In February of 1988, a young man began his stand-up comedy career. Thirty years later, the stage might be a bit bigger and the crowd might be a bit larger, but Brent Butt is still there.
鈥淚t鈥檚 still the thing I love to do. The thing I look most forward to is getting up on stage in front of a crowd with a microphone. You would think I would be somehow done with it, that it would be boring or dull, but it isn鈥檛, I look forward to it immensely.鈥
While Yorkton might be a 鈥渕etropolis鈥 compared to Butt鈥檚 hometown of Tisdale, shows in this province are like a hometown show.
鈥淚t鈥檚 always a blast coming back to Saskatchewan, I love it. There鈥檚 an immediate familiarity, like coming back and visiting family.鈥
Stand-up isn鈥檛 Butt鈥檚 only career anymore, as running a production company and producing film and television have become his day job. He notes that a lot of what he needs to do for production he can do on the road, reviewing footage on his phone while going between gigs, which helps when making a stand-up tour.
鈥淚t seems somehow even more special when I can get out and on the road again.鈥
Butt鈥檚 love of being on stage doing stand-up is part of why he thinks people still come out to see him. Audiences can tell when they鈥檙e being sold something, Butt says, but he鈥檚 not selling anything on stage, he just wants to have a good time with the crowd.
鈥淚鈥檓 not out there because I need to be out there. I鈥檓 out there because it鈥檚 who I am and where I want to be and it鈥檚 the thing that makes me most happy. I think people pick up on that. When I鈥檓 on stage, I鈥檓 having a good time, and they get it.鈥
On tour, Butt emphasizes that he鈥檒l go to anywhere that will have him, because he鈥檚 grateful that audiences still want to see him on stage. While not every comic will go to smaller cities, Butt believes that it鈥檚 his duty to go where an audience wants him.
鈥淭his was my dream, this is what I鈥檝e always wanted to do since I was a kid. It鈥檚 not lost on me that a lot of people don鈥檛 get to live their dream and I鈥檓 living it. As long as there鈥檚 a crowd of people wanting a show, I鈥檒l go do it, because there will be a day when they probably won鈥檛 want to come.鈥
There are no worries about that now, Butt is a big draw for comedy fans. Butt says the big difference now from when he started is that the venues are much nicer.
鈥淲hen you start out it鈥檚 road houses where they want to kill you and they鈥檙e throwing ashtrays at you. You鈥檙e doing stand-up in a strip bar where you鈥檙e the exact opposite of what they want to see. Then you graduate to comedy clubs where people are coming to see comedy. Then you graduate to where I鈥檓 playing, theatres where people want to see me specifically. For me, it鈥檚 a matter of increasingly nicer venues. But the way I approach it is the same as it鈥檚 always been.鈥
The thrill of the show is also the same, as is the risk that every comic faces before they go on stage 鈥 Butt鈥檚 the only person there, and doesn鈥檛 know the audience or what they鈥檙e going to enjoy before getting in front of the crowd. That鈥檚 the thrill, Butt explains.
鈥淲hen I am waiting in the wings getting introduced, it鈥檚 exciting. Thirty years later it鈥檚 still exciting.鈥
Of course, Butt is much more animated now than he鈥檚 ever been. When he鈥檚 not on stage, he鈥檚 gearing up for Corner Gas Animated, the revival of his hit sitcom. After six seasons and a movie, there was still an appetite for the show, Butt says, but they needed to figure out how to keep things fresh.
鈥淲e didn鈥檛 really want to go back and do the same thing again because we felt as though we had went over that as much as we should go over it, we鈥檙e all getting older, it just didn鈥檛 feel like the thing to do. At the same time, you like having a job, you like being employed. So we just said if we were going to do something, what are we going to do?鈥
The idea sprung from an old idea from the original series, for doing an animated scene in an episode. They went back to that idea and explored what animation might do for the show. Butt says it doesn鈥檛 change how episodes are written 鈥 one of the writers, Norm Hiscock, a former King of the Hill writer, told Butt that he shouldn鈥檛 change anything 鈥 but they do have a bit more freedom.
鈥淚n the live action show we always had these fantasy sequences where we could pop into a character鈥檚 and see what they were imagining, those were always fun and funny. But when you鈥檙e doing it in the physical world you鈥檙e always limited in what you can do. It really opens up now, we have a Sasquatch fight a unicorn in a very violent battle. Pirate ships fighting destroyers, we have a Mad Max kind of scene.鈥
There are still limits, however.
鈥淲hen we did the Mad Max scene, I think we wrote in the script initially 100 war machines roll over the desert sand, and the directors came back and said 鈥100? Are we drawing and animating 100 war machines, because that is going to take a really long time. How about a dozen?鈥濃
Corner Gas has been a hit since its debut in 2004, though Butt admits that wasn鈥檛 what they expected, and that in the beginning they didn鈥檛 expect much beyond the first order of episodes.
鈥淚 was surprised that anybody watched at all. I thought we hoodwinked the network into letting us do 13 episodes of a show about a gas station in Saskatchewan, but nobody is going to watch it, so let鈥檚 have a good time and make a show that we liked and we鈥檙e proud of. The fact that anybody watched blew us all away from the get go... I should probably stop being surprised but every time we do something with Corner Gas we鈥檙e dumbfounded by the response. Pleasantly dumbfounded.鈥
Butt will be in Yorkton on February 25 at the Anne Portnuff Theatre, tickets are available at ticketpro.ca. Corner Gas Animated debuts on April 2 on The Comedy Network.