Comedian Jon Stewart feted for humor, advocacy with Mark Twain Prize
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[April 25, 2022]
By Jeff Mason
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Comedian Jon Stewart
became the 23rd recipient of the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor at
the Kennedy Center on Sunday, with tributes from late night television
hosts Stephen Colbert and Jimmy Kimmel plus music from singer Bruce
Springsteen.
Stewart, who captured the American zeitgeist while zinging politicians
and the media as host of the "The Daily Show" on Comedy Central for 16
years, joked about the big-name stars celebrating him whose careers he
helped advance.
"It reminds of ... just how many people I carried," he quipped.
Comedians from Colbert, who appeared by video link because he has
COVID-19, to Samantha Bee, Steve Carell, and Dave Chappelle noted the
influence Stewart had on their lives and comedic paths.
"He really is the kind of guy that wants to see his friends and people
around him succeed," Kimmel told reporters before the show.
Springsteen, who like Stewart hails from New Jersey, performed his song,
"Born to Run."
Stewart left "The Daily Show," which is now hosted by Trevor Noah,
before President Donald Trump's time in the White House.
"We missed you very much," said Chappelle, a previous recipient of the
Mark Twain Prize.
"The Daily Show" won 20 Emmy Awards during Stewart's tenure and boosted
the careers of its so-called correspondents, including Bee, Colbert, and
John Oliver.
"Jon Stewart changed my life," said actress Olivia Munn, a former
correspondent on Stewart's show. She then mocked Stewart for keeping his
Emmys in a cardboard box. "Because that's who he is: lazy and vaguely
disrespectful."
Colbert recalled telling Stewart that his job on "The Daily Show" was
the best job on television.
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Comedian and talk show host Jon Stewart arrives with his family, his
wife Tracey, son Nate, and daughter Maggie, on the red carpet before
receiving the Mark Twain Prize For American Humor, at The Kennedy
Center in Washington, U.S., April 24 2022. REUTERS/Cheriss May
"I know now that what I was really
saying to you was the best job on television was working for you,"
Colbert said. "I meant that when I said it in 2000. And 22 years
later, I no longer mean that," he said, drawing laughter from the
audience. Colbert is now host of the "The Late Show" on CBS.
Stewart returned to a television hosting gig last
year with a new show, "The Problem With Jon Stewart," on the Apple
TV+ streaming platform.
An advocate for U.S. military veterans and first responders from the
Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, Stewart received the award from two men
representing those groups: John Feal, a 9/11 first-responder and
Israel del Toro, a veteran.
In his acceptance speech, Stewart took a serious
turn when talking about the future of comedy, making a reference to
actor Will Smith's onstage slap of comedian Chris Rock at the
Oscars.
"Comedy survives every moment," he said. "It's not the fragility of
audiences. It's the fragility of leaders."
Stewart said the Mark Twain Prize was a reminder that "what we have
is fragile and precious" and said comedy is a bellwether for what is
happening in society.
"We're the banana peel in the coal mine," he said. "When society is
under threat, comedians are the ones who get sent away first. It's
just a reminder to people that democracy is under threat.
Authoritarians are the threat to comedy, to art, to music, to
thought, to poetry."
The Mark Twain prize is named after novelist and essayist Samuel
Langhorne Clemens, better known by his pen name, Mark Twain. The
program will air on PBS stations on June 21.
(Reporting by Jeff Mason. Editing by Gerry Doyle)
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