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Graciousness key to Steve Harvey’s success

Comic says hosting a special talent; his standup days over

By Luaine Lee, Tribune News Service
Published: May 18, 2018, 6:00am

LOS ANGELES — Host extraordinaire Steve Harvey, got his start in standup comedy. But Harvey hasn’t executed standup for six years and may never again.

“Because it’s so politically correct out here now,” he says. “It’s so PC. (Dave) Chappelle’s special broke a lot of the rules, and so did (Chris) Rock, but they’re not television stars. And I’m connected to a radio show and TV that’s very much sponsor-driven. If I had said anything that those two guys said, and somebody wrote in (to) a sponsor talking about it, ‘I can’t believe he said THAT!,’ then my whole television empire crumbles.”

Harvey has always kept his TV empire clean. And an empire it is. On May 24 he’ll be celebrating the season finale of his popular Fox series, “Showtime at the Apollo.”

He also hosts a TV talk show, a morning radio gig, NBC’s “Little Big Shots” and the syndicated “Family Feud.”

A bit of a workaholic, Harvey, 61, admits hosting is what he does best. He says he learned the intricacies of that job in 1991 when he emceed at his own comedy club.(“Hosting is a specialized talent because you have to be gracious,” he nods. “Most people are not successful hosts because they make the show about them. It’s really about the other person.

“You have to be gracious when people are succeeding. Now if they’re losing, you can do your thing. But I’ve always hosted. Then when I became host of ‘Showtime at the Apollo’ I had so much experience bringing up acts at this one-nighter club that I had in Dallas, and my own comedy club, I became good at it.”

He’s so good at it that he’s the go-to guy when anybody needs a host. That’s why Harvey is holding down five jobs on a schedule that would exhaust a tsunami. “I just decided that I wanted to do something exceptional, and the only thing I know is work,” he shrugs.

“I’ve slowly been turning my brand into a global entrepreneur. It takes work to make dreams come true. I don’t know any other way to do it.”

But at times he’s overwhelmed, he confesses. “There are a lot of days that I wish I was off, but I can’t be. But also at the same time, I’m really grateful and proud of the fact that I don’t miss — I’ve been on ‘Family Feud’ 200 episodes. This is the ninth year. I’ve never missed a day — never missed a show. I’ve been on my talk show — this is the end of the sixth year. I’ve never missed a show. Never missed ‘Showtime at the Apollo.’ Never missed an episode of ‘Little Big Shots,’ ‘Little Big Shots: Forever Young,’ ‘Funderdome.’

“I’ve never missed an episode of television, except one episode of television back in the ’90s — ‘The Steve Harvey Show’ — my mom passed. Other than that, I’ve never missed a day. I’m very grateful for being healthy to be able to work.”

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