Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Brian and Mila Mulroney mourning 'dear' friend, comic Joan Rivers

Jennifer Ditchburn, The Canadian Press, 05 Sep, 2014 01:11 PM
    OTTAWA - No one was safe from Joan Rivers' sharp-edged humour, not even Mila Mulroney, who, a decade ago, found herself on the pointy end of a Rivers dart.
     
    The comedian was among a gilt-edged group celebrating Brian Mulroney's 65th birthday.
     
    "She said the first time she met Brian Mulroney and then met his wife that she was sure I was his third wife because of the jewelry I was wearing," Mila Mulroney recalls.
     
    "It was a very harmless joke, there were no four-letter words. She was really very adaptable. She could be anywhere with anyone."
     
    The former prime minister's wife counted Rivers, an American comedy legend who died Thursday, as a good friend.
     
    "She really wasn't finished and it was such a life cut short," said Mila Mulroney of her reaction to Rivers' death.
     
    "It was upsetting from that standpoint and losing a very dear friend was another point."
     
    Mila Mulroney met Rivers more than twenty years ago through a mutual friend who had worked with former American first lady Nancy Reagan. The Mulroneys were living in 24 Sussex at the time.
     
    The two hit it off, and they met over the years at dinners and events in New York, Montreal, Florida, and elsewhere. A few years ago, the Mulroneys took her to dinner at the Palm Springs home of Canadian business mogul Paul Desmarais.
     
     
    "She liked people that dared to dare, and she always thought that politicians and their families were very big risk-takers," said Mila Mulroney.
     
    She said Rivers was fond of the former prime minister and his famous gift of the gab. Rivers tried to attend his 75th birthday this year, but her packed schedule wouldn't allow it.
     
    "She thought Brian was wonderful because he's a good storyteller, and she actually stole some of his lines," recounts Mulroney.
     
    However, Rivers added her own particular spice to the borrowed gags.
     
    "I think they were a little to risque to give to you. She adapted them, she added a few words to them."
     
    Mulroney said was struck by the difference between Rivers' on and off-stage personas, an observation echoed by many of the comic's friends since her death.
     
    "She was quiet, she was a great listener. She didn't have to have centre stage at all. She was a very good friend. She involved you in her life."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Greenpeace says defamation lawsuit an attempt to muzzle

    Greenpeace says defamation lawsuit an attempt to muzzle
    An environmental group says a forestry company's lawsuit against it is an attempt to muzzle criticism.  

    Greenpeace says defamation lawsuit an attempt to muzzle

    Senators, not PM, should choose Senate Speaker, Liberal senator says

    Senators, not PM, should choose Senate Speaker, Liberal senator says
    Canada's Senate may never become an elected parliamentary chamber, but a move is afoot to bring at least a measure of democracy to the appointed upper house.

    Senators, not PM, should choose Senate Speaker, Liberal senator says

    Best polio vaccine? Oral and injectable, used in tandem, new study says

    Best polio vaccine? Oral and injectable, used in tandem, new study says
    For decades scientists have debated whether injectable or oral polio vaccine is the best option for trying to finish the job of eradicating polio. Now a new study offers an answer: both.

    Best polio vaccine? Oral and injectable, used in tandem, new study says

    RCMP arrest man after father, adult son found slain in Prince Edward Island

    RCMP arrest man after father, adult son found slain in Prince Edward Island
    The RCMP said Thursday they arrested a man after a father and his adult son were found dead in Prince Edward Island.

    RCMP arrest man after father, adult son found slain in Prince Edward Island

    Police best suited to solve cases of missing, murdered women, says Harper

    Police best suited to solve cases of missing, murdered women, says Harper
    Prime Minister Stephen Harper says police investigations, not a national inquiry, are the best way to deal with crimes involving missing and murdered aboriginal women.

    Police best suited to solve cases of missing, murdered women, says Harper

    Vancouver to take Trans Mountain pipeline challenge to Federal Court

    Vancouver to take Trans Mountain pipeline challenge to Federal Court
    The city of Vancouver says it will go to the Federal Court of Appeal on Friday over Kinder Morgan's proposed expansion of its Trans Mountain pipeline.

    Vancouver to take Trans Mountain pipeline challenge to Federal Court