TORONTO 鈥 Cedric the Entertainer admits it took some coercing for him to star in The Neighbourhood.
Debuting Monday on Global and CBS, the comedy series stars the veteran performer and Tichina Arnold of Martin fame as the Butlers, who live in a predominantly African-American neighbourhood in Los Angeles.
Former New Girl star Max Greenfield and Beth Behrs of 2 Broke Girls fame play the Johnsons, a white family that moves next door and disrupts the dynamics of the community.
Cedric said he wasn鈥檛 sure about tackling such sensitive subject matter with levity. He worked with show creator Jim Reynolds to get the tone right.
鈥淭he idea of the show actually happened to him, where he moved into this predominantly black neighbourhood, and yet when I first read the script, it was strictly from his point of view,鈥 the actor and standup star, who was born Cedric Antonio Kyles, said in an interview.
鈥淚t didn鈥檛 necessarily tell the story of how the black guy saw it and it made it strictly about race and I was like: 鈥楴o.鈥 I didn鈥檛 respond to the script at first, so we met, we started to talk, we found some commonality about it.鈥
The story sees the Johnsons move to the area from Michigan when Behrs鈥 character gets a job as a school principal in L.A.
Other cast members include Marcel Spears and Sheaun McKinney as the Butlers鈥 sons, and Hank Greenspan as the Johnsons鈥 son.
Cedric, who co-starred on the sitcom The Steve Harvey Show from 1996 to 2002, said he liked that The Neighbourhood was a multi-cam series with a 鈥渘ostalgic energy to it.鈥
Having a live audience helps them determine whether a joke works and provides much-needed immediate feedback when they鈥檙e dealing with this type of subject matter.
鈥淚 think we can defuse things,鈥 he said, 鈥渁nd at the same time run straight at 鈥檈m in a way that people are like: 鈥極h, you鈥檙e not preaching to me, you鈥檙e just showing me what would be a stage play and I can watch it happen and know that hopefully the outcome will be something that either I鈥檒l be shocked and grow by and moved by, or I鈥檓 going to be entertained most of the time with a good laugh.鈥濃
Still, there were moments during shooting when the test audiences weren鈥檛 sure whether to laugh, he said.
Cedric is hoping audiences will find parts of the series funny, despite ongoing racial tensions in the U.S.
鈥淚 just feel it鈥檚 unfortunate that that鈥檚 the tone of the country, and so with this show we can have the opportunity to take that, flip it and then turn it into some fun,鈥 the Missouri native said.
鈥淓ven though we do have serious subject matter, we still know that it鈥檚 an opportunity for laughter inside of it.鈥