Richard Pryor
Richard Pryor
(Age 65 Yr. )
Personal Life
Nationality | American |
Profession | American Actor and Comedian |
Place | Peoria, Illinois,   USA |
Physical Appearance
Height | 5 feet 10 inches |
Weight | 75 kg (approx.) |
Eye Color | Black |
Hair Color | Black |
Family
Parents | Father: LeRoy Pryor Mother: Gertrude L. Thomas |
Marital Status | Married |
Spouse | Jennifer Lee |
Childern/Kids | Sons: Richard Pryor Lr. , Franklin Pryor, Stephen Micheal Pryor Daughters: Rain Pryor, Elizabeth Pryor, Renee Pryor, Kelsey Pryor |
Richard Franklin Lennox Thomas Pryor Sr. was an American stand-up comedian and actor. He reached a broad audience with his trenchant observations and storytelling style, and is widely regarded as one of the greatest and most influential stand-up comedians of all time. Pryor won a Primetime Emmy Award and five Grammy Awards. He received the first Kennedy Center Mark Twain Prize for American Humor in 1998. He won the Writers Guild of America Award in 1974. He was listed at number one on Comedy Central's list of all-time greatest stand-up comedians. In 2017, Rolling Stone ranked him first on its list of the 50 best stand-up comics of all time.
Early life
Pryor was born on December 1, 1940, in Peoria, Illinois. He grew up in a brothel run by his grandmother, Marie Carter, where his alcoholic mother, Gertrude L. (née Thomas), was a prostitute. His father, LeRoy "Buck Carter" Pryor (June 7, 1915 – September 27, 1968), was a former boxer, hustler and pimp. After Gertrude abandoned him when he was 10, Pryor was raised primarily by Marie, a tall, violent woman who would beat him for any of his eccentricities. Pryor was one of four children raised in his grandmother's brothel. He was sexually abused at age seven, and expelled from school at the age of 14. While in Peoria, he became a Prince Hall Freemason at a local lodge.
Pryor served in the U.S. Army from 1958 to 1960, but spent virtually the entire stint in an army prison. According to a 1999 profile about Pryor in The New Yorker, Pryor was incarcerated for an incident that occurred while he was stationed in West Germany. Angered that a white soldier was overly amused at the racially charged scenes of Douglas Sirk's film Imitation of Life, Pryor and several other black soldiers beat and stabbed him, although not fatally.
Career
1960s
In 1963, Pryor moved to New York City and began performing regularly in clubs alongside performers such as Bob Dylan and Woody Allen. On one of his first nights, he opened for singer and pianist Nina Simone at New York's Village Gate. Simone recalls Pryor's bout of performance anxiety:
He shook like he had malaria, he was so nervous. I couldn't bear to watch him shiver, so I put my arms around him there in the dark and rocked him like a baby until he calmed down. The next night was the same, and the next, and I rocked him each time.
In 1969, Pryor moved to Berkeley, California, where he immersed himself in the counterculture and met people like Huey P. Newton and Ishmael Reed.
1970s
In the 1970s, Pryor wrote for television shows such as Sanford and Son, The Flip Wilson Show, and a 1973 Lily Tomlin special, for which he shared an Emmy Award. During this period, Pryor tried to break into mainstream television. He appeared in several films, including Lady Sings the Blues (1972), The Mack (1973), Uptown Saturday Night (1974), Silver Streak (1976), Car Wash (1976), Bingo Long Traveling All-Stars & Motor Kings (1976), Which Way Is Up? (1977), Greased Lightning (1977), Blue Collar (1978), and The Muppet Movie (1979).
Pryor signed with the comedy-oriented independent record label Laff Records in 1970, and in 1971 recorded his second album, Craps (After Hours). Two years later Pryor, still relatively unknown, appeared in the documentary Wattstax (1972), wherein he riffed on the tragic-comic absurdities of race relations in Watts and the United States. Not long afterward, Pryor sought a deal with a larger label, and he signed with Stax Records in 1973. When his third, breakthrough album, That Nigger's Crazy (1974), was released, Laff, which claimed ownership of Pryor's recording rights, almost succeeded in getting an injunction to prevent the album from being sold. Negotiations led to Pryor's release from his Laff contract. In return for this concession, Laff was enabled to release previously unissued material, recorded between 1968 and 1973, at will. That Nigger's Crazy was a commercial and critical success; it was eventually certified gold by the RIAA and won the Grammy Award for Best Comedy Album at the 1975 Grammy Awards.
1980s
In 1980, Pryor became the first black actor to earn a million dollars for a single film when he was hired to star in Stir Crazy. While on a freebasing binge during the making of the film, Pryor doused himself in rum and set himself on fire. Pryor incorporated a description of the incident into his comedy show Richard Pryor: Live on the Sunset Strip (1982). He joked that the event was caused by dunking a cookie into a glass of low-fat and pasteurized milk, causing an explosion. At the end of the bit, he poked fun at people who told jokes about it by waving a lit match and saying, "What's that? Richard Pryor running down the street."
Before the freebasing incident, Pryor was about to start filming Mel Brooks' History of the World, Part I (1981), but was replaced at the last minute by Gregory Hines. Likewise, Pryor was scheduled for an appearance on The Muppet Show at that time, which forced the producers to cast their British writer, Chris Langham, as the guest star for that episode instead.
After his "final performance", Pryor did not stay away from stand-up comedy for long. Within a year, he filmed and released a new concert film and accompanying album, Richard Pryor: Here and Now (1983), which he directed himself. He wrote and directed a fictionalized account of his life, Jo Jo Dancer, Your Life Is Calling, which revolved around the 1980 freebasing incident.
1990s and 2000s
In his later years starting in the early to mid-1990s, Pryor used a power-operated mobility scooter due to multiple sclerosis (MS). To him, MS stood for "More Shit". He appears on the scooter in his last film appearance, a small role in David Lynch's Lost Highway (1997) playing an auto-repair garage manager named Arnie.
Rhino Records remastered all of Pryor's Reprise and WB albums for inclusion in the box set ... And It's Deep Too! The Complete Warner Bros. Recordings (1968–1992) (2000).
In December 1999, Pryor appeared in the cold open of The Norm Show in the episode entitled "Norm vs. The Boxer". He played Mr. Johnson, an elderly man in a wheelchair who has lost the rights to in-home nursing when he kept attacking the nurses before attacking Norm himself. This was his last television appearance.
In 2002, Pryor and Jennifer Lee Pryor, his wife and manager, won legal rights to all the Laff material, which amounted to almost 40 hours of reel-to-reel analog tape. After going through the tapes and getting Richard's blessing, Jennifer Lee Pryor gave Rhino Records access to the tapes in 2004. These tapes, including the entire Craps (After Hours) album, form the basis of the February 1, 2005, double-CD release Evolution/Revolution: The Early Years (1966–1974).
Legacy
Jerry Seinfeld called Pryor “the Picasso of our profession” and Bob Newhart heralded Pryor as "the seminal comedian of the last 50 years". Dave Chappelle said of Pryor, “You know those, like, evolution charts of man? He was the dude walking upright. Richard was the highest evolution of comedy.” This legacy can be attributed, in part, to the unusual degree of intimacy Pryor brought to bear on his comedy. As Bill Cosby reportedly once said, "Richard Pryor drew the line between comedy and tragedy as thin as one could possibly paint it."
Death
On December 10, 2005, Pryor had a third heart attack in Los Angeles. After his wife's failed attempts to resuscitate him, he was taken to a local hospital, where he was pronounced dead at 7:58 a.m. PST. His widow Jennifer was quoted as saying, “At the end, there was a smile on his face.”
He was cremated, and his ashes were given to his family. His ashes were scattered in the bay at Hana, Hawaii, by his widow in 2019. Forensic pathologist Michael Hunter believes Pryor's fatal heart attack was caused by coronary artery disease that was at least partially brought about by years of tobacco smoking.
Filmography
Films
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1967 | The Busy Body | Lt. Whitaker | Film debut |
1968 | Wild in the Streets | Stanley X | |
1969 | Uncle Tom's Fairy Tales | Unknown | Also producer and writer; uncompleted/unreleased |
1970 | Carter's Army | Pvt. Jonathan Crunk | |
1970 | The Phynx | Richard Pryor (cameo) | |
1971 | You've Got to Walk It Like You Talk It or You'll Lose That Beat | Wino | |
1971 | Live & Smokin' | Richard Pryor | Stand-up film; also writer |
1971 | Dynamite Chicken | Richard Pryor | |
1972 | Lady Sings the Blues | Piano Man | |
1973 | The Mack | Slim | |
1973 | Some Call It Loving | Jeff | |
1973 | Hit! | Mike Willmer | |
1973 | Wattstax | Richard Pryor / Host | |
1974 | Blazing Saddles |
| Co-writer |
1974 | Uptown Saturday Night | Sharp Eye Washington | |
1975 | Adiós Amigo | Sam Spade | |
1976 | The Bingo Long Traveling All-Stars & Motor Kings | Charlie Snow, All-Star (RF) | |
1976 | Car Wash | Daddy Rich | |
1976 | Silver Streak | Grover T. Muldoon | |
1977 | Greased Lightning | Wendell Scott | |
1977 | Which Way Is Up? | Leroy Jones / Rufus Jones / Reverend Lenox Thomas | |
1978 | Blue Collar | Zeke Brown | |
1978 | The Wiz | Herman Smith (The Wiz) | |
1978 | California Suite | Dr. Chauncey Gump | |
1979 | Richard Pryor: Live in Concert | Richard Pryor | Stand-up film; also writer |
1979 | The Muppet Movie | Balloon Vendor (cameo) | |
1980 | Wholly Moses! | Pharaoh | |
1980 | In God We Tru$t | G.O.D. | |
1980 | Stir Crazy | Harold "Harry" Monroe | |
1981 | Bustin' Loose | Joe Braxton | Also producer and writer (story) |
1982 | Some Kind of Hero | Eddie Keller | |
1982 | Richard Pryor: Live on the Sunset Strip | Richard Pryor | Stand-up film; also producer and writer |
1982 | The Toy | Jack Brown | |
1983 | Superman III | August "Gus" Gorman | |
1983 | Richard Pryor: Here and Now | Richard Pryor | Stand-up film; also director and writer |
1985 | Brewster's Millions | Montgomery Brewster | |
1986 | Jo Jo Dancer, Your Life Is Calling | Jo Jo Dancer | Also director, producer and writer |
1987 | Critical Condition | Kevin Lenahan / Dr. Eddie Slattery | |
1988 | Moving | Arlo Pear | |
1989 | See No Evil, Hear No Evil | Wallace "Wally" Karue | |
1989 | Harlem Nights | Sugar Ray | |
1991 | Another You | Eddie Dash | |
1991 | The Three Muscatels | Narrator / Wino / Bartender | |
1996 | Mad Dog Time | Jimmy the Grave Digger | |
1997 | Lost Highway | Arnie | Final film role |