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Ventriloquist Goes to the Dogs With Clean, Family-Friendly Humor
By Randall Murphree (AgapePress) - Ventriloquist Todd Oliver and his talking dogs are riding high on the waves of Table Rock Lake in Branson, Missouri. Oliver does two shows a day, six days a week on the Showboat Branson Belle, a dinner cruise ship with a first-rate Broadway-style show at 4:00 and 8:00 pm. The Belle, along with Silver Dollar City, is among 20 properties operated by Herschend Family Entertaiment in eight states. With his talking dogs -- Irving, Lucy and Elvis -- Oliver has earned wide national acclaim. He is a frequent late-night TV guest, having been on the Late Show With David Letterman, The Tonight Show, and the Late, Late Show with Craig Ferguson. In this exclusive interview, he reveals his strong family foundation and his Christian faith. Interview begins below
AgapePress: Give us a little background. Why ventriloquism? It wasn't too long after that I was doing my first show. I wasn't real effective. I mean, I was so bad I had the dummy in one hand and the joke book in the other. But something about a 10-year-old kid doing mother-in-law jokes just doesn't really go over. But ventriloquism is something that, like many other things, you have to bad at before you can be good at it. I was in the work program in high school as an entertainer, so I got high school credit for going out and working at the career of my choice -- show business. I'd go three times a week to schools in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area as a volunteer. [Eventually, as a professional,] I went on the school assembly circuit playing four schools a day, five days a week. Now, that was work, serious work. My program consisted of using time wisely, developing good daily habits at home and at school, using the library. We touched on the drug problem. You get a youngster interested in something that's really good and they spend a lot of time in it and it certainly can change their life for the better, as it did for me. AP: Who are your entertainment heroes? AP: When did you make show business your career goal? AP: How does your Christian faith play a role in your work on-stage? AP: When did you come to personal faith in Christ? I remember feeling awful and missing my dad and then seeing Red Skelton and laughing until my stomach hurt. So comedy was a wonderful escape from depression and sadness. As long as you're reading your Bible and you have a sense of humor as you walk through life, you can make it in this world. AP: Do you live the typical celebrity lifestyle? There are some show business people who are "on" all the time, as we say in the business. That's not the way it is with me. I go to work and I'm a ventriloquist and comedian. But when I'm home, you can see me out back in my jeans shoveling manure in the barn. Political correctness is not part of our vocabulary. We're conservative people. Being a conservative and being a comedian -- some people in Hollywood might think that's an oxymoron. They can't relate to that, but it's worked for me. AP: How long have you been in Branson? That doesn't mean that the clean comedy is cornball or old-fashioned. Hardly the case. For a clean comedian to be successful today, we have to be hip, we have to be timely, we have to be clever. But we have to be able to relate to all ages. On the showboat, in the summertime the average audience has kids, teenagers, parents and grandparents. AP: Any parting thoughts? Randall Murphree, a regular contributor to AgapePress, is editor of AFA Journal, a monthly publication of the American Family Association. He visited Silver Dollar City near Branson, Missouri, over Labor Day weekend. For more information on events, schedules and days of operation during the theme park's Christmas festival and other special events, call 800-831-4FUN or visit SilverDollarCity.com. © 2006 AgapePress all rights reserved.
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