Comedian and actor Stéphane Rousseau spoke with his friend Martin Matte on the set of the show on Thursday evening about the relationship he had with his father and how he took advantage of his son’s fame at the beginning of his career Martin Matte live.
When asked by the moderator who he had made the 100 moves and celebrated memorable “parties” with, Stéphane Rousseau admitted that his father often attacked him.
“My father, sometimes, […] told me we were going somewhere. We ended up not driving to the place he told me, or we drove there, but there was a stop along the way. Once we stopped at a hair salon. […] He had posters in his suitcase, markers and all that stuff. He took me to a hair salon in Ville Mercier,” he said.
“It’s your father. It makes you angry because you got hit a little, but you know he likes it. Those little ladies were super happy,” the comedian added with a smile, but stressed that he never really meant to confront him.
“I was a little uncomfortable with it. He grabbed me all the time, differently, another time,” Stéphane Rousseau then added.
“When I finally had a confrontation with him, I waited too long and it started…it wasn’t pretty,” he continued.
Discover sexuality with the Smurfs
In an at times inconsistent interview, in which Martin Matte sometimes seemed to be pressed for time, Stéphane Rousseau allowed himself a suggestive, colorful to say the least, anecdote from his youth, about his bespectacled Smurf and Smurfette’s neighbor. Martin Matte’s live team found it completely by chance.
The guest of the week, who also hosted a talk show, Le Show de Rousseau, in 2018, was entitled to a personalized appearance by Appendeux (Julien Corriveau and Jean-François Provençal). The duo that we met in the group Les Appendices paid particular tribute to Ms. Jigger, the famous puppet controlled by the comedian.
A look back at the first
Martin Matte returned on Thursday evening to the echoes of the premiere of his talk show that he received during the week. In particular, he took the liberty of reading some comments from Internet users, such as those of a certain Francine, who accused him of cutting off his guest of the week, Patrick Huard.
In his opening number, the comedian, who gained confidence during the episode – and barely spoke about penises – gave a brief review of current events and, among other things, questioned Prime Minister François Legault’s selective listening after he raised the possibility of one to build a third connection between Quebec and Lévis.
“It’s like digging up your grandmother so you’re not alone at Christmas […]. He says he’s in listening mode. “This has to be selective listening because he doesn’t listen to teachers or nurses, he only listens to the voters he lost,” the moderator said.
Filmed at Espace St-Denis, “Martin Matte en direct” is shown every Thursday at 8 p.m. on TVA.
Dumas and his band provide the musical atmosphere.