Robin Harris

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Robin Harris
Background information
Birth name Robin Hughes Harris
Origin Chicago, Illinois, USA
Genre(s) Comedy
Years active 1980–1990

Robin Hughes Harris (August 30, 1953March 18, 1990) was an African-American comedian and actor, best known for his recurring comic sketch about Bébé's Kids.

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[edit] Childhood

Born in Chicago, Illinois, his father was a welder and his mother was a factory seamstress. In 1961, the family moved to Los Angeles where he attended Manual Arts High School. A track star, Harris received a scholarship and attended Ottawa University in Kansas. During this time, he began to hone his craft of comedy. He worked for Hughes Aircraft, a rental car company, and Security Pacific Bank to pay his bills. In 1980, he debuted at Los Angeles’ Comedy Store with little response.

[edit] Career

1985 was his year; as the master of ceremonies at the Comedy Act Theater, his “old school” brand of humor began to gain him a mainstream following. A large-eyed stand-up churlish brand of humor and quick put-downs were his trademark. Harris made a promising feature debut playing a no-nonsense bartender in the feature film I'm Gonna Git You Sucka (1988). A very sensitive man and professional, Harris performed memorably in Spike Lee’s Do The Right Thing (1989). As Sweet Dick Willie, Harris served as part of the neighborhood "Greek chorus" that commented on the events of an increasingly tense day. Harris had a perfect platform as Pop, the no-nonsense, quick-witted father of Kid in House Party (1990). He followed up later that year with a small turn as a jazz club MC in Mo' Better Blues. He also had a role in Eddie Murphy's Harlem Nights.

[edit] Bébé's Kids

In Harris' "Bébé's Kids" routines, Harris' girlfriend Jamika would insist that he take her friend Bébé's three ill-behaved children with them on a date, as she continually agreed to babysit them. The children would regularly make a fool out of and/or annoy Harris. "We Bébé's kids," they would proclaim, "we don't die...we multiply."

The Hudlin Brothers had intended to make a feature film based upon the "Bébé's Kids" sketches, but Harris died of a heart attack while the film was in pre-production. Bébé's Kids instead became an animated feature—the first ever to feature an all-Black main cast—directed by Bruce W. Smith and featuring the voices of Faizon Love, Vanessa Bell Calloway, Marques Houston, Nell Carter, and Tone-Loc.

[edit] Death

Early in 1990, Harris was keeping a very tight schedule, which demanded much travel and long hours. He had respiratory problems and often nodded off during the day. Arriving in his hometown, Chicago, for an appearance at the Regal Theater, he failed to meet friends the following day. His brother found him dead at his hotel. He was only 36 years old.

[edit] Trivia

[edit] External links