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Blue Collar comedian to make a stop in Greensburg on solo tour

By Rachel Basinger rbasinger@heraldstandard.Com 7 min read
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Comedian Bill Engvall will perform at the Palace Theatre, 21 W. Otterman, Greensburg, on Friday, Nov. 8.

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Comedian Bill Engvall

Long-time comedian Bill Engvall, best known for his “HereĢƵ Your Sign” bit, will be coming to Greensburg for two shows next week.

He will perform at the Palace Theatre, 21 W. Otterman, Greensburg, at 6 p.m. and 9 p.m. Nov. 8.

Engvall has hosted numerous television shows including the game show LINGO for GSN, Country Fried Videos and Mobile Home Disasters, for CMT as well as several award shows.

He was featured on the TNT show Hawthorne, narrated a documentary for the Speed Channel on Darrel Waltrip and starred in the Hallmark Channel movie “Kiss at Pine Lake.”

Engvall also starred in and executive produced his own self-titled sitcom for TBS, which ran for three seasons and he was one of the stars of the sketch comedy show, Blue Collar TV, on the WB network. In 2008 Bill starred in Bait Shop which co-starred Billy Ray Cyrus and had its world premiere on the USA Network.

Engvall was part of the enormously successful Blue Collar Comedy concert films, which have sold more than 9 million units and are some of the most watched movies and special in Comedy Central history.

Engvall is a native of Galveston, Texas, but because his dad was in public health service, his family moved around a lot.

His start in comedy came from humble beginnings.

“I was in college and discovered women and beer and studies went out the door, so I dropped out of college, moved to Dallas and began spinning records in a night club,” Engvall said. “My friend who was a bouncer at the club said a new comedy club had opened and asked me to go watch amateur night.”

Once they got there and a “few rounds of liquid encouragement” went through them, Engvall got talked into going on stage. That was the beginning of 40-plus years of a comedy career.

“I just fell in love with it,” he said. “I’ve always enjoyed making people laugh, and it seems to come fairly easy to me because I’m able to pick up on stuff that a lot of people don’t.”

Engvall said he knew he had truly made it as a comedian when he won the American Comedy Award for “Best Male Stand-up Comedian.”

“That was the first year that the comedy awards had let the fans do the voting as opposed to just a panel of people,” he said. “That really meant a lot to me that the fans picked me out of five great comics.”

But it was the Blue Collar Comedy Tour that “put it all over the top” for Engvall.

“Being a part of that group was an amazing experience,” he said. “I’ll always be grateful to those fellows, but I would say the biggest break was when ‘HereĢƵ Your Sign’ first came out.

“I wish I could tell you that I was that smart that I knew it would be a hit,” Engvall said. “The original joke was that I thought that stupid people should be slapped, and my wife who is constantly looking out for me, said I didn’t look like the kind of guy who walks around slapping people.”

Engvall was in a club where he was performing for five or six nights in a row, which really gave him the opportunity to work on his material, and he came up with this idea of a sign that said “I’m stupid.”

“Man, people just hooked into it – to the point where I would sell signs at my show for $1 a piece or two for $5 and you can’t believe how many people would buy two,” he said.

Engvall said he would’ve never believed it would catch on like it did.

“I’m still amazed today that people will pay money to hear what I’ve got to talk about,” he said. “I thank God for it, but just the other night I was at a show, and I was walking in the room with the promoter and the room was filled.

“I told him that it was weird that these people made plans to come out and see me, like I would say I was going out to see Elton John – itĢƵ a big deal,” said Engvall. “It never goes unappreciated that people are coming out. I hope and pray that I never ever lose that feeling, because if you do, I think itĢƵ time to quit.”

Most comedians draw on what they know and things happening in their lives, which tends to draw in on family life or family members, but Engvall said they always know there are lines he won’t cross.

“But that being said, when my daughter was in high school, she came home one day and said ‘thatĢƵ enough – some kid I don’t even know came up to me in the hallway at school today and said I heard your dad talking about your underwear on the radio,'” he said.

“But they all enjoy the perks of the business, so they’re willing to put up with a little bit to have a nice life,” Engvall added.

Engvall has been touring for years, both solo and as part of the Blue Collar Comedy tour and said there are plus and minuses with both.

“With the guys, it was great because you could hang out with your friends on the road,” he said. “When you’re touring on your own, it gets kind of lonely sometimes and boring. But then again, on the Blue Collar tour, we all only got 20 minutes each and then an encore, whereas on my own I get to really stretch it out and have some fun.

“it was a little more constricted on the Blue Collar tour as opposed to by myself, but the numbers on Blue Collar were crazy,” Engvall added. “The fact that we were selling out arenas – I looked at (Jeff) Foxworthy one day and said this was as close to rock stars as we were ever going to get.”

In the last several years Engvall has been solo touring and has been continuing to try his hand at acting.

“I enjoy acting a lot,” he said. “I enjoy the challenge of bringing a fictitious character to life. But, when you’re doing television and movies and stuff, I’m not the boss.

“I may have a 20-year-old executive at a network thatĢƵ telling me what I think is funny and what I should do, but being 62 and doing this for 40 years, sometimes thatĢƵ a hard pill to swallow,” Engvall said. “But when I’m touring, I’m the boss and I make all the decisions.”

Recently he just wrapped up on an indie film called “No Running” that will be out next year and he continues his reoccurring role as Reverend Paul on the Tim Allen Show.

“ThereĢƵ different people looking at me for other projects – thereĢƵ some other irons in the fire, but I’m old enough now that I’ve learned until the check clears and I’m on the stage, I don’t take anything for granted,” Engvall said.

Tickets for his upcoming Greensburg show are $35, $45, $55, $65 and $90 and can be purchased online at http://www.thepalacetheatre.org or by calling 724-836-8000.

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