By Andy Blatchford, The Canadian Press
MONTREAL - A popular Quebec comedian, who turned the high-profile case of a missing girl into a punchline, claims he is being shunned by neighbours and has become the target of death threats.
Francophone comic Mike Ward has come under fire in Quebec for using 10-year-old Cedrika Provencher, who vanished almost a year ago, in one of his jokes.
In his June 27 stand-up routine during Montreal's comedy festival, Ward cracked that the provincial tax collection department would take the children of those who owe money.
"Revenu Quebec, they're mentally ill," he quipped during a Just for Laughs gala. "You owe them $8 and they'll kidnap your kids.
"They're the ones who have little Cedrika."
In a video posted Monday on his website, Ward claims the joke was well received by the audience.
But ever since Le Journal de Montreal reported the story last week, he has been chastised by prominent media personalities for delivering a tasteless punchline.
Now he says his joke has turned into a personal nightmare.
"Since Friday, I have not been able to leave my place," Ward says in the video on his website. "Everywhere I go people stare at me, they judge me."
Ward says two people have been hanging around outside his home for days and he claims to have received death threats.
"I think I'm going to stay inside for a year and a half," said Ward, who lives in St-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Que., south of Montreal.
"I'm not going to start my car myself for at least five years."
In the profanity-laced video, Ward insists he never said anything mean about the girl.
Police departments in St-Jean-sur-Richelieu and Montreal both said Tuesday that Ward had not filed a formal complaint about the threats.
Ward's manager, Michel Grenier, said he doesn't know if Ward has gone to authorities to report the threats.
Grenier refused to comment further and said the comedian was not available for an interview.
Provencher disappeared July 31, 2007 from her suburban neighbourhood in Trois-Rivieres, about midway between Quebec City and Montreal.
The girl's case made headlines countrywide and police fruitlessly pursued tips of reported sightings everywhere from Fredericton to Calgary.
Her family still holds hope of finding the freckle-faced, brown-eyed girl.
Provencher's grandfather said while there is nothing funny about Cedrika's disappearance, he doesn't think the comedian intended to be malicious.
"It's a bad joke for us," Henri Provencher said in a telephone interview.
"It's not the right (time) to make this joke because the situation with Cedrika is not a joke."
He also condemned any threats against Ward.
"The population must be calm," he said.
The elder Provencher, who has seen Ward perform before, said the comic probably didn't realize the joke would be painful for family members.
"I don't think he had bad intentions," he said.
"But he should have paid attention and not used Cedrika's name. It wouldn't have taken away from the quality of his show and I think the punchline would have been good anyway."
He also said a friend who attended Ward's show told him the joke bombed, which contradicts media reports.
"Nobody laughed," Provencher said. "They don't like this kind of joke, I don't like it too."
Copyright © 2008 Canadian Press