do is take a situation and extract all the absurdity out
of it. That’s what makes the bits great, man
KW: How do you feel about Obama’s victory?
SH: I think it’s the greatest thing ever for this country. Even deeper
than that, I think it’s big for the world. When I was overseas in France
this summer, everybody who came up to me said, “Obama! Obama! Obama!
Please!” So, I think his winning has done a lot for the reputation of
America. I’m also happy for African-Americans that they get to feel a
sense of belonging, finally, and that their vote does count, and just
being able to point to our children and say, “Okay, here’s the deal,
everything is possible now, for real.” It’s all possible now. This kills
the excuses for everybody, and it helps those of us who are parents to
be able to say, “Hey, this can happen for you. You can become the
President of the United States. Let’s not use our color as a crutch
anymore, but rather as a pole vault stick to get over all these
barriers.” That’s what I think is great about Obama’s
election.
KW: The
Columbus Short
question: Are you happy?
SH: Am I happy? Yes I am.
KW: The
Tasha Smith
question: Are you ever afraid?
SH: Uhh… no.
KW: Is there a question no one ever asks you, that you wish someone
would?
SH: [Chuckles] No, they’ve asked me everything, man.