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  1. Mark : [singing once again] You're gonna get a thousand dollars! [Scott gives Bruce the cash] Mark : He just gave you a thousand dollars!

    • The Devil
    • Don Roritor and Marv
    • Paul Bellini
    • The Cops
    • At & Love
    • The Probing Aliens
    • Cory, Dory, Tory, and Rory
    • Buddy Cole
    • Queen Elizabeth II
    • Gord and Jeff

    Popular culture abounds with demons who, if not inspiring sympathy for the Devil, at least make him into a likable rogue. The Devil portrayed by Mark McKinney is a metal-loving dark lord who engages in guitar duels for the souls of young rockers when he isn't helping sinister salesmen and television network executives with their work (reportedly, h...

    The Kids in the Hall attempted to follow in the footsteps of their spiritual predecessors from Monty Python's Flying Circus, hoping to go on to make movies together after the success of their show. Unfortunately, their first film, Kids in the Hall: Brain Candy, was also their last. The first sketch of the Kids in the Hall reboot makes reference to ...

    A frequent collaborator of Scott Thompson and a writer for The Kids in the Hall, Paul Bellini became the original series' mute mascot. He starred in such sketches as the "Touch Paul Bellini Contest" and "Bellini Day," in which a futuristic utopia was shown to worship the unflappable, towel-clad Bellini as their god and savior. He never spoke until ...

    Bruce McCulloch and Mark McKinney frequently played a duo of incompetent Toronto Police Department patrolmen, whose antics parodied true crime shows like COPS. Their cop characters return, as witless as ever, in a number of sketches throughout the new season of The Kids in the Hall.

    The Kids in the Hall parodied corporate culture with several recurring characters who worked for the fictional company AT & Love. The premiere episode of the new Kids in the Hallbrings back AT & Love office workers Kathie with a K (Bruce McCulloch) and Cathy with a C (Scott Thompson) as they mourn the company's decision to stop using their beloved ...

    One of the new Kids in the Hall sketches ends with an alien duo blowing up the Earth (a la Looney Tunes' Marvin the Martian character). The aliens, played by Kevin McDonald and Dave Foley, previously appeared in the Kids in the Hallseason 4 sketch "Career Crisis," in which one alien questions his coworker as to the ultimate purpose of their job tra...

    Several sketches in the Kids in the Hall revival center on a trio of waiters, Cory (Foley), Dory (McCulloch), and Tory (McKinney), and desert chef Rory (Thompson) as they deal with numerous disasters in their high-class restaurant. While they were not recurring characters in the original Kids in the Hall, all four characters originally appeared in ...

    Known as Buddy to his friends, colorful gay bar owner Charles Budderick Cole was one of the few Kids in the Hall characters to maintain a presence after the series ended and likely could have starred in a Saturday Night Live style solo movie had Brain Candy not bombed so badly. Scott Thompson continued to play Buddy Cole as part of his one-man stag...

    Buddy Cole enlists the aid of another famous queen, calling in a favor from Queen Elizabeth II (also Scott Thompson) to save the last glory hole in Toronto. Buddy's close friendship with the Queen of England was previously established in the Kids in the Hallmini-movie "Chalet 2000," which took up an entire season 4 episode.

    Gord (McCulloch) and Jeff (McKinney) were a duo of dishonest salesmen who attempted to shill unlikely merchandise and sell people on Ponzi schemes promising easy money. The new Kids in the Hallseries reveals they are still up to their old tricks, trying to sell a device called the Gut Spigot, which claims to siphon the fat from out of your stomach ...

    • Crushing Your Head. Squishy, squish, squish… the headcrusher's main purpose is simple: smoosh all the "flatheads." Played by Mark McKinney, the headcrusher character appears in many sketches, "crushing" people's heads from across the street on a crusade against yuppies and 1990s businessmen.
    • Cabbage Head: Restaurant. Cabbage Head is a jerk. And why wouldn't he be? He's got a cabbage for a head. He smokes cigars and he's an abrasive womanizer. Played by Bruce McCulloch, Cabbage Head makes his first appearance on a date with a lady (Kevin McDonald in drag) in Season 1, Episode 2.
    • Chicken Lady. She's a freak... A super-freak, if you know what I mean. Chicken Lady is Mark McKinney's weird physically imposing horny human/bird hybrid who wants a romp in the hay.
    • Buddy Cole: I'm Canadian. Scott Thompson's character Buddy Cole was ahead of his time in many ways. The queer socialite delights in taking digs at his own personal life and the gay community.
  2. McKinney cowrote and starred in the Kids in the Hall movie Kids in the Hall: Brain Candy, in which, among other roles, he spoofed SNL and KITH executive producer Lorne Michaels.

  3. The Kids in the Hall is a Canadian sketch comedy troupe formed in 1984 in Calgary and Toronto, consisting of comedians Dave Foley, Bruce McCulloch, Kevin McDonald, Mark McKinney, and Scott Thompson. Their eponymous television show ran from 1989 to 1995, on CBC, in Canada.

  4. Feb 4, 2023 · It goes without saying that Kids in the Hall — the five-person Canadian comedy troupe consisting of Bruce McCulloch, Scott Thompson, Mark McKinney, Dave Foley and Kevin McDonald — featured a wide array of memorable characters.

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  6. The Kids in the Hall is a Canadian sketch comedy TV series that aired for five seasons from 1988 to 1995, and a sixth revival season in 2022, starring the comedy troupe The Kids in the Hall. The troupe, consisting of comedians Dave Foley, Kevin McDonald, Mark McKinney, Bruce McCulloch, and Scott Thompson, appeared as almost all the characters ...

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