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CODCO
CODCO
from Wikipedia
CODCO
Starring
Country of originCanada
No. of seasons5
No. of episodes63
Production
Production locationsNewfoundland, Halifax, Nova Scotia (Production Studio)
Running time22 minutes
Original release
NetworkCBC
Release1988 (1988) –
1993 (1993)

CODCO is a Canadian comedy troupe from Newfoundland, best known for a sketch comedy series which aired on CBC Television from 1988 to 1993.[1]

Founded as a theatrical revue in 1973,[1] CODCO drew on the province's cultural history of self-deprecating "Newfie" humour, frequently focusing on the cod fishing industry. The troupe's name was an abbreviation of "Cod Company".

Following the end of CODCO, two of the troupe's core members and an occasional guest collaborator, as well as some of their sketch characters, moved on to the new series This Hour Has 22 Minutes.[1]

Roots

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In 1973, Tommy Sexton and Diane Olsen wrote a comedic show about Canadian stereotypes of Newfoundlanders, Cod on a Stick. Originally launched in Toronto, the cast consisted of Sexton, Olsen, Greg Malone, Cathy Jones, Mary Walsh and Paul Sametz.[2] The show subsequently opened in St. John's, with Scott Strong replacing Sametz, and then toured the province with Robert Joy replacing Strong. When the show was taped by the National Film Board in 1974, Andy Jones appeared in the cast as well.

Sexton, Olsen, Malone, Cathy Jones, Andy Jones, Walsh and Joy subsequently performed in the show Sickness, Death and Beyond the Grave in 1974. In 1975, all except Malone, who was on a brief sabbatical to study at the Toronto Dance Theatre, appeared in What Do You Want to See the Harbour For, Anyway?; later that year, Malone rewrote the show as Das Capital.

In the fall of that year, the troupe compiled bits from their earlier shows for a week-long performance in Philadelphia, which was titled Philadelphia: Somewhere on the Hungry Coast of Newfoundland. That show was also taped for broadcast on CBC Television's Peep Show, as Festering Forefathers and Running Sons.[3]

Joy and Olsen left the troupe in 1976.

Mike Jones, Cathy and Andy Jones' brother, was not a performing member of the troupe, but was associated with them as a frequent director of their stage shows.[4]

Over the next number of years, the troupe's members only rarely worked together as CODCO, but often collaborated with each other individually on various projects, including the film The Adventure of Faustus Bidgood and the television series The Root Seller, The Wonderful Grand Band and The S and M Comic Book.[2] Greg Thomey and Paul Steffler also frequently collaborated with the CODCO members on various projects.

TV series

[edit]

In 1986, Walsh, Sexton, Malone, Cathy Jones and Andy Jones reunited as CODCO for a benefit show in St. John's.[2] Sexton and Malone had just completed the successful and popular S and M Comic Book series of CBC Television specials, and the CBC was interested in developing further projects with the duo — after the success of the CODCO reunion show, the troupe decided to work on a CODCO series.

CODCO began production in 1986, and debuted on the CBC in 1988.[2] Although not regular contributors, Thomey and Joy sometimes appeared on CODCO as guest performers.

For most of its run, CODCO aired as the latter half of a one-hour sketch comedy block, immediately following The Kids in the Hall.[1]

Segments and characters

[edit]

CODCO shared several characteristics with The Kids in the Hall, including the presence of openly gay members and the use of drag[5] — although where The Kids in the Hall often revelled in absurdist humour, CODCO's sketches were typically based around social commentary and satire, often with a strongly political edge.[6] Their sketches were also strongly reflective of the troupe's background on the stage, sometimes playing more as humorous character or scene studies than as conventional sketch comedy.[1]

Recurring characters included the Friday Night Girls (Walsh and Jones), a homely, dateless pair of female friends whose Friday nights rarely consisted of anything more exciting than riding the Metrobus;[1] Dakey Dunn (Walsh), an unexpectedly insightful macho lout;[1] Frank Arsenpuffin (Andy Jones), a hapless talk show host faced with a succession of horrifying guests; Marg at the Mental (Sexton), a patient in a psychiatric hospital; and Jerome and Duncan (Sexton and Malone), a flamboyant pair of gay lawyers.[1][5] Thomey sometimes appeared on the show as Newfoundland separatist Jerry Boyle, a character he would later reprise on This Hour Has 22 Minutes.

Another recurring sketch, House of Budgell, was essentially an ongoing soap opera set in a boarding house.[6] Wake of the Week focused on the Furlong sisters, a pair of elderly spinsters who regularly crashed funeral wakes, while The Byrd Family focused on a family of hardened criminals. Another of the show's most famous sketches parodied Canadian literary icon Anne of Green Gables; instead of Prince Edward Island, Anne lived in a dreary Newfoundland fishing outport called Green Gut.[7] In another, a Newfoundlander brings his girlfriend from Toronto home to meet his parents; the sketch escalates to the brink of violence as the parents tried to explain why the Mi'kmaq, not Newfoundlanders, were responsible for the extinction of the Beothuk.

Malone performed a number of celebrity impersonations, including Margaret Thatcher and Canadian television journalist Barbara Frum,[6] while Sexton did recurring impersonations of Barbara Walters and Tammy Faye Bakker. In one famous sketch, Malone as Frum moderated a debate between Jones as a gay teacher who had been fired from his job for testing HIV-positive and Sexton as Clarabelle Otterhead, the homophobic president of a lobby group called Citizens Outraged by Weird Sex (or COWS).[8] The troupe also parodied the conventions of television news through mock local newscasts; in one such sketch, a racist anchor character loudly blamed Africa for AIDS: "It's all your fault, it's all your fault. Nah nah nah nah nah nah. You're black, you're black, take your dirty bugs back. You're screwing green monkeys and giving it to our junkies. We give you all our foreign aid, and all we gets back is AIDS, AIDS, AIDS."[6]

Parody music videos were also a frequent feature of the show. In a transparent spoof of Quebec pop idol Mitsou, Cathy Jones played Jansu, a shallow, self-promoting pop singer who tried to be topical with lyrics such as "it's a political world/so separate your garbage!". Sexton parodied body image as Dusty Springroll, who sang an ode to the fashionability of bulimia. Figures such as Anne Murray and Bruce Cockburn were parodied in commercials for compilation albums with satirical lyrics set to the melodies of real songs by the artists, while another sketch was set in a café holding a Leonard Cohen impersonation contest.[7]

The end of CODCO

[edit]

In 1991, a sketch was filmed for CODCO called the "Pleasant Irish Priests in Conversation", which involved three Roman Catholic priests discussing their sexual experiences;[6] it was a reference to the then-ongoing Mount Cashel Orphanage child abuse controversy. The CBC refused to air the sketch. As a result, Andy Jones quit the show in protest.[6] The series carried on for two more years before it came to a close in 1993. Ironically, the CBC subsequently aired "Pleasant Irish Priests" in a CODCO Uncensored special just a few months after the regular series ended.

Following the end of CODCO, Walsh and Cathy Jones worked with Thomey and Rick Mercer to create This Hour Has 22 Minutes.[6] Several CODCO characters, including Dakey Dunn and Jerry Boyle, were carried over to the new series.

Sexton died in 1993 of complications from AIDS.[1]

Malone ran as a New Democratic Party in the St. John's West by-election in 2000, losing narrowly to Loyola Hearn.[9] Malone ran as the Green party candidate for the riding of Avalon for the 2019 federal election.[10][11]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
CODCO was a Newfoundland-originated Canadian comedy troupe known for its irreverent, satirical sketches that drew on regional stereotypes, political critique, and social taboos, beginning as a theatre collective in 1973 and later producing a nationally broadcast CBC television series from 1987 to 1993. The group's name, short for "Cod Company," alluded to Newfoundland's cod-fishing heritage and the self-deprecating "Newfie" humor central to its style. Core members included Andy Jones, Cathy Jones, Greg Malone, Mary Walsh, and Tommy Sexton, who collectively created material through improvisation, mime, song, and exaggerated caricatures, often employing cross-dressing and whimsical absurdity to lampoon gender roles, religion, sex, and Canadian politics. Founded with initial funding for its debut production Cod on a Stick in , the troupe toured extensively in Newfoundland, across , the , and during its active theatre phase from 1973 to 1976, producing works like Sickness, Death and Beyond the Grave (1974) and Das Capital (1975) that emphasized collective creation and short-form . Brief reunions in the late 1970s and 1980s preceded a 1985 national tour that paved the way for television adaptation by Salter Street Films, resulting in 63 episodes of the CODCO series characterized by its off-the-wall approach to hot-button issues, which sparked controversy for its unfiltered brutality and polarizing takes on sensitive topics. The troupe disbanded in 1992 amid internal artistic disputes—Andy Jones departed in 1991—and the death of Tommy Sexton in 1993 from AIDS-related complications, though its influence endured through members' subsequent projects, including and contributions to Canadian comedy's satirical tradition. Despite critical acclaim for innovative writing and benchmark performances in sketch format, CODCO remains relatively underavailable in modern formats, limiting broader retrospective access to its output.

Origins

Formation and Early Performances

CODCO was formed in 1973 by a group of Newfoundland-born performers who had pursued individual artistic careers outside the province before reuniting to create satirical material rooted in regional experiences. The troupe's core members included , Mary Walsh, Andy Jones, Tommy Sexton, and Greg Malone, with Bob Joy and Diane Olsen joining shortly thereafter. The group's debut performance occurred in that year with the revue Cod on a Stick, a collection of sketches, scenes, and music mocking stereotypes of Newfoundlanders encountered away from home. This initial show highlighted self-deprecating "" humour, drawing on the province's fishing traditions and cultural perceptions. Following the Toronto engagement, CODCO returned to Newfoundland for a run in St. John's before touring the province, solidifying its local appeal. By 1974, with an expanded ensemble, the troupe staged Sickness, Death and Beyond the Grave, further developing its irreverent style amid Newfoundland's emerging theatre scene. The company remained active through 1976, producing multiple revues that emphasized political and social satire tied to island identity.

Theatrical Roots in Newfoundland Culture

CODCO's theatrical origins were deeply embedded in Newfoundland's longstanding traditions of folk performance and community-based entertainment, particularly the custom of , which dates back to at least 1819 and involved disguised participants engaging in improvised antics, singing, and during seasons. This practice, though officially banned in 1861 due to occasional violence, persisted in rural outports through the mid-20th century, fostering a cultural affinity for exaggerated, participatory that mirrored social hierarchies and local absurdities. CODCO drew from these roots by incorporating elements of , , and into their episodic revues, transforming folk-derived physicality into pointed critiques of Newfoundland identity and external stereotypes. The troupe emerged amid a broader theatrical revival in Newfoundland during the and , a period marked by a surge in professional activity following decades of dormancy after earlier amateur and touring companies. This was fueled by a cultural reassertion of local narratives post-Confederation with in 1949, with collectives like the Mummers Troupe and the Newfoundland Travelling Company pioneering collective creation methods rooted in community concerts, school skits, and revue-style performances that blended song, dance, and scripted humor. CODCO, formed in 1973 by St. John's-based performers including Andy Jones, , Greg Malone, Mary Walsh, Tommy Sexton, Diane Olsen, Paul Sametz, and Bob Joy, aligned with this movement by starting as a low-budget in before returning to Newfoundland for provincial tours. Their debut production, Cod on a Stick that year, exemplified the era's shift toward provocative, locally sourced material that satirized mainland misconceptions of Newfoundlanders while amplifying regional pride through dark, whimsical humor. This foundation in Newfoundland's performative heritage distinguished CODCO's style from mainland Canadian theatre, emphasizing sessions and performative research drawn from folk storytelling traditions to generate sketches that lampooned authority, out-, and . Productions like Das Capital (addressing urban development) and Sickness, Death and Beyond the Grave (exploring mortality and ) from 1973 to 1976 integrated puppets, , and audience interaction, echoing mummering's communal disruption while adapting counter-cultural influences from the and to critique both local complacency and external condescension. By rooting their in verifiable cultural touchstones—such as the self-deprecating "" jokes prevalent in Newfoundland revues—CODCO not only preserved but professionalized these elements, paving the way for a sustained emphasis on indigenous voices in Canadian .

Television Adaptation

Development for CBC

Following the disbandment of the CODCO theatre troupe in 1977, core members , Mary Walsh, Andy Jones, Tommy Sexton, and Greg Malone reunited in 1985 for a benefit performance in Newfoundland, excluding former members Diane Olsen and Bob Joy. This event demonstrated renewed interest in their satirical sketches and directly led to CBC commissioning a television adaptation to bring their Newfoundland-rooted to a national audience. Production of the series began in 1986, handled by Halifax-based Salter Street Productions, which specialized in regional . acted as , Jack Kellum as , and David Acomba as director, adapting the live format into half-hour episodes with sketches filmed primarily in a CBC Halifax studio and supplemented by on-location shoots in St. John's for authenticity. The development emphasized preserving CODCO's raw, unfiltered humor targeting , gender roles, and regional stereotypes, while navigating broadcast standards for wider appeal. The series premiered on on March 3, 1987, airing weekly in a late-night slot initially paired with other comedy programming like . This transition from marked a significant expansion, enabling the troupe to reach beyond , though it introduced production constraints absent in their stage work, such as scripted revisions for timing and compliance. Over six seasons, the show produced 63 episodes before evolving amid cast changes.

Broadcast Run and Production Details

The CODCO television series premiered on on March 3, 1987, initially airing regionally in Newfoundland for its first two seasons before expanding to national broadcast. The program ran weekly until its final episode on March 31, 1993, spanning six seasons in total. Each episode followed a half-hour format, typically produced as part of CBC's programming slate that occasionally paired it with other Canadian sketch shows like . Production was handled collaboratively by the core CODCO troupe members—Andy Jones, , Greg Malone, Tommy Sexton, and Mary Walsh—who served as writers, performers, and creative leads, in association with Salter Street Films based in . The series maintained the troupe's improvisational and satirical roots from their theatrical origins, with sketches developed collectively rather than through a traditional . Andy Jones departed the production in 1991, prompting structural adjustments including a shift toward more pointed political satire in later seasons, though the core ensemble continued until the end. The show concluded original production in 1992, with the 1993 finale airing amid personal challenges for the cast, including Sexton's impending death from AIDS-related illness later that year.

Content and Style

Sketch Format and Recurring Characters

CODCO's television series adopted a format characterized by discrete, vignette-style segments that satirized Newfoundland's provincial politics, religious institutions, cultural idiosyncrasies, and social norms. Episodes, typically 30 minutes in length and broadcast weekly on CBC from 1986 to , comprised 5 to 8 sketches per installment, often linked thematically around local absurdities or national hypocrisies. Performers utilized meticulous sets, costumes, and makeup to impersonate targets with exaggerated fidelity, enabling pointed mimicry of figures like clergy or officials, as seen in censored sketches such as "Pleasant Priests in Conversation," where priests casually discussed amid the Mount Cashel scandal. This structure facilitated a raw, unfiltered style blending visceral confrontation—frequent and sexual —with absurd whimsy, setting it apart from polished urban satires like , which shared its CBC time slot. Recurring characters reinforced CODCO's focus on archetypal Newfoundland personas, amplifying critiques of roles, isolation, and authority. Mary Walsh's Marg Delahanty, a ferocious "warrior princess" railing against systemic and patriarchal structures, embodied defiant and appeared across multiple episodes to skewer politicians and clerics. The Friday Night Girls, portrayed by Walsh and as frumpy, romantically frustrated women trapped in repetitive, joyless routines, satirized rural ennui and unfulfilled aspirations through sketches of botched dates and petty dramas. Segments like the "Kissing Booth," featuring Tommy Sexton and in drag as predatory, low-class women accosting men, explored repressed sexuality and class tensions with aggressive physicality. Male cast members routinely cross-dressed to animate these and similar figures, such as outport lesbians or trashy matrons, underscoring the troupe's comfort with as a comedic and subversive tool.

Thematic Focus on Newfoundland Identity

CODCO's sketches often centered on Newfoundland's distinct , leveraging self-deprecating "" humor to highlight the province's isolation, linguistic uniqueness, and economic reliance on the cod fishery, which served as both local color and a for broader existential struggles. This approach rooted the troupe's work in authentic regional experiences, such as St. John's urban-rural divides and life, portraying characters that reflected real locals like the iconic Mr. and Mrs. Budgell sketches, which drew from everyday community figures to evoke a sense of resilient, irreverent provincial pride. By satirizing mainland Canadian perceptions of Newfoundlanders as backward or comical—stereotypes amplified by the province's late entry into in 1949—CODCO aimed to deflate these tropes and elevate local self-esteem, transforming derogatory "Newfie jokes" into tools for cultural affirmation. Sketches frequently tackled social issues tied to identity, such as , , and institutional scandals like Mount Cashel, using exaggerated clarity to humanize and critique rather than perpetuate victimhood, often infused with the province's Irish-influenced accent and secular-shifting ethos. This thematic emphasis extended to regional satire, contrasting Newfoundland's rough, hard-drinking, and sexually frank culture against national norms, thereby underscoring the province's otherness within while fostering a of comedic amid economic hardships like fishery declines. Early theatrical works, such as Cod on a Stick (1973), exemplified this by mocking the of Newfoundland heritage, signaling the troupe's intent to reclaim and redefine identity from within.

Reception

Critical Praise and Cultural Impact

CODCO received acclaim for its innovative that blended sharp with authentic Newfoundland , earning the Best Comedy Program or Series award at the 4th in 1989. In 1993, the series secured two additional : one for Best Writing in a Variety Program or Series and another for Best Performance in a . Critics and performers, such as Scott Thompson of , praised CODCO as a "brilliant, fearless" troupe whose "scathing " and "visceral, sexual, and dysfunctional humor" set it apart, influencing subsequent Canadian comedy acts through its physicality and unfiltered ridicule of institutions like the church. The program's layered content, drawing from Newfoundland's revue traditions, prompted some mainland viewers to question whether its depth transcended typical , highlighting its intellectual edge amid political and cultural commentary. Columnist Bob Wakeham described CODCO's stage and television work as "unprecedented and iconic," crediting it with blazing a trail during Newfoundland's 1970s cultural renaissance by satirizing the derogatory "" stereotype while celebrating provincial heritage. Culturally, CODCO amplified Newfoundland identity nationwide, fostering pride and shifting perceptions from national ridicule to recognition as a powerhouse, with its characters and embedding local absurdities into broader Canadian discourse. By touring internationally in the 1970s and airing on CBC from 1986 to 1992, the troupe exported elements of Newfoundland's counter-cultural —rooted in , , and black humor addressing out-migration and social issues—elevating regional and television standards. Its legacy includes redefining self-deprecating "Newfy" humor as a tool for cultural assertion, influencing successors like and contributing to the province's artistic evolution amid economic challenges.

Viewer Engagement and Ratings

CODCO garnered substantial viewer engagement in Newfoundland and Atlantic Canada, where its sketches celebrating and critiquing local identity cultivated a devoted regional audience that valued its raw, uncompromised humor. The series' emphasis on provincial stereotypes, political satire, and social taboos struck a chord with viewers familiar with the cultural nuances, leading to strong loyalty despite occasional censorship battles with CBC. Comedian Scott Thompson, of The Kids in the Hall, characterized CODCO as "hugely popular in Canada" for its bold approach to topics like sexuality and institutional hypocrisy, which influenced peers and sustained interest among comedy enthusiasts. Nationally, however, engagement was more modest, with the show's niche focus on Newfoundland-specific content limiting crossover appeal compared to broader Canadian sketch series. Critics have described it as "criminally under-recognized" relative to contemporaries, attributing this to its relentless regionalism rather than any lack of quality, as evidenced by popular sketches like those featuring outport characters and satire that remain fan favorites. The absence of widely reported national ratings figures reflects the era's limited data availability for regional programming, but its six-season run from 1988 to 1993 indicates sufficient CBC support to continue production amid mixed broader reception. Long-term engagement persists through cultural memory and revivals, including a 2019 reunion performance in Halifax that elicited a , underscoring the troupe's lasting draw for audiences appreciative of its foundational role in elevating Newfoundland voices in Canadian media. This sustained interest, rather than peak viewership metrics, highlights CODCO's impact as a catalyst for later successes like This Hour Has 22 Minutes, where core members transitioned their style to wider acclaim.

Controversies

Censorship and Regulatory Challenges

In 1991, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) refused to air the CODCO sketch "Pleasant Irish Priests in Conversation," which satirized by in the context of Newfoundland's , a series of revelations beginning in 1989 involving systemic abuse at the Christian Brothers-run institution. The sketch featured three priests casually discussing explicit acts with boys, highlighting institutional cover-ups, but CBC executives deemed it too inflammatory amid ongoing public outrage and legal proceedings related to the , which ultimately led to convictions of several brothers and a provincial inquiry. This decision exemplified broader tensions between CODCO's irreverent style and CBC's adherence to (CRTC) guidelines on decency and taste, which required broadcasters to avoid content likely to offend community standards. The prompted founding member Andy Jones to quit the series in , arguing that the network's intervention undermined the troupe's artistic integrity and satirical purpose; reports place his departure between October 1990 and 1992, coinciding with disputes over this and similar material. Jones' exit weakened the show's dynamics, as he was a key writer and performer, and contributed to perceptions of CBC exerting editorial control to mitigate backlash from powerful institutions like the , which held significant influence in Newfoundland. Despite the refusal, CBC later broadcast the sketch in a 1993 "CODCO Uncensored" special shortly after the main series concluded, alongside other edited segments featuring profanity and risqué humor that had been bleeped or cut during original airings to comply with broadcast standards. Throughout its run from 1988 to 1993, CODCO faced ongoing regulatory hurdles under CRTC policies emphasizing "responsibility" in programming, including of coarse language, sexual content, and political barbs that risked complaints; the troupe's Newfoundland-centric often targeted local hypocrisies, but national broadcast requirements prioritized avoiding fines or license reviews for indecency. No formal CRTC fines were imposed on CODCO, but the pattern of preemptive edits—such as muting expletives or shortening sketches—highlighted the challenges of edgy regional comedy on a public broadcaster funded by taxpayers and accountable to federal oversight, fostering internal debates about creative freedom versus institutional caution. These incidents underscored CODCO's role in testing boundaries, ultimately influencing later Canadian like , though at the cost of diluted broadcasts during its prime.

Criticisms of Content and Stereotypes

CODCO's satirical sketches drew criticism for relying on exaggerated regional and ethnic stereotypes, particularly those rooted in Newfoundland's self-deprecating "" humor , which portrayed locals as hard-drinking, superstitious, or comically backward in ways that some argued reinforced mainland Canadian prejudices rather than solely subverting them. This approach, while effective in highlighting cultural absurdities like outport isolation or influence, prompted backlash from viewers sensitive to the amplification of tropes such as the "lazy Newfoundlander" or rural simplicity, with detractors claiming it risked alienating audiences by prioritizing shock over nuance. Specific content targeting religious institutions faced accusations of insensitivity through , as seen in sketches lampooning Irish Catholic priests amid real-world scandals. The "Pleasant Priests in Conversation" bit, featuring three clerics casually discussing , was labeled outrageous for its blunt use of clerical to critique pedophilia cover-ups, exacerbating tensions post the 1989 Mount Cashel revelations and contributing to founding member Andy Jones' departure in 1991 after CBC censorship. Jones' exit underscored internal critiques that such content pushed boundaries too far, potentially offending Newfoundland's devout communities by equating with or cultural . Gender portrayals also elicited debate, with some feminist-leaning observers faulting the show's whimsical yet brutal takes on —such as drag-infused spoofs of macho fishermen or domineering matriarchs—for occasionally veering into that objectified women or trivialized power imbalances, despite empowering female performers like Mary Walsh. Overall, while CODCO's defenders viewed these elements as reclaiming stereotypes for empowerment, critics contended the format's dependence on mimicry and exaggeration, inherent to , sometimes prioritized laughs over responsible representation, fostering unease among conservative Newfoundland audiences unaccustomed to such unfiltered self-scrutiny.

Decline and Legacy

Factors Leading to Cancellation

The departure of founding member and key performer Andy Jones in 1992 marked the pivotal factor in CODCO's cancellation, stemming from a censorship dispute with the CBC over the sketch "Pleasant Irish Priests in Conversation," which satirized Roman Catholic in a manner deemed too controversial for broadcast. Jones, who had been a central writer and actor since the troupe's inception in , quit in protest after the network refused to air the segment, leading to a perceived decline in the show's creative dynamism and artistic integrity without his contributions. This internal fracture occurred after six seasons of original production, which had aired weekly on CBC from March 3, 1987, to the cessation of new content in 1992, though some reruns extended into 1993. The loss of Jones, combined with the troupe's shift toward individual projects—such as Mary Walsh and developing —eroded the collaborative energy that defined CODCO's output under Salter Street Films. No evidence from production records indicates declining viewer ratings as a direct cause; rather, the creative impasse with CBC highlighted ongoing tensions over satirical boundaries that had previously tested the show's viability. Tommy Sexton's death from AIDS in 1994, shortly after the series wrapped, further symbolized the troupe's dissolution, though it postdated the decision to end original episodes and did not precipitate the cancellation itself. The cumulative effect of these personnel and institutional conflicts underscored 's vulnerability as a regionally focused, boundary-pushing production reliant on its core ensemble's cohesion.

Post-CODCO Careers and Reunions

Following the conclusion of the CODCO television series in , core cast members transitioned to diverse pursuits in , acting, writing, and advocacy. Andy Jones, who had departed the show in 1991 amid disputes over censored content, continued developing one-man theatrical performances and screenplays, including adaptations of Newfoundland folklore, and received appointment to the in 2019 for his contributions to arts and culture. He published Actor Needs Restraint!, a 2024 collection of his scripts and monologues spanning decades of solo work. Cathy Jones joined the satirical series as a founding performer and writer, contributing characters and sketches until her departure in 2021 after 28 seasons, during which she earned multiple for writing. She also appeared in films such as (2013). Greg Malone focused initially on advocacy following the 1993 death of co-star Tommy Sexton from AIDS-related complications on December 13, 1993, including public speaking and writing on queer experiences in Newfoundland. Malone later resumed acting in films like Maudie (2016) and published a 2009 memoir, You Better Watch Out, detailing his life and CODCO tenure. Mary Walsh extended her satirical work through characters like Marg Delahanty on and independent documentaries critiquing politics and society. Tommy Sexton, the youngest core member, had no post-series output due to his illness diagnosis shortly after production ended. Associate member relocated to the , building a screen career with roles in horror films including (2005) and television series such as , while receiving an honorary doctorate from Memorial University in 2015. CODCO alumni have sporadically reunited for live performances, reflecting enduring audience interest in their Newfoundland-rooted satire. In March 2019, Andy Jones, Cathy Jones, Greg Malone, and Mary Walsh staged a one-night reunion show in Halifax, Nova Scotia—their first joint appearance since 1993—featuring sketches and characters from the original series. On October 25, 2025, surviving core members Andy Jones, Cathy Jones, Greg Malone, and Mary Walsh, joined by Robert Joy, performed at the ArtsNL 45th Anniversary Gala in St. John's, Newfoundland, at JAG Soundhouse, reviving material amid high demand that prompted a sold-out event and an added matinee on October 26. These gatherings underscore the troupe's lasting cultural resonance, though no full television revival has occurred.

References

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