When Rick Mercer was an ‘all-around wunderkind’ in 1992

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Rick Mercer can make people laugh. He’s currently doing it as host of CBC-TV’s Comedy Night with Rick Mercer, an hour-long program featuring Canadian stand-up comics. 

And he’s been making Canadians laugh for a long time. From 2004 to 2018, he starred on The Rick Mercer Report (initially Rick Mercer’s Monday Report) and before that, he was a founding cast member of CBC’s This Hour Has 22 Minutes. He was with the show from 1993 to 2001. 

Original cast of This Hour Has 22 Minutes in the 1990s
Rick Mercer (seated at right) is seen with Mary Walsh, Cathy Jones and Greg Thomey in a CBC publicity photo for This Hour Has 22 Minutes. (Marvin Moore/CBC Still Photo Collection)

But even further back, Mercer was earning national attention. On Feb. 6, 1991, Mercer was a guest on CBC-TV’s Midday to discuss his new play, Show Me the Button: I’ll Push It (or Charles Lynch Must Die). The show, which premiered at the National Arts Centre in Ottawa in October 1990, was inspired by a controversial column by the journalist Charles Lynch. It was the Meech Lake era, and in Lynch’s opinion, Newfoundland was expendable insofar as Canadian Confederation was concerned. Mercer was of a different mind, and in March of 1991, the play earned praise from the Globe and Mail‘s theatre critic Ray Conlogue. As Conlogue wrote at the time: the show was a “comic battering ram that Mercer wields against a Canada he sees as arrogant, bullying and dismissive of himself and his people.”

During Mercer’s Midday appearance he was joined by Lynch. Both men stated their positions on the program. Mercer, then 21, said he felt that Newfoundland’s input wasn’t sought amid discussions of the Meech Lake Accord in 1990. The play had been his response.

Air sickness

Rick Mercer’s 1992 Air Canada rant

Playwright Rick Mercer gives a scathing commentary on the airline in light of its new policy on lost luggage. Aired Oct. 14, 1992 on CBC’s Midday.

Midday became a regular gig for Mercer, who began making occasional appearances on the noon-hour current affairs program later that year. The “all-around wunderkind,” as host Tina Srebotnjak described him in 1992, delivered sharp monologues on topics ranging from royal commissions to Air Canada’s new strategy for tracking lost luggage.

And Mercer was still writing plays during that time. In October 1992, Globe and Mail theatre critic Liam Lacey described Mercer’s one-man show I’ve Killed Before, I’ll Kill Again as a “wildly imaginative story told by an exceptionally intense and talented performer.” 

Early in 1993, Mercer was a guest on the CBC late-night talk show Friday Night! with Ralph Benmergui to perform a scene from that play. During a chat with the host, hee said playwriting was an ongoing pursuit for him.

“The National Arts Centre of Canada has commissioned myself and Gerald Lunz, who’s also the producer-director of I’ve Killed Before, to write a new play for their ’94 season,” he said.

According to the National Arts Centre website, Mercer’s play Canada: A Good Place to Hide reached the stage in 1995.

Rick Mercer meets CBC host Ralph Benmergui in 1993

Canadians get to know the young playwright from Newfoundland on a CBC talk show. Aired on Feb. 5, 1993 on CBCs Friday Night! with Ralph Benmergui.

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