Pubdate: Sat, 3 Jul 2010 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2010 The Ottawa Citizen Contact: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Author: Bill Brownstein HOLY SMOKE! IT'S CHEECH & CHONG Stoner Duo Set to Light Up Just for Laughs Festival Words of wisdom from those seemingly ageless stoners: "For some reason, we're timeless," marvels Tommy Chong. "Yeah, we're like the immigration problem. We're never going to go away," pledges Richard " Cheech" Marin. Right they are. Cheech and Chong, credited by many with creating the stoner genre of film and comedy, have been sparking up together, and apart, for more than 40 years. Clearly, the pot hasn't killed them or their careers. The duo will likely go several tokes over the line when they make their Just for Laughs fest debut July 16 in Montreal. Presumably on hand to serve as gala hosts, the pair will be doing excerpts on stage from Cheech and Chong: Get It Legal, the followup to their hit reunion tour, Cheech and Chong: Light Up America. Doubtless, the theatre staff are hoping patrons don't attempt to do their own rendition of Up in Smoke, Cheech and Chong's classic stonerflick. Even for those who weren't born in the tandem's heyday, Cheech and Chong are cultural icons - curios? - who still resonate. It's no accident, Cheech observes in an interview with Canwest News Service: "We hypnotize people." Many of their fans weren't even born when the duo separated in 1985 to pursue solo careers. But they got back together as a comedy unit a few years ago, in, of all places, Ottawa. The Canadian connection is strong. The L. A.-raised Cheech, who turns 65 July 13, and the Edmonton-born Chong, 72, f irst started as a joint act in Vancouver in the late 1960s and soon conquered the continent with their countercultural shtick, relating mostly to their everchill states. Their stoner shtick paid monster dividends: They cut nine hit discs, including Big Bambu and Los Cochinos, the latter winning the 1973 Grammy award for best comedy album. They also made nine hit flicks, including Up in Smoke, which grossed more than $100 million at the gate. The guys also materialized in Graham Chapman's pirate spoof Yellowbeard and Martin Scorsese's off-centred After Hours. After a messy split in the mid-'80s, Cheech showed up in such flicks as Tin Cup and the Spy Kids trilogy, as well as the TV series Nash Bridges. Chong popped up in comedy clubs and on That '70s Show. They planned to get back together for a movie in 2003, but Chong had to do nine months in the jug after pleading guilty to charges of distributing drug paraphernalia in the U.S. "We don't fight with each other any more," Chong says. "We've got our wives to fight with now." What is intriguing is that the same issues that burned when the pair first started out continue to sizzle today: the legalization of marijuana and Latino immigration crackdowns. " I did Born in East L.A. almost 25 years ago, but the topic is still as relevant today - even more so," says a no-nonsense Cheech, about the f ilm comedy that he wrote, directed and starred in about a legal Latino in L. A. who is deported to Mexico. "And, of course, there are less people smoking dope now than ever before," cracks Cheech. " But that's what keeps us in the news and still working," Chong interjects. Chong still maintains a residence in Vancouver: " I go back frequently to put out the garbage and to mow the grass." We'll leave the latter remark to your own imaginations. The pair - their voices, anyway - are set to be unleashed shortly in an animated feature film. "We're playing around with a few titles," Cheech says. " But I think we've settled on Avatar 2. It has a nice ring to it." They are also working on a live action feature, set in Mexico and slated for release next year. The working title: Grumpy Old Stoners. Ah, old habits die hard. But lucrative though those habits may be, they do invite much scrutiny - mostly for Chong - from customs off icials. Due to his bust, Chong is invariably on a watch list. "When I came to Ottawa, I was greeted by agents in flak jackets with automatic weapons and sniffer dogs," Chong claims. " Then they found out that I was Canadian and they had to let me in." Cheech muses that he has been largely spared these hassles at the border: "They've tried to get me for narcotics smuggling, but I usually hand them back to Tommy at that point. On the other hand, they did think I was a terrorist in Edmonton." Chong does, however, believe that pot will be legalized in parts of the U.S. and even Canada within the next three years. But that's a good news/ bad news scenario: " Once they do legalize it, we'll break up for good," Chong laments. " We won't have an act any longer." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake