Chappelle show on halt?

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Why Is Chappelle's Show at a Halt? Not Because of Drugs, an Aide Says


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By JESSE McKINLEY and LOLA OGUNNAIKE
Published: May 6, 2005
Representatives of the comedian Dave Chappelle yesterday denied rumors that drugs were involved in the suspension of production of his acclaimed sketch comedy show, "Chappelle's Show."

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Danielle Levitt/Comedy Central
No one has explained why Dave Chappelle stopped production.




Matt Labov, Mr. Chappelle's publicist, categorically denied speculation that drug use - a frequent topic of Mr. Chappelle's stand-up comedy routines - played any part in his client's problems with delivering the show on time. The third season's premiere had already been delayed twice.

"He's not in rehab. He does not have a cocaine addiction," Mr. Labov said.

But little other information was offered about the abrupt suspension, which was announced Wednesday. Officials at Comedy Central, the cable channel that carries the show, said they had no information as to when or if new episodes might be seen. After a yearlong hiatus, the show was to have returned for its third season at the end of this month.

Mr. Chappelle, 31, took on an enormous amount of responsibility last August when he signed a two-year contract with Comedy Central worth an estimated $35 million to $50 million, a lucrative deal for a half-hour cable comedy show.

"Obviously, I'm sure there's a lot of pressure, with the expectation of the fans, and the network and the expectation of the press," said Mr. Labov.

But those expectations and tensions were no doubt also heightened by the unusual amount of hands-on involvement Mr. Chappelle has in the show. In addition to his roles as the producer and star - playing everyone from a blind, black racist to Rick James, the decadent (and now deceased) funk star - Mr. Chappelle and his writing partner, Neal Brennan, were also writing almost every line of this season's 10 scheduled shows.

"Dave and Neal are essentially the whole writing staff," said Mr. Labov. "They'd shoot for a week and then Dave and Neal would take a week off to write."

Indeed, some of the internal pressures may have come from the unique style of production employed by "Chappelle's Show," in which dozens of comedy sketches, musical numbers and other bits are shot in no particular order and assembled later in the editing room. "They don't necessarily have a shooting script for a set episode," said Mr. Labov.

While that method worked well in two previous seasons, earning rave reviews and high Nielsen ratings, the show currently has no completed episodes despite having shot material sporadically since early February.

Mr. Chappelle added to his workload by booking several casino engagements this spring, playing large theaters at the Borgata in Atlantic City and Foxwoods in eastern Connecticut.

Last season the show was one of Comedy Central's biggest draws, averaging more than three million viewers, twice as many as Comedy Central's "Daily Show" with Jon Stewart.

Ratings like that, along with impressive DVD sales, helped to establish Mr. Chappelle as a major star worthy of a multimillion-dollar deal after years as a stand-up comic and movie actor.

"Each network has certain things that identify them and 'Chappelle' is one of - if not the - show, that says Comedy Central," said Jon Mandel, the chairman of Mediacom, a media buying agency.

Donnell Rollins, a regular on "Chappelle's Show," refused to comment on the circumstances of the delay. "We've been told that all calls should be directed to his publicist," he said, but he added that he believed it had nothing to do with the quality of the coming season. "Yeah, it was going to be funny," he said. "It was going to be consistent with the first two seasons."


source: http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/06/business/media/06comedy.html
 
Chappelle Reportedly Checks Into Facility

By DAVID BAUDER, AP Television Writer 59 minutes ago


NEW YORK - Comedy Central star Dave Chappelle has checked himself into a mental health facility in South Africa, the magazine Entertainment Weekly reported on Wednesday.

The comedian's whereabouts and condition have been unknown since Comedy Central abruptly announced last week that the planned May 31 launch of the third season of "Chappelle's Show" had been postponed and production halted.


Chappelle flew from Newark, N.J., to South Africa on April 28 for treatment, said the magazine, quoting a source close to the show it would not identify. Entertainment Weekly said it had corroborating sources for its story.

"We don't know where he is," Comedy Central spokesman Tony Fox said. "We've heard about South Africa. We don't know. We haven't talked to Dave."

Chappelle's spokesman, Matt Labov, would not comment on the magazine's story.

"It seems like the issues he's contending with are really quite serious," said Dade Hayes, a senior editor at Entertainment Weekly. "It isn't a case of him spending a weekend someplace recuperating from exhaustion."

The magazine's sources say Chappelle is still in the facility, which was not named, Hayes said. Chappelle's representatives have denied that the comedian was abusing drugs.

Chappelle reportedly signed a $50 million deal with Comedy Central for two more seasons of his show, a payday made possible because of the explosive sales of the show's first season DVD. The magazine said Chappelle had shot four to five episodes' worth of sketches for the new season, but none of its onstage introductions.
 
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