Bill Cosby does first stand-up gig since career implosion

Andrea Mandell | USA TODAY

Show Caption Hide Caption Bill Cosby's first performance since sex scandal Bill Cosby got applause and laughs from a friendly hometown crowd in Philadelphia as he performed in public for the first time since a sex scandal embroiled him in 2015. (Jan. 23)

Bill Cosby got back on the stage for the first time since his public image of "America's Dad" was shredded by dozens of sexual assault allegations.

Earlier Monday, Cosby announced a performance in Philadelphia for that evening, to be done in honor of jazz musician Tony Williams.

The disgraced 80-year-old comedian hit the stage at the LaRosa Jazz Club.

NPR reporter Bobby Allyn tweeted out a some footage of the event, showing Cosby dressed in a gray sweatshirt and sitting on a stool, holding his cane and speaking to a small crowd of people.

Bill Cosby, sitting on a stool in a hoodie at a Philly jazz club, telling stories and working the crowd. No mention yet of his looming trial on sexual assault charges. pic.twitter.com/D7qldKi79B — Bobby Allyn (@BobbyAllyn) January 23, 2018

Cosby took the stage for about an hour, reports the Associated Press. He told stories, honored old friends and finished by leading the band in a set, first using his mouth to scat in place of a missing horn section and then taking a turn at the drums.

Handing the drumsticks off to the 11-year-old son of the bass player, Cosby asked if the boy knew who he was and then told him.

"I used to be a comedian," Cosby deadpanned.

According to the AP, Cosby reminisced about his childhood, telling the crowd about how when he was 4 he grilled a relative about the impending birth of his brother. He mimicked his Uncle William, who took a swig from a cocktail before answering every question — including whether a stork was really delivering the baby to his parents.

Afterward, Cosby nearly dropped a glass jar he was using as a prop, prompting a "Whoa!" from the crowd.

Cosby, who's legally blind, seized on the moment.

"Let me tell you something about people talking to blind people, you sighted people," Cosby said. "If you see a blind person walking into a pole or something, if you speak perfect English, there's a word called 'Stop!' Not 'Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa!'

"You laugh when blind people walk into things," he continued. "And guess what: Blind people laugh when sighted people fall down!"

Meanwhile, prosecutors are preparing for Cosby's retrial in Philadelphia on sexual assault charges. They told a judge last week that they want to call 19 other accusers to try to show a pattern of "prior bad acts" over five decades.

Bill Cosby trial: How did a mistrial happen? And what comes next?

The comedian's first trial ended with a hung jury in June. In that proceeding, prosecutors asked to call 13 other accusers, but the judge allowed only one to testify, a woman who said she was attacked by Cosby at a Los Angeles hotel in 1996.

Cosby now has a new team of lawyers. The comedian is charged with drugging and sexually assaulting former Temple University employee Andrea Constand at his suburban Philadelphia home in 2004. Cosby has said the encounter was consensual.

Jury selection for the retrial will start March 29, it was also announced Monday.

To date, roughly 50 women have accused Cosby of being a serial sex offender dating back to the mid-1960s.

Contributing: The Associated Press