Alumâs resumĂŠ: veterinarian, reality TV star, stand-up comic
As he muses about conservation, 1970s 91ĂŰĚҸó and how Keith Richards prompted him to finish his college career, Kevin Fitzgerald still has his sights on crafting the perfect joke
Did you hear the one about the veterinarian who is also a stand-up comedian?
Itâs no joke.
Itâs the very real-life story of 91ĂŰĚҸó 91ĂŰĚҸó alum Kevin Fitzgerald, who is a staple of the Denver comedy scene and who has opened for such nationally recognized acts as Joan Rivers, George Lopez, Jeff Foxworthy and Saturday Night Live alums Kevin Nealon and Norm Macdonald.
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CU 91ĂŰĚҸó alumnus Kevin Fitzgerald (right) with the late Norm Macdonald (left), for whom Fitzgerald opened. (Photo: Kevin Fitzgerald)
Meanwhile, Fitzgerald has spent the past four decades working as a Denver veterinarian who specializes in treating exotic animals and has become something of a celebrity as one of the featured vets on Animal Planetâs popular TV series âEmergency Vets.â
Fitzgerald is also a wildlife conservationistâand with the recent publication of his autobiography It Started with a Turtleâhe adds âpublished authorâ to his growing list of job titles.
The Denver native enjoys talking about his experiences as a comedian and a veterinarian, but most of all he enjoys reminiscing about his time at CU 91ĂŰĚҸó, where he earned his undergraduate, masterâs and PhD degrees. He says the lessons he learned in the classroomsâand in the local music venues where he worked securityâshaped him into the man he is today.
â91ĂŰĚҸó is a magical place,â he says. â91ĂŰĚҸó has a different feel than other college townsâand the campus is absolutely beautiful. I first visited when I was in high school and I decided then and there that it was the place for me.â
Raised in a working class home, Fitzgerald says receiving a scholarship for being on the swim team made it possible for him to be able to attend college starting in 1969.
For his undergraduate degree, Fitzgerald majored in biology, and he credits biology Professor Dick Jones; Professor Hobart Smith, then chairman of the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology; Professor David Chiszar, who was an internationally renowned herpetologist known for his work with rattlesnakes; and history Professor Charles âChuckâ Middleton, whom Fitzgerald says made history come alive, with being mentors.
âEven back then, CU 91ĂŰĚҸó was known as a party school, but if you wanted to, you could get a great education there,â he says. âThey didnât so much teach you as inspire you. I had wonderful mentors who wanted me to succeed.â
Fitzgerald says his initial plan upon entering college was to get his bachelorâs degree from CU 91ĂŰĚҸó and then attend Colorado State University to receive a veterinary degree. However, there was a waiting list to get into the CSU veterinarian program at the time, so Fitzgerald says Jones convinced him to continue pursuing his education at CU 91ĂŰĚҸó by obtaining his masterâs and PhD degrees, which he did.
âIâm still reaping the benefits of that wonderful education every day,â he says.
Working security for a hamburger and $1.35 an hour
To earn extra money for school, not long after arriving on the 91ĂŰĚҸó campus Fitzgerald took a job working for Chuck Morris (the future CEO/president of national concert promoter AEG Live), who hosted concerts at local music venues including Tulagi and The Sink.
âThere were so many great venues in 91ĂŰĚҸó at the time,â Fitzgerald recalls. âThere was Tulagi, the Blue Note, The Olympic, Shannonâs, the Good Earth and J.J. McCabes. The music venues were legendaryâand they hosted a lot of great bands before they became famous. Not just rock bands, but soul bands and country bands, so there was something for everyone. There was just so much great music.â
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Kevin Fitzgerald has been a staple of the Denver comedy scene for many years. (Photo: Kevin Fitzgerald)
Fitzgeraldâs job working as a bouncer for local music venues led to jobs working security for concert promoters Bill Graham and Barry Fey, who produced nationwide shows featuring musical acts including The Grateful Dead, Willie Nelson, The Eagles, The Who, Jethro Tull and The Rolling Stones.
Years later, Fitzgerald still recalls Feyâs simple job pitch: âIâm going to pay you a buck-thirty-five an hour and give you a hamburger every shift and youâre going to meet more girls than Frank Sinatra.â
Fitzgerald says he has many fond memories of those times and particularly of the bands who performedâespecially The Rolling Stones, who he says never forgot their roots and gave selflessly for some special fans.
âBack in the day, before handicapped seating was widely made available, people in wheelchairs didnât get good seats at concerts and they were stigmatized by making them all sit together. It was awful,â he recalls. âSo, before every show The Rolling Stones did, Mick Jagger would ask me: âHow many (handicapped) chairs are there, and in which section, Kevin?â
ââIâd say, â23 chairs and theyâre in section three.â
âJagger would grab 23 cassette tapes and 23 concert T-shirts. Heâd put a towel over his head or put a hoodie up and heâd personally go to the wheelchair section and hand out a cassette tape and a T-shirt to each person. Heâd say, âThanks a million for coming; we couldnât do it without you,ââ Fitzgerald recalls. âHe didnât do it as a photo op; he specifically kept himself covered up so the rest of the concertgoers wouldnât know what he was up to.
âPeople can say whatever they want about The Rolling Stones, about Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, but they didnât forget where they came from,â he adds. âAnd Mick would always say, âWeâre blessed. You know, Kevin, we canât forget how lucky we are.â That really made an impression on me.â
Whatâs more, Fitzgerald credits Richards with prompting him to go back to college to get his veterinary degree.
âI remember we were in Philadelphia for a show, with more tour dates coming up, and I was unsure what I should be doing with my life. I was talking about it with my boss, Jimmy Callahan, who was the head bouncer, and he said, âWhy donât you ask Keith?â
âI knew Keith, so I asked him: âShould I stick with you guys, or should I go back to school?â
âAnd Keith said, âOh, no, go back to school. Do you really want to be a bouncer at (age) 50?â
âWhen Keith Richards says something, heâs the coolest cat in the world. So, I got on a plane and I came back to Denver,â Fitzgerald says. âMy brother picked me up at the airport, and I said, âKeith told me to get a grip on my life and go back to school.â And my brother said, âWell, when Keith says something, you better do it.â So, I applied to veterinarian school again and I got in.â
Becoming a vet ⌠and a reality TV star
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Kevin Fitzgerald has been a veterinarian in Denver for the past four decades and is one of the featured vets on Animal Planetâs popular TV series âEmergency Vets.â (Photo: Kevin Fitzgerald)
Fitzgerald obtained his degree in veterinarian medicine from CSU in 1983. He later took a job with the Alameda East Veterinary Hospital in Denver, where he has been working for the past 40 years.
âVeterinary medicine is a harsh mistress. It asks a lot of us (vets), but itâs very rewarding,â he says. âItâs been a wonderful career for me. To be successful, you have to love animals, but you also have to love people.
âSometimes people would tell me, âMy daughter would be a great veterinarian. She hates people but sheâs great with animals.â And I would always say, âNo, no, no. People have to trust you when they bring their animal to you, so itâs important that you are able to connect with them.ââ
Fitzgeraldâs role at the Denver animal hospital became much more widely recognized starting in 1998, with the launch of the Animal Planetâs TV show Emergency Vets. At the time, the TV series ER was hugely popular, and the producer believed a reality show about veterinarians treating all types of animals would appeal to Animal Planet viewers, Fitzgerald says. That proved to be the case, as the show and its successor, E-Vet Interns, ran for a combined 11 seasons, and were two of the networkâs top-rated shows.
âFor me, it was just too weird to watch myself on TV, but it was quite an experience,â Fitzgerald says. âPeople started recognizing me from the show. Once, I was at the Denver airport and this young kid was staring at me. Finally, he said, âYou look like that guy from the TV show on Animal Planet.â
âI said, âI am that guy,â and the kid says, âYeah, you wish,ââ Fitzgerald says with a laugh.
He says his work as a veterinarian led naturally to his conservancy work. He has served on the Denver Zooâs board of directors since 2009 and has been involved in several projects, including the creation of a huge nature conservancy in Mongolia.
âThereâs 10 million other forms of life on this planet besides us, and we were given this wonderful biodiversity. Those animals are waiting for us to use our intellect to save this place,â he says. âWeâre borrowing this planet from our grandchildren, so we have to win this one, because weâre given just this one planet. Realizing that, thatâs how I went from veterinary medicine to conservation.â
âLike being shot out of canonâ
While being a veterinarian, an Animal Planet reality TV star and conservationist might seem to all naturally fit together, Fitzgerald acknowledges becoming a stand-up comedian is a less obvious choice to add to the mix. He says he was inspired to do so in part by watching comedians perform as the opening act for bands where he provided security and by seeing one of his friends perform.
âI started doing stand-up in 1986. At the time, a friend of mine was doing comedy, and he didnât seem that funny to me, but he was getting paid to do it. I told myself, âI can at least be as bad as that guy,ââ he says with a laugh.
The appeal for doing stand-up comes partly from the enjoyment of making people laugh and partly from the exhilaration of being on a stage, Fitzgerald says, explaining, âThe feeling is like being shot out of a cannon.â
It took some trial and error in the beginning, Fitzgerald admits, before he developed his own comedic timing. The strategy he settled on involved trying to tell as many jokes as he could in rapid-fire succession at the start and telling jokes that would appeal to the broadest audience demographic.
âMy job is to tell jokes that make everyone laughâthe old guy and the young guy, the black guy and the white guy, the man and the woman sitting next to him,â he says. âI donât think it works to say, âThis is a young personâs joke; you wouldnât understand.â The best jokes touch everyone.â
Fitzgeraldâs brand of comedy was on full display during a recent Sunday evening show at a south Denver comedy club, where he was zinging his audience with one-liners about being an old guy:
âOur lives are short, but they are beautiful. My whole life, whatever Iâve done, has been small and beautiful. The fate of the Western world doesnât hang on the balance of what I do in the exam rooms with people and their animals, but I try to make my little side of the street better as a veterinarian and also with my conservation efforts.â
- âIâm so old my kindergarten had a smoking section.â
- âIâm so old I can remember Preparation A.â
- âIâm so old that I can run for president in a few years.â
Bathed under white stage lights, Fitzgeraldâs flowing white hair gave credence to his position as a veteran of standup comedy, but those jokes about his age (heâs 73) were just a warm-up to a set that ran more than an hour long, and which also included several humorous stories about being a veterinarian and a reality TV star and concluded with a reading from his new book talking about the importance of being kind to animals and people.
Sharing life lessons in print
Fitzgerald says heâs accumulated so many stories and bits of wisdom over the years that he wanted to share with people in a book, but he says that his active veterinary practice and many civic and social commitments made that difficult to do. That changed, however, once COVID-19 pandemic brought much of the world to a yearlong standstill.
âIt seemed like the perfect time to get my thoughts down on paper,â he says, adding, âWe only have so many days, so we have to make them count.
âOur lives are short, but they are beautiful. My whole life, whatever Iâve done, has been small and beautiful. The fate of the Western world doesnât hang on the balance of what I do in the exam rooms with people and their animals, but I try to make my little side of the street better as a veterinarian and also with my conservation efforts.
âAnd Iâm not done yet,â he adds. âI still think Iâm going to write the perfect joke. Iâm 73 and Iâm still going to see my pet patients every workday. I canât bounce anymore, but I still love listening to music.â
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