George Lopez
The Prime-Time Funny Man
By JAMES PONIEWOZIK
Desi Arnaz, Freddie Prinze and I," says George Lopez, "are
in a club that only has three members." It sounds
arrogant, but he's right. Since 1951, the three comics
have played lead roles in the only hit network sitcoms
starring Latinos—spaced roughly 30 years apart.
George Lopez, the show, is a success story rooted in a
sad one. Lopez, 44, was abandoned by his parents as a boy
and raised by his grandmother, who he says was belittling
and incapable of showing affection. Yet he credits those
early woes with inspiring his sometimes dark-edged humor. "If
you grow up with a supportive family," he says, "you
become a guy who gets laughs from everyday observations:
laundry and airplanes and relationships. If you grow up
emotionally neglected, you do a deeper type comedy."
The show, on ABC, has never been a smash hit, but it has
had a solid run since its debut in 2002, holding its own
against phenomenon American Idol. It will be followed next
fall by Freddie, a Latino-family sitcom starring Freddie
Prinze Jr.—the son of Lopez's comedy idol—whom
Lopez helped persuade to do the show. Lopez, just recovered
from a kidney transplant, has also taken care that his
sitcom's crew includes Latinos and other minorities. "If
you come to our stage," he says, "it looks like
Costco." He says he hopes Latino kids watching him
see—as he did watching the elder Prinze's Chico and
the Man—that they can have "goals, not just
dreams. What is a dream to Mexican kids, to white kids
is a goal."
Copyright © 2005 Time Inc.