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Charlie Sheen Booed Off The Stage At Live Show In Detroit

Sheen Detroit

First Posted: 04/03/11 11:02 AM ET Updated: 06/03/11 06:12 AM ET

There was no #winning for Charlie Sheen last night.

The star, who kicked off his "Violent Torpedo of Truth" stage show in Detroit on Saturday, was booed off the stage as he berated the audience and spoke incoherently, stringing together a series of catchphrases that had both lost him his job on sitcom "Two and a Half Men" and turned him into an internet star/curiosity.

As is his customary response now, Sheen is reportedly not upset, blaming the situation on the audience and not himself. He continues the live tour, a 20-date sojourn across North America, on Sunday night in Chicago.

There are still no refunds available.

AP story below:

AP:
Charlie Sheen was heckled, booed and eventually abandoned by the crowd at his inaugural stage show, with many of the audience members chanting "refund" and heading for the exits even before the show abruptly ended.

Winning? Not on opening night.

The first stop on Sheen's "My Violent Torpedo of Truth/Defeat is Not an Option" 20-city variety show started Saturday night with thunderous applause but ended 70 minutes later. In between, Sheen tried to appease his audience with rants, a rapper and a question and answer session, ultimately concluding the first show was "an experiment."

The former "Two and a Half Men" star learned firsthand at Detroit's 5,100-seat Fox Theatre that show business still requires a show. The debacle called into question the fate of the nascent tour. Some fans already predicted a premature end for the monthlong trek, which was scheduled to resume Sunday in Chicago.

"No way" the show makes it through all the dates, said Bob Orlowski, a lawyer from Plymouth, Mich., who watched with six clients in a suite.

"He's not suited for this," said Orlowski, 46. "It wasn't funny."

Sheen's publicist, Larry Solters, declined to comment after the show. Sheen, 45, reappeared after the house lights went up to thank the hundreds who remained.

It wasn't clear when Sheen lost the audience, but there were many awkward moments.

Sheen, known for his wild partying and rampant drug use, said he thought Detroit would be a good place to tell some stories about crack cocaine. The remark prompted loud, immediate boos.

At another point, Sheen showed a short film he wrote, directed and produced years ago called "RPG." He sat in the front row to watch the flick, which starred a much younger Johnny Depp. Again, more boos.

The show actually started off with a bang.

After a video montage of movie clips – Sheen in "Wall Street" and "Platoon" set to a guitar solo from Sheen friend Rob Patterson – the star emerged to raucous applause and a standing ovation. The cheering increased as the women he calls his "goddesses" took the stage.

The two women, a former porn star and an actress who live with him, carried placards with the words "War" and "Lock," a reference to Sheen's recent description of himself.

When the goddesses locked lips in front of him, Sheen smirked. He had the crowd in the palm of his hand.

"I don't see a single empty seat," he said.

That quickly changed.

As the showed bogged down, an audience member booed, prompting Sheen to reply, "I've already got your money, dude."

Things only got worse.

"Tonight's an experiment," he said.

For some, it was an expensive experiment.

Linda Fugate, who paid $150 for two seats, left the theater and walked up the street, yelling, "I want my money back!"

"I was hoping for something. I didn't think it would be this bad," said Fugate, a 47-year-old from Lincoln Park, Mich.

Fans who arrived at the theater – some flying in for the show – said they were hoping to see the increasingly eccentric actor deliver some of the colorful rants that have made him an Internet star since his ugly falling out with CBS and the producers of "Two and a Half Men."

They got the ranting. It just wasn't funny.

"Brutal. I expected him to at least entertain a little bit," said Rodney Gagnon, 34, of Windsor, Ontario.

Some saw something between victory and defeat.

Geoff Rezek, 69, a computer consultant from Darien, Conn., who met Sheen after the concert and received a poster, said the show needed work, but was salvageable. He believes Sheen is a consummate showman who took a risk.

"I wouldn't miss the first show. Who knows if there's going to be a second show?" Rezek said, perhaps prophetically. He also bought a ticket for Sheen's performance next week in Connecticut.

Sheen has made headlines in recent years as much for his drug use, failed marriages, custody disputes and run-ins with the police, as for his acting. Martin Sheen has compared his son's struggle with addiction to a cancer patient's struggle for survival.

In August, the wayward star pleaded guilty in Aspen, Colo., to misdemeanor third-degree assault after a Christmas Day altercation with his third wife, Brooke Mueller. The couple have since finalized their divorce.

Charlie Sheen's behavior, which included lashing out at "Two and a Half Men" producer Chuck Lorre, finally became too much for Warner Bros. Television, which fired him March 7.

Sheen fired back with a $100 million lawsuit and all-out media assault in which he informed the world about his standing as a "rock star from Mars" with "Adonis DNA."

After one of the sustained booing moments, Sheen tried to calm the crowd.

"Come on, guys. You paid to see me," he said. "... You gave me your hard-earned money without knowing what this (expletive) show was about. I'm here now ... and I'm willing to open up."

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There was no #winning for Charlie Sheen last night. The star, who kicked off his "Violent Torpedo of Truth" stage show in Detroit on Saturday, was booed off the stage as he berated the audience and...
There was no #winning for Charlie Sheen last night. The star, who kicked off his "Violent Torpedo of Truth" stage show in Detroit on Saturday, was booed off the stage as he berated the audience and...
 
 
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06:44 PM on 04/07/2011
Just because Sheen has engineered a trainwreck and is selling it off as entertainment, does not mean that it might, or might not, be entertaining to some. People find humor in all sorts of things that others do not. That is subjective, and all comes down to taste. You pay to see the Sheen show? You gotta expect to get what he gives you.

I do not feel sorry for anyone that paid to see Sheen- but I do feel sorry for the people that paid to see Sheen, stuck around as they wanted to trudge through it- hoping for a jewel in the mud, something hilarious or insightful- and then got their show cut short buy a group of people that decided to boo him offstage. I mean, I can understand booing an opening act that puts on a shoddy performance as a method of getting to the headliner(s), but booing the main act only provides shorter show and a quick trip out.

The blame for the outcome of this event can go to certain members of the audience for booing, for others in the audience for allowing it or going along with it, and to Sheen for not being able to perform proper crowd control over the dissatisfied. Professional comics know how to deal with hecklers, see examples from Dane Cook, or Gilbert Godfried's telling of the aristocrats joke at Hef's Roast.
05:57 PM on 04/07/2011
I started laughing when they wrote Charlie blames the audience... lol.
02:50 PM on 04/07/2011
People who paid for this, don't deserve their money back.
02:30 PM on 04/07/2011
Find it funny that some of the same people who demand personal autonomy are posting here about how Charlie needs to be locked away or somehow forced to a rehab place for his purported addictions. Ok, there is the real possibility of him having drug and some sort of sex addict issues. Really though is it anyone else business? To be concerned, yes. But in no way forced or coerced into some change that others feel he needs (Maybe to be like yourself and not threaten your comfort zone?) Also as far as I knew money and power seem to drive most sectors of our society. He has both. The people in Detroit are the biggest fools. They paid good money to see a show from someone who gets in your face and is outrageous in his behavior and then get upset when he continues the same, Yeah, Charlies a real loser, all the way to the bank. Funny how most of the recent headlines refer to the Detroit show not to the successful shows in Chicago/Cleveland. Not at all saying I agree with his behaviors but at least he is very upfront about them; contrary to a lot of others that do the same thing but only sneaking around and when caught start blaming others. Truthfully I somewhat admire his provocative, no holds barred ways... No remorse, no apologies, telling it as he sees it and living life large till the end whenever that may be.
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Callah
just another Northern Californian
02:06 PM on 04/07/2011
Yea.. its sad to see someone just crash and burn mentally on a stage...and its not a part of the program. How long till we read he has finally bit it in some crack-induced freakout?
12:01 PM on 04/07/2011
Wow. Somebody doesn't know what sojourn means.
11:50 AM on 04/07/2011
Flashing News Headline-

Idiots pay hard-earned cash, in a down economy no less, to see a human train-wreck/freak-show give a drunken, disjointed, vitriolic, rant.

Shortly thereafter-

Idiots are upset and want refunds when aforementioned human train-wreck, gives a drunken, disjointed, vitriolic, rant...
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tomteboda
05:06 AM on 04/17/2011
Amazingly, many adults have not yet developed the ability to see the future. That ability the rest of us consider a part of logical deduction.
10:38 AM on 04/07/2011
I though he was the idiot.

But people paying money to watch his show are bigger idots
10:10 AM on 04/07/2011
Sorry Charlie!
11:18 PM on 04/06/2011
But he was well received in Chicago!
Sterling Greenwood/AspenFreePress
09:01 PM on 04/06/2011
Anyone who paid the kind of money this show cost, deserved to.This man should be in a closed rehab center somewhere learning about his dreadful illness and how he can become responsible for himself. That will come only after he does everything possible to alleviate the agony and misery he has caused to so many people around him. He will never be able to change all that suffering, but he could make up for it if he really wants to change and clean up his life. Go away, Charlie, and don't come back til you are healed.
04:02 PM on 04/06/2011
I'm sure all the talk show hosts are grateful. They can continue to discuss this human mess ad nausium.
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Lisa Hartwell
Cattledog girl
09:34 AM on 04/06/2011
Well let us put it in perpective here. In Chicago-land alone there 8 million people. I reckon there is bound to be enough of large sausages with the mentality to boot, who would buy tickets to to watch this clown.

There are those people out there who find him to be hero. I suspect it mostly is men who never get laid....
08:24 AM on 04/06/2011
It's amazing in an economy as bad as this that people will spend hard earned money to see this loser! Things must not be as bad as we are told.
05:55 AM on 04/06/2011
As we spiral d
o
w
n