People Weekly, Volume 45,
Issue 18, May 6, 1996 , p. 217+ .
Section: ON THE MOVE
Author: MICHAEL A. LIPTON
MARIA SPEIDEL IN MANHATTAN
Mark McKinney's neighbors
must think his apartment is haunted. Voices--some with weird European accents,
others squawking like chickens--resonate through the walls of the two-bedroom
place the Saturday Night Live regular shares with his wife, Marina Gharabegian,
and their infant son, Christopher, on Manhattan's Upper West Side. "They're
all these different people who live in Mark's head," explains Gharabegian,
28, a former caterer who married McKinney last September. "Mark will start
talking to me in a character's voice, and a few days later it will end up on
television."
Using that method,
McKinney, 33, created the Chicken Lady, a shrill featherbrain he first played
(in beak and dress) as one of the Kids in the Hall, the celebrated troupe of
Canadian sketch comics who performed from 1984 to 1994. McKinney's most recent
character is Don Roritor, the villainous drug-company tycoon he plays in Kids in
the Hall's first movie, Brain Candy, which opened nationally on April 12.
Today, though, McKinney
is speaking for himself. Very softly. Christopher Thomas Russell McKinney, born
on March 4, is napping in his nursery, and his puffy-eyed dad (who has been
getting by on five hours of sleep) is determined not to wake him. Fatherhood
really isn't much of a change, McKinney insists: "You just have to make
this adjustment to go without sleep."
McKinney could have used
a nap after shooting Brain Candy last summer. The movie, with Dave Foley, Kevin
McDonald, Bruce McCulloch and Scott Thompson, showcases all five in multiple
roles. Besides evil executive Roritor--who is marketing a feel-good drug called
Gleemonex as if it were a Snickers bar--McKinney turns up as a dopey cop, a
Croatian cabbie, a nerdy chemist and a talk show diva. "Mark is like Peter
Sellers," says McDonald. "He can do accents at the drop of a
hat."
Peter Sellers!
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McKinney has heard a lot
of exotic speech patterns firsthand. His father, Russell, is a retired Canadian
career diplomat, and his mother, Chloe, is an architectural writer. "I was
a diplomatic brat," says McKinney, who was born in Ottawa but moved with
his family--including sister Jayne (now 39 and a children's shelter manager) and
brother Nick (27 and also a comedian)--to postings around the world. He went on
to study at Memorial University in Newfoundland in 1980. "I was not a
serious student," he says. But before flunking out in his freshman year, he
worked at the campus radio station, where he had his first brush with comedy.
"I did funny voices for commercials," he says.
Moving to Calgary, Alta.,
in the late 1980s, he hooked up with McCulloch and Norm Hiscock (now an SNL
writer), and the three formed a comedy troupe, the Audience. Then, in 1983,
McKinney and McCulloch set out for Toronto, where they teamed with Foley and
McDonald, who called themselves the Kids in the Hall. Their name came from a
famous Jack Benny aside, "I got that one from the kids in the hall"--a
reference to the gag writers who hung around outside his office.
Benny, presumably, would
have blanched at these Kids, who deal in dark humor (one sketch has trappers
slaying yuppies, then selling their Armani "pelts") and often dress in
drag. By 1989 the Kids had become a national phenomenon, and SNL producer--and
fellow Canadian--Lorne Michaels signed them to a CBC series that began that
year. (The show is now in reruns on Comedy Central.) They taped their last show
in 1994 and have begun to prosper on their own. Foley now stars on NBC's
NewsRadio; McDonald was in National Lampoon's Senior Trip; Thompson is a regular
on The Larry Sanders Show; and McKinney, hired as an SNL regular in January
1995, survived last summer's cast purge to emerge as one of this season's stars.
"His Steve Forbes impressio n," Michaels says, "is
brilliant."
Forbes agrees--with the
possible exception of McKinney's manic giggle. When the publisher announced his
presidential candidacy, his daughter Moira told him her greatest fear was that
he would be parodied on Saturday Night Live. Forbes appeared as an SNL guest
host himself on April 13. "I assured her this was progress," he says.
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