" So says "Big Daddy" Jeff Wayne.
Born
and raised in the Northern most portion of the
Bluegrass state, Wayne came from a poor but stupid
family. When he was 14 years old he was bitten by
the showbiz bug, and as soon as he was able moved
as far west as he could without drowning. Forsaking
college, he went to earn his education at The
Comedy Store in Los Angeles. "Higher learning"
consisted of touring the comedy clubs on the road,
finishing school tours of Europe and working cruise
ships.
"Big Daddy" became a headliner on the comedy
circuit and did all the cable television shows
(HBO, Showtime, A&E, MTV, etc.). In the world
of stand-up comedy, as a comedian, writer, and
booker of several Los Angeles clubs, Wayne worked
in varying capacities with Chris Rock, Judd Apatow,
Jim Carrey, Roseanne, Sam Kinison and hundreds of
others.
Wayne made his leap into theater when he wrote
and starred in his one-man show, Big Daddy's
Barbeque. A critical and popular success, Wayne has
toured with the show for over 10 years, and
performed it over 1,000 times. Variety wrote,
"Wayne is a one-man riot." Wayne writes his own
material which has a distinct quirky outlook,
probably because he bases most of his ideas on the
philosophy of Ayn Rand, his "shero." Other
influences are Joseph Campbell, Yukio Mishma, W.C.
Fields and the Marx Brothers.
Wayne has been described as having a face like
Fred Flintstone and an attitude like Al Bundy. He
has been celebrated in such diverse publications as
The Los Angeles Times, Washington Post, New York
Times and Sondags B.A. (Oslo!), not just for being
funny, but for having amazing audience
communication. A divorced father of three, Wayne
collects vintage showbiz memorabilia, plays a bad
game of golf, and hangs with his "dogs" (cannine).
Parent, Raconteur, Jokester, Duffer, World
Traveler, lover of the grape, showbiz geek, rabid
news watcher, Wayne confesses he is all of that,
"...and I still don't know what the hell it is all
about!"