Robin
Williams took a swipe at the Quebec separatist movement
while Kid Rock belted out a revenge ballad to ex-wife
Pamela Anderson as nearly 2,000 troops gathered for
a pre-Christmas show at Kandahar Airfield on Friday.
Comedian Lewis Black, Miss USA Rachel Smith, who
was born on a military base in Panama, and cycling
legend Lance Armstrong were also on hand as part of
the six-day, 14-show tour organized by the American
United Service Organization.
Designed as a morale booster, Canadians figured prominently
in Williams' act as he attempted to deliver jokes
in a thick Quebecois accent and performed a spot on
imitation of former prime minister Jean Chrétien.
"You're a kind people. You're like the apartment
of a very loud party. It's wonderful, keep it down
eh," Williams said of Canada.
The Oscar winner is a veteran on the USO circuit,
having visited Afghanistan four times.
"It's pretty wild when you do have such a mixed
crowd of Danish, Belgian and English. Even the French
are going; we understand you're making fun. It's pretty
wild," he told reporters on Friday.
Williams said it's interesting to revisit the country
and see the growth and change in the region.
"The good news is there are people here doing
a great job and that's why we came, because you know
everyone thinks of Afghanistan as being a forgotten
war but it was the first war and the one, to me, that
mattered the most because Osama lives somewhere that
way," he said pointing toward the Afghan countryside.
Williams, Armstrong and company have already performed
in Qatar, Kuwait, Iraq and will perform in Kyrgyzstan
and Europe before returning to the U.S.
Maj. Vanessa Daniel, a nurse stationed in Afghanistan,
was overjoyed with her autographed photo of Williams.
"I really love him," she said.
"I did the Tour of Courage with Lance Armstrong
in Vancouver and I had to come all the way to Kandahar
to get his autograph. It's Christmas time and I think
the morale of the troops has really improved so it's
awesome that we got a really good lineup here today,"
she said of the show.
To add to the entertainment, Electronic Arts donated
and shipped more than 2,000 video games to service
members throughout the Persian Gulf region.
The NFL donated hundreds of free footballs while
Armstrong donated thousands of LIVESTRONG T-shirts
and wristbands to troops. Thousands of DVDs and CDs
were also delivered to troops overseas from companies
like HBO, Comedy Central and Pixar.
"It was awesome and if you're going to spend
Christmas in the desert, what better way than to have
celebrities like this here," Capt. Andrew Legg
told reporters after the show.
"It's great for morale, I'd like to see more
things like this. I don't know what Canada has planned,
obviously these things are kept secret right up until
the last moment, but I hope that we see more people
like this from Canada. You really see the effect it
has on moral regardless of what nation we come from
when we're here," he said.
This article was published on December
21, 2007 on ctv.ca |