By Mark
Dawidziak | Cleveland
Plain Dealer
"Everybody
Loves Raymond" star
Patricia Heaton took a stand
Monday night at the 30th annual
American Music Awards. The Bay
Village native stood up and
walked out of the Shrine
Auditorium, disgusted by what
she described as "an
onslaught of lewd jokes and
off-color remarks."
A two-time Emmy winner for her
portrayal of Debra Barone on
"Everybody Loves
Raymond," Heaton was at
the awards ceremony in Los
Angeles to introduce a
prerecorded retrospective of
executive producer Dick Clark's
annual music bash. But the
sitcom star grew increasingly
upset with the raw and raunchy
comments made by presenters,
performers and the hosts for
the evening, the Osbournes.
"I'm no prude, but this
was such a vulgar and
disgusting show," Heaton
said yesterday morning after
seeing her four sons off to
school and before leaving for
the Burbank studio where
"Everybody Loves
Raymond" is taped.
Known for her candor in a town
where stars routinely are
warned to modify and suppress
opinions, Heaton rarely shies
away from speaking her mind,
even when her views don't
conform with the Hollywood
company line.
"I arrived a little late
and was seated in the
audience," Heaton said.
"I was going to present
what's called a video package -
a look at 30 years of the
American Music Awards. Well,
what was passing for humor
basically ranged from stupid to
vulgar, and I just thought,
'I'm not going to be part of
this.' So I walked out and
said, 'Get me my car. I'm
leaving.' "
A prerecorded audio clip
introduced the retrospective
after Heaton bolted the Shrine
Auditorium.
She was not alone in noticing
the harder edge to this year's
American Music Awards.
Show-business industry
publications and reporters
covering the event noted that
the Osbournes and other
performers kept the ABC network
censors working overtime.
Print advertisements for the
live awards event showed a
roaring Ozzy Osbourne saying,
"I'll be bleeped!" He
was - often.
"The entire evening became
about bleeping," said
Heaton, the sister of Plain
Dealer reporter Michael Heaton
and the daughter of retired
Plain Dealer columnist Chuck
Heaton. "It was as if they
were trying to become more like
the MTV awards. But it's one
thing if this kind of stuff is
on MTV at 10 at night. It's
quite another if it's on ABC at
8 o'clock. I don't know what
Dick Clark was thinking."
Low points for Heaton included
one performer's graphic
references to three-way sex and
Sharon Osbourne's joke about
what she called Mariah Carey's
"fake" endowments.
"I really didn't know what
I was getting into,"
Heaton said. "I mean,
there was Ryan Seacrest pulling
open his co-presenter's shirt,
then noticing there was a
12-year-old girl in the front
row. And he says, 'Don't worry,
honey, you'll have a pair of
these soon.' And everybody went
crazy. It felt like I was in
the Roman Colosseum. As far as
I'm concerned, it was an
affront to anyone with a shred
of dignity, self-respect and
intelligence."
Heaton says she is not
expecting any repercussions
from the decision and certainly
isn't expecting a "you'll
never present in this town
again" backlash.
"And if there is,"
she said, "who cares?
"When I was waiting for my car,
one of the security people
came up to me and said, 'I
just want you to know how
much I admire what you're
doing.' So I wasn't the only
one who felt this way. The
camera coordinator for the
awards was our camera
coordinator from 'Raymond.'
And when I walked on the set
the next day, he started
applauding." 