In partnership with ‘The King Of Staten Island’
In The King Of Staten Island, Scott Carlin is struggling to get his life together, still grappling with the death of his firefighter dad when he was a kid. The comedy draws from Saturday Night Live star Pete Davidsonās own life, using the death of his father and his life growing up in New Yorkās āforgotten boroughā as a foundation for one of the most heartfelt and hilarious movies to be released so far this year. Written by Davidson, Dave Sirus and Judd Apatow, The King Of Staten Island (available to rent at home now) looks set to cement the comedianās place as one of the funniest, brightest stars around right now, so what better time to get to know him?
Where it all began
He might be able to sell out grand venues and command the attention of film and TVās most powerful names, but Davidsonās first comedy performance was a little more modest. Seeing potential in him when he was 16 years old, a friendās dad organised a set for him at a makeshift comedy club run out of the back of a bowling alley in Staten Island. The rest, as they say, is history.
Peteās comedy influences
Davidson has listed his comedy influences as Dane Cook and Adam Sandler. The most important comic in his life, though, is Bill Burr, who he saw in Atlantic City when he was 16 and has called āthe best comedian of all time, and a real-life heroā. That set inspired the wannabe comic to start frequenting New Yorkās open mic scene, performing himself a few nights a week. Now, Davidson is starring alongside his biggest hero ā Burr plays Raymond Bishop, the firefighter with his eye set on Scottās mum, in The King Of Staten Island.

Losing his father
Like his character in The King Of Staten Island, Davidsonās dad was a firefighter who died trying to save other peopleās lives. In real life, Scott Davidson died on 9/11 when his son was seven years old. The tragedy had a huge impact on the star, who frequently references his dadās death in his material as a way of lessening the pain. When Davidson was still fairly unknown in mainstream comedy, he participated in Comedy Centralās Roast Of Justin Bieber, drawing a big reaction for his unflinchingly raw material. āI lost my dad on 9/11 and I always regretted growing up without a dad,ā he said at one point. āUntil I met yours, Justin. Now Iām glad mineās dead.ā
A brutally honest comedian
Nothing is off limits in Davidsonās set, be that the death of his dad, his mental health issues, drug use or his engagement to Ariana Grande (and their subsequent break-up). His performances are often called ādarkā because of his willingness to use the bad moments in his life to elicit a laugh from the audience. āI always have to be honest,ā he told the New York Times recently of his act. āIt automatically shuts down everyone. Also, most people are lying to you and most of it is an act. The reason Iām able to relate to certain people is because of that.”

His big break
After becoming a part of New Yorkās comedy club circuit, Davidson caught the attention of Amy Schumer, who recommended him to comedy kingmaker Judd Apatow. The director was looking for someone to play a very small part in 2015 movie Trainwreck and ended up casting Davidson. His role featured only one line, but he still managed to make an impression on one of the filmās stars. According to the rising comic, the day after he filmed his scene he got a phone call from Bill Hader telling him heād recommended him to SNL creator Lorne Michaels. From there, a star was born, becoming one of the youngest cast members of the long-running show at the age of 20.
Heās already built up an impressive resumĆ©
Over the last two years, the comedian has become a pretty in-demand name in the film world. Heās starred in Netflix rom-coms (Set It Up), voiced a CGI bird (The Angry Birds Movie 2), and stolen the show in indie flicks (Big Time Adolescence). His star doesnāt look set to stop rising just yet either ā as well as starring in, co-writing and co-producing The King Of Staten Island, Davidson is also set to play an as-yet-unknown character in James Gunnās The Suicide Squad.
His best character (so far)
Davidson might have described himself as a āutility playerā when it comes to his role on SNL, but thatās to overlook his most iconic character so far ā Chad. The part involves little but monosyllabic responses, a vacant look, and finding dirty humour in his scene-matesā lines. But the results are undeniably hilarious, whether heās the oblivious pool boy set free from an affair with suburban mum Julia Louis Dreyfus, or the victim in a Scream-style horror movie.
(Ā©2020. Universal Studios. All rights reserved.)
The post Get to know Pete Davidson, the rising SNL star with his own Judd Apatow movie appeared first on NME Music News, Reviews, Videos, Galleries, Tickets and Blogs | NME.COM.