ReasonForOurHope

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

I Always Liked Kevin James

photo by Anela George
If you haven't seen Kevin James stand up show Sweat the Small Stuff, you have to do yourself a favor and find a copy of it right now and watch it.  It is quite possibly the funniest stand up concert I have ever seen.

I put up there with the likes of Bill Cosby and Robin Williams in his ability to entertain and audience, though his style is much different.  He doesn't so much tell long, elaborate stories, but instead makes everyday observations about life that we all notice, but never can articulate.

And it wasn't until I watched it a few times that I realized that he was completely clean.  He didn't go blue at all.


I also noted in my review for Here Comes the Boom (which you can read here), that there were a lot of references to spirituality.  My wife's instinct was that this came right from James.  And as usual, she was correct.  An interview with the actor/comedian, for Catholic News Service reports


He doesn’t exactly advertise it, but the “king of Queens” is a Catholic family man.
Kevin James, who played Doug Heffernan for nine seasons on the CBS sitcom and has since branched out into movies, has no problem talking about his values and how it affects his career.
“I am involved in my faith, it becomes more and more — you know, it becomes a difficult, difficult position. You have a platform and you don’t want to do anything that doesn’t glorify God in every way,” James told Catholic News Service in a telephone interview from Philadelphia.
“I can’t play a priest in every film, either. You definitely want to have a positive message. I want to be able to sit and watch my movies with my children,” added James, who is married with two daughters and one son. Having control over and writing the material, according to him, is a key to “be inspiring and (to) move people in a positive way.”
James, 47, is promoting his upcoming film comedy, “Here Comes the Boom.” In it, he plays a high school science teacher who once loved his work but has “lost his mojo,” as he put it, but gets it back when budget cuts threaten the job of the music teacher (Henry Winkler), who never lost his love for teaching.
James’ character even goes so far as to train to be a mixed martial arts fighter — which James did in real life to prepare for the movie — in the belief that even a loser’s payday in such a bout will reap the bucks necessary to save the music program.
It’s not that James admits to some road-to-Damascus moment that made his faith all the more relevant to him. “I was born and raised Catholic and absolutely love my faith and learn more and more about it all the time,” he said. “It’s nice to have that going into whatever you do, whatever part of life you take upon yourself.”
It might have been, though, that James had his own lost-his-mojo moment. “I’ve been very guilty, a lot, of not knowing my faith too much and just praying when I needed it when something bad happened in my life and not being thankful when things turned good,” he told CNS. “The more I realized how important it is, the more I want to learn about it and do the right thing. All good is from him (God), and so I want to honor him. It’s honestly about learning more and instilling that in my kids and my friends, and those around me.”


You can read the whole thing here

I wish him great success and I thank him for honoring God in the public square.

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