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Speaker
JIM MORRIS
Subjects
entertainment
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The New Yorker
Magazine hailed Jim Morris as "the country's leading political
impressionist".
Jim Morris Comedian, Political Satirist, Impressionist sets his
sights on the most prominent personalities in politics and popular
culture, the major newsmakers, newscasters, and entertainers on the
cutting edge and renders them in spot-on comic performances.
Jim Morris' show has been described as a monologue with a cast of
thousands, the political life of our country as an ongoing sitcom
and a sort of White House Confidential with laughs as Jim takes us
behind closed doors into the secret comic halls of power.
Heading the cast are President George W. Bush, Bill Clinton, George
H. W. Bush and Vice-President Al Gore with Arnold Schwarzenegger,
Rush Limbaugh, Dr. Phil and if the political spirits are just right
sometimes an appearance by the Ghost of Ronald Reagan.
Audiences rave over Jim's ability to fully submerge himself within
each character and comically envelop their particular political
beliefs, moral ideologies, and personality quirks.
Now some of the 2008 hopefuls including Barack Obama, Hillary
Clinton, Rudy Giuliani, John McCain and John Edwards have joined the
show.
The Boston Herald
described Jim as "a one-man Disney attraction, his own Hall of the
Presidents."
Through four Presidential administrations, as
politicians come and go, Jim Morris continues to play the President.
"I used to think I'd be a lame duck comedian right alongside the
latest lame duck President”.
Jim has always been interested in making people laugh, politics and
impersonating and puncturing authority figures. He discovered his
art while attending high school in Framingham, Mass., where one day
pretending to be the principal he issued an “unauthorized” early
dismissal over the school public address system. Of course, that day
the other students were all dismissed much earlier then Jim.
Now-a-days Jim still tries to bring that daring sense of comic
anarchy to his show.
"I think of myself as a political cartoonist” said Morris "the
impressions are my vehicle and the targets are always those with the
most power and influence. The star of the show is the President of
the United States the most powerful person in the world. I sort of
disappear into the character and their shtick, their mannerisms,
verbal ticks, faults and foibles, exaggerated, emerge. Sometimes
what feels like a hidden political truth pops out of my mouth and I
wonder if there is some danger in impersonating the President. Can
you spell Guantanamo?”
“I picture the President, his staff and the First Family away from
the cameras” explained Jim. “Imagining the conversations where the
good stuff goes down, the deals get hatched and the decider decides.
It's my comic version of the administration".
Newt Gingrich the former Speaker of the House put it this way "I've
worked closely with most of the guys Jim does in his act, and the
scary thing is Jim often makes a lot more sense than they do.”
The New York Times in their review said "What distinguishes Mr.
Morris's impressions from those of previous Presidential parodists
is with the seriousness with which he approaches his task. In the
age of sound bites and handlers, Mr. Morris's parodies are much more
than personal demolition jobs. They are surreal exposés of the
emptiness and equivocation of contemporary political rhetoric that
makes candidates of every ideological stripe appear ridiculous and
untrustworthy."
One of the special highlight of the Jim Morris show is his
remarkable ad-lib Presidential News Conference, when as George W.
Bush he fields questions from audience members as stand-ins for the
White House correspondent's corps. Jim hilariously captures all of
the attitude, optimism, and befuddled essence of our nation's
leader. "Uncanny" said the Chicago Tribune, "Dreadfully wicked" was
the opinion of the Washington Times and Mike Wallace of all people
called it "Mean, mean, mean."
“I never forget that first and foremost I'm a comedian” says Jim
“and my mission and primary responsibility is to be funny.”
"Every so often," Jim said, "the audience gets so wrapped up in the
rare opportunity to talk face to face with the President that it
gets real--even scary, they forget that it's me, Jim Morris the
comedian they're dealing with” he laughs “and they get into it with
the President”. These classic comedy encounters with the audience
serve up not only big laughs, but an extraordinary, only-in-America
example of democracy at work.
Jim has enjoyed several face-to-face encounters with the principal
subjects of his humor. Scenes of engagement have included the
legendary White House Correspondents Dinner, "A Gala Salute to the
President" at Washington D.C.'s historic Ford's Theater, and even up
close and personal inside the Oval Office. “They did reassure me
beforehand” he said “that the court jester was the only person who
could heckle the king without losing his head.”
Jim is seen regularly on Network and Cable Television offering his
own versions of politician's sound bites and spin, starring in
comedy specials for HBO, ABC, CBS and Cinemax, appearing on the
Tonight Show, Comic Relief, CNN's Crossfire, Keith Olbermann and
Larry King Live. Jim provides the voices for "The X-Presidents" the
critically acclaimed cartoon on NBC's Saturday Night Live and now
DVD.
Jim Morris tours in the
latest edition of his one-man show “The Presidential Follies of
2008”.
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56 Poquonock Avenue
Windsor, Connecticut 06095
Voice: 800-875-2893
Fax: 860-687-1062
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