Diceman back for comedy series

NEW YORK (AP) - Andrew Dice Clay finds out his live-in girlfriend's ex is paying alimony. Never mind that the monthly checks help keep the lights on at the household of this less-than-flourishing comedian - his raging male ego just won't stand for it!

And then, on another episode, comes Oscar-winning actor Adrien Brody, who asks Dice if he can shadow the comedian to prepare for a Broadway role as the quintessential manly man, the sort of swaggering Brooklynite that Clay personifies. Brody transforms himself into a Dice clone who even wants to observe the Diceman's technique in the bedroom.

Welcome to the world of "Dice," a new Showtime comedy premiering the first of its six episodes at 8:30 p.m. CDT Sunday. Kevin Corrigan plays Milkshake, Dice's sidekick. Natasha Leggero guest stars as Carmen, his longtime squeeze. And his real-life grown sons Dillon and Max Silverstein play his sons.

"Dice" draws on the outrageous, chaotic life of this performer and family man as he scuffles in Las Vegas for a show-biz comeback - with his efforts often falling flat.

"Dice ruins everything," Clay said in a recent interview, laughing at the leather-clad lout at the heart of his new series who, in the first episode, gets his nose out of joint when his favorite casino boosts the ATM fee to $5 and, as a result, nearly drives him to ruin his girlfriend's brother's wedding.

This is the character Clay has always insisted lives apart from him as an onstage surrogate, a comic alter ego whose appearances used to fill arenas while his detractors blasted him as "filthy," "racist" and "misogynous."

"I paint these crazy sexual cartoon pictures that the audience relates to," Clay declares. "It's purely for the sake of comedy."

The man born 58 years ago as Andrew Clay Silverstein is speaking affably, cordially and at relatively low decibels, though bedecked in trademark Diceman style: black leather jacket, T-shirt stretched across his massive chest, tinted shades, leather fingerless gloves.

"With the microscope I was put under, my career went down for a while," he concedes. But in recent years, he has enjoyed a resurgence and a wave of unaccustomed respect thanks to acting turns in Woody Allen's "Blue Jasmine" and Martin Scorsese's current HBO drama series "Vinyl."

Clay says he loves acting, explaining that was his gateway into entertainment.

"When I got onstage as a comic nearly 40 years ago, it wasn't about standup comedy, it was about acting: I started developing my acting chops. And from there the Diceman phenonema happened."

On his new series, he says gratefully, he gets to act out a role - or, rather two: a version of his real-life self as well as his public Diceman persona.

Upcoming Events