Gary Owen is coming to the Houston Improv. The comic, veteran and co-star of big-screen hits like Daddyย Day Care and Get Hard, has been smiling and telling jokes since 1997, right after he exited the Navy. In fact, Owenโs smile was well known during his service. โEverybody always told me I was funny,โ Owen says. โYou get these jackets when youโre in Honor Guard and they put a nickname on the jacket, only you donโt know the nickname until you see it. When I was presented my jacket, it said โSmileyโ on it, because Iโm a cheerful guy, I think.โ
That smile served Owen well as he cut his teeth in the Southwest comedy scene, where he found success playing prominently African-American rooms. โTrying to get stage time in San Diego, I was only getting one show a week, if Iโm lucky,โ Owen says. โA couple of black guys I was stationed with in the Navy told about other spots, quote-unquote black spots โ spots white comics wouldnโt play. But I started going! A lot of times Iโd be the only white guy there, but I didnโt care โ I just wanted to get onstage!โ
The gambit paid off, as Owen developed a following, evenย being named โBlack Americaโs Favorite White Comicโ by Ebony Magazine inย 2011.ย That turned into a relationshipย with Tyler Perry and BET, which will produce his upcoming self-titled series inย October โ a first for the network. โIโm the first white lead!โ he exclaims. โI didn’t realizeย I was until I read the write-ups. I didnโt give any thought to it.โ Owen credits BETโs โaggressive interestโ in the project as a green light to make theย show he felt passionate about. โIt made the most sense to go with BET, becauseย thatโs my audience. They didnโt have to sell me as a new talent with a newย show; they just said: โWe got a new show โ you already know Gary.โโ
Reflecting back, Owen wagers that being himself onstage wasย vital to finding fans. โHereโs what I learned: At that time, the only things onย TV were Def Jam and Showtime at the Apollo,โ Owen says. ย โPeople made assumptions that black audiencesย were rowdy and booed all the time, and thatโs not true โ they just wanted youย to be funny. Iโd see white guys go up at the black rooms and they wouldnโt beย themselves; theyโd become a character onstage. Black audiences saw rightย through that. Iโve always just been me onstage and theyโve embraced it.โ
After nearly two decades slinging jokes, Owen still findsย himself inspired by the fellow funny folks. This year, Owenโs Think Like A Man Too co-star Kevin Hartย was named the highest-paid comic of 2016, raking in more than $87 million, topping perennial list topper Jerry Seinfeld for the first time in a decade.ย โThe biggest difference since Kevin became the richest comic on earth is now,ย heโll spring for the lattes when weโre together!โ Owen quips, busting a gut. โKevinย deserves it; he works so hard. And Wendy Williams said it best: โThe differenceย between Kevinโs 87 million and Seinfeldโs 40 million, is Seinfeldโs getting hisย by sitting on a couch.โ To make what Kevinโs getting, you gotta work.โ
On the much-hyped PC-ification of the modern comedy audienceย (particularly college students, as Seinfeld himself has griped), Owen saysย heโs learned not to push his envelope too far. โCollege kids used to want toย change the world; they were โsay what you want,’ freedom-of-speechย [enthusiasts]. Now it seems like a lot of college kids want to beย offended. They want to have a cause,โย the comic wonders. โI donโt know. Maybe weโre just at a down moment.โ
The Gary Owen Show, whichย premiered on the cable network on October 11,ย will offer a peekย inside Owenโs real life, starring his wife, Kenya, and three children: Emilio,ย Austin and Kennedy. โIn this time of the election and the police brutalityย cases, the media has the general public thinking [that] black and white peopleย arenโt getting along, that weโre at each otherโs throats. Thatโs not the case.ย We have fun with race, and we arenโt scared of it. My wife is black, my kidsย are mixed and we have cultural differences. My actโs been dealing with that forย years.โ
Unlike the current vogue of shows about comedians (asย stand-ups Louis C.K., John Mulaney and Marc Maron have done recently), Owen says his series wonโt go into his life onstage, but instead go directly to theย source. โEighty percent of my act is just me talking about my family,โ he says. โThis way,ย weโre bringing my comedy act to life.โ But donโt expect trash TV, Owen warns.ย โThis ainโt Love & Hip-Hop! Noย hairs getting pulled, no drinks getting thrown.โ The only bet Owen will placeย is who he expects to be the breakout star. โMy wife is gonna end up being likeย Sharon Osbourne when this airs,โ he predicts. โIt was Ozzyโs show, but whenย you watch, you saw that Sharon ran that house.โ ย
Performances are scheduled for 8 p.m. on October 13, 8 p.m. andย 10:30 p.m. on October 14, 7 and 9:30 p.m on October 15 and 7:30 p.m. onย October 16 at 7620 Katy Freeway. For information, call 713-333-8800 or visit improvhouston.com. $40-50.
This article appears in Oct 6-12, 2016.
