Kevin Hart Seriously Funny on Comedy Central

Kevin Hart Seriously Funny premiered at 10 pm, July 11 2010 on Comedy Central. Kevin Hart is electrifying. Stardom radiates from him like a New York billboard as he lights up the stage and side swaps his audience with his unique comedic humor.

Undaunted by his chances of being accepted on the “tough” comedy circuit, Kevin debuted on amateur night at a Philadelphia comedy club. The audience welcomed him into their hearts and Hart was hooked. Kevin quit his job as a shoe salesman for an athletic shoe store chain and began chasing his dream of becoming a star. Comedy swims through his bloodstream right along side red and white cells.

Kevin began performing full time at clubs such as the Boston Comedy Club, Caroline’s, Stand-Up NY, The Improvisation, The Laugh Factory and The Comedy Store in Los Angeles. He expanded his reach worldwide, performing at comedy clubs in both Amsterdam and London. But it was his performance at the Montreal Comedy Festival which led to his work in feature films such as “Paper Soldiers” (2002), “Scary Movie 3” (2003) – where he wrote his own part – and “Along Came Polly” (2004).

In 2004 Hart executive-produced, wrote and starred in the ABC-TV sitcom “The Big House,” which debuted in April of 2004 and was loosely based on his family in Philadelphia. His other television appearances include a month long stint on “Love, Inc.”, “The 25 Best Bodies on BET”, “Barbershop” and MTV’s “Wild ‘n’ Out with Nick Cannon.”

His biggest break came when he landed the lead role in “Soul Plane” which flew him onto the big screen. He has since landed roles in “Scary Movie 4”, “In the Mix”, and “The 40 Year Old Virgin”, “Fools Gold” and “Meet Dave.”

Kevin’s hour-long stand-up special, “Grown Little Man,” aired on Comedy Central in 2008. In 2009, he landed a co-starring role in Comedy Central’s original action/fantasy comedy series, “Krod Mandoon.”

Kevin has the uncanny ability to flip the proverbial script and integrate his comedic routines to fit the audience. Whether he is entertaining a group of bank presidents at a charity fund-raiser for the United Way or screaming and shouting over a college rock band, he always leaves his audience feeling satisfied and wanting more.

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