Richard Pryor

Richard Pryor

Date of birth: 01-12-1940

Richard Pryor helped define modern stand-up; elevating it from an entertainment to an art with his unflinchingly frank use of his own life, however unflattering, into his coruscating routines.

And what a life it was - forever chasing women, money and drugs in a lifetime of addictive but unfulfilling hedonism that landed him in jail several times, and almost killed him when he set himself alight freebasing cocaine.

Born to a prostitute in his grandmother’s brothel in the ghettos ofPeoria Illinois, he grew up surrounded by performers and freaks. It was a tough area; he found a baby in a shoebox the street when he was seven years old and counted himself lucky that his family kept in.

In his autobiography, he reveals that a priest once  ‘gave me a smooch on the lips… like a girlfriend’. His family conspired to encourage the abuse, in the hope of extorting a quick buck, until his fearsome grandmother put a stop to it.

Even more terrifyingly, a 17-year-old lad once threw Pryor against a wall in an alley and forced him to give him oral sex. He was six at the time.

His first professional performance came at the age of seven, when he played drums at a nightclub.

Pryor started as a mainstream storytelling comedian, inspired by the homely comedy of the hugely successful Bill Cosby – even though such a colourless approach hardly related to Pryor’s harsh reality amid the often murderous racial tensions bubbling in Peoria.

But it was enough earn a few bucks a night at the black-and-tan nightclubs – as venues with a mixed racial clientele were known –giving him a lifestyle that once would have been impossible to him.

'I made a lot of money being Bill Cosby,' he once recalled. 'But I was hiding my personality. I just wanted to be in show business so bad I didn't care how. It started bothering me - I was being a robot comic, repeating the same lines, getting the same laughs for the same jokes. The repetition was killing me.’

Surprisingly, it was Groucho Marx who brought this home, telling Pryor at a party: ‘Do you want a career you’re proud of, or do you want to end up a spitting wad like Jerry Lewis?’  The words made Pryor realise he was ‘pimping his talent like a cheap whore’,  and in 1969, he had a crisis of confidence, abandoning a Las Vegas stage mid-set, saying: 'What the fuck am I doing here?".

He moved to Berkeley, California, and joined the hippies, radicals, bohemains and drug dealers, all the while exploring his attitude to life and to comedy - reclaiming the word nigger and talking with scabrous honesty about everything important to him

Although Pryor spoke frankly about his experiences as a black man in a racially divided America, he was never defined purely by his colour. Almost every stand-up of any skill of the past 30 years has been directly or indirectly influenced by the honesty he brought to the art.

His routines, naturally enough, offended conservative America with their subject matter and their uncompromising language – though he stopped using word 'nigger' in his shows following a trip to Zimbabwe. 'There are no niggers here,' he wrote. 'The people here, they still have their self-respect, their pride.'

He married seven times - twice to Flynn BeLaine and twice to his widow Jennifer who nursed him through his last years. And in 1980, he set himself on fire while freebasing cocaine at home. In a paranoid, hallucinogenic haze, he doused himself with a bottle of cognac and lit it. Flames lapping every inch of his body, he leapt out of a window and ran through the streets, his flesh burning up. His eventual, possibly miraculous, recovery from the 50 per cent burns to his body was long and painful.

In 1974, Pryor was sentenced to three years' probation for tax offences, and in 1978, he fired shots into his wife’s car, an incident which he turned into one of his finest stand-up routines.

But against all the social rhetoric, he could also talk of more mundane matters, such as his love of animals. In his later years, he became a spokesman for animal rights group Petra.

He appeared in several films including Stir Crazy, Superman III, Brewster's Millions and See No Evil, Hear No Evil - but he was always at his most electrifying live. Of his sometimes dubious film roles he said: 'I'm sorry, but they offered us the money. I was a pig, I got greedy.’

Pryor had been lined up to play the sheriff in Blazing Saddles, which he co-wrote with Mel Brooks, but the film's backers shied away from his controversial reputation and he lost the role to Cleavon Little. He is similarly said to have lost the starring role in Trading Places to Eddie Murphy.

He was diagnosed with the wasting disease multiple sclerosis in 1986 and his speech and mobility gradually eroded, a potentially tragic decline to such a vibrant life. After initial uncertainty, Pryor seems to have accepted his conditionwith the ‘shit happens’ attitude that has permeated his life. But by 1992, he was too weak to keep performing

In 1998, he was awarded America's first Mark Twain award for humour. And in 2004, he was voted No 1 in a poll to find the greatest stand-up of all time poll by US cable network Comedy Central.

He once said: 'Comedy rules! Don't let anybody tell you otherwise, and there are no rules in stand-up comedy, which I really like. You can do anything you want and you can say anything that comes to mind - just so long as it's funny. If you ain't funny then get the fuck off the stage, it's that simple.'

He died in Encinio, California, on December 10, 2005, of a heart attack – 14 years after undergoing quadruple bypass surgery.

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Richard Pryor’s first albums to be rereleased on vinyl

Recordings capture his 'evolution from nightclub comedian to the voice of his generation'

Richard Pryor’s first two albums are to be re-released as newly remastered vinyl LPs.

As well as the self-titled Richard Pryor and Craps (After Hours), record label Stand Up! Records is also releasing Live At The Comedy Store, 1973 on vinyl for the first time.

Pryor released his self-titled album in 1968, when he was starting to change his style from being a mild-mannered storyteller in the mould of Bill Cosby to finding his own, edgier, voice.

Scott Saul, author of Becoming Richard Pryor, wrote in his liner notes for the Richard Pryor reissue: ‘What you hold in your hands is something precious: both the landmark debut that was, and the piece of cultural dynamite that might have been. In its original form, Richard Pryor [the album] alerted the world that Pryor had stepped out of Bill Cosby’s long shadow and developed a style — surreal, nervy, improvisational — that was all his own.’

The album was recorded at the Troubadour in West Hollywood, and is being released as a double disc. Sides one and two are the original, but newly remastered, album, while sides three and four offer bonus material recorded at the same time, originally issued as tracks on the CD Evolution/Revolution.

First released in 1971, Craps (After Hours) was recorded at a time when Pryor was performing at nightclubs that drew an almost entirely black audience, having previously nurtured his career in front of predominantly white crowds. Omnivore  Records say: ‘In these lively black clubs, he could say anything he wanted and those parts of himself that had been buried, by shame or censorship, could now serve as his creative fuel.’

In his introduction to the package, Dolemite Is My Name co-writer Larry Karaszewski writes: ‘This fascinating collection chronicles how Richard Pryor evolved from 1960s nightclub comedian to being the voice of his generation. The performances capture the moment where Richard Pryor stopped being polite. Where he took off his suit and tie and gloves. Where Pryor began to reflect what was happening in the streets and in the counterculture.'

Craps (After Hours) is also released as a double disc – the remastered original recorded at The Redd Foxx Club in Hollywood in 1971, plus material from Evolution/Revolution: The Early Years and No Pryor Restraint: Life in Concert. Side four is an engraving of the original cover art for Craps (After Hours).

For some unknown reason, possibly a mix up at the record factory, some of the original 1971 LPs were pressed with a comic referred to as Hotshot Hogan on the B-side – but he has been lost to history.

Live At The Comedy Store, 1973 was recorded at the West Hollywood comedy club, which had opened 18 months earlier

His performance was never meant to be heard beyond its original audience, but 14 tracks were originally issued in 2013 as a limited edition promotional CD – and all 20 were out together for a CD release in 2021. It is this which is now to come out on vinyl

Here’s a clip:

All three albums’ re-releases have been made with the blessing of Pryor’s estate with his widow Jennifer Lee Pryor acting as producer.

They will be available from May 26.

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Published: 23 Apr 2023

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Past Shows

Edinburgh Fringe 2004

Richard Pryor: Live In Concert


Agent

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