Tina Fey wins Mark Twain humour prize

http://www.cbc.ca/arts/tv/story/2010/05/25/fey-twain-prize-winner.html

Comedy It girl Tina Fey, celebrated for her hit comedy 30 Rock  and
pitch perfect Sarah Palin impression, is the latest recipient of the
top humour prize in the U.S.

The Saturday Night Live alumni is the 13th annual winner of the Mark
Twain Prize for American Humor — and the youngest ever to be named,
the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts announced on Tuesday.

"I am truly thrilled to receive this honour," Fey, who recently turned
40, said in a written statement.

"I assume Betty White was disqualified for steroid use," she quipped,
referencing the 88-year-old comedy veteran who recently drew raves as
host of the New York sketch comedy show.

Fey, a former member of The Second City improv troupe in Chicago, was
the first woman to become head writer of SNL. She remained on the show
for nine seasons, both as a writer and cast member, including her
much-praised co-anchoring of the program's Weekend Update news
segment.

Her time at SNL is considered a watershed for the long-running show,
during which strong female comic performances rose to the forefront of
the traditionally male-oriented program.

She left in 2006 to develop a new show, the satirical 30 Rock, but has
returned to SNL for regular cameos — including as former Alaska
governor and U.S. vice-presidential candidate Palin during the
election campaign and for the recent episode White hosted.

An Emmy, Golden Globe and Screen Actors Guild Award-winner, Fey has
also appeared in several hit film comedies, including Mean Girls
(which she wrote), Baby Mama and Date Night.

"She's politically conscious, she's a writer, she's a filmmaker, she's
a producer, she's a performer," said Mark Krantz, a Twain Prize
executive producer.

"Her body of work is as inclusive and far-reaching as anyone else's,
and she's just funny."

Fey will be feted at a Kennedy Center gala on Nov. 9. Typically
organizers assemble the winner's colleagues, those who have influenced
her and those whom she has influenced to honour her at the gala, which
is later broadcast on TV.

Established in 1998, the Mark Twain Prize recognizes individuals who
have had an impact on American society in ways similar to the iconic
19th century American author, essayist and humorist.

Awarded each year by the John F. Kennedy Center for Performing Arts,
past recipients have included Steve Martin, Bill Cosby, the late
George Carlin, Richard Pryor, Bob Newhart and SNL creator Lorne
Michaels.

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