If Johnny Pemberton had followed family tradition, he'd be cutting up patients on an operating table instead of cutting up audiences in comedy clubs and on the small screen.
The Rochester native, who appears in the new ABC sitcom "Family Tools," comes from a long line of Mayo Clinic surgeons, starting with great-grandfather John DeJarnette Pemberton, who worked alongside the hospital's founding brothers.
But the Lourdes High School graduate went another direction.
"I thought about a career in science. I still do," Pemberton said by phone from Madison, Wis., where he performed at a comedy club the same night of the "Tools" premiere. "I didn't realize comedy was something you could do as a career. I just kind of fell into it."
"Tools" revolves around perennial loser Jack Shea (Kyle Bornheimer), who, after being kicked out of the seminary, is called back to his hometown by his aunt (Leah Remini) to help his ailing father (J.K. Simmons) run his repair business. Needless to say, the partnership is a wreck. At one point, Jack shoots himself in the foot. Literally.
Pemberton doesn't have a lot of scenes in the early episodes, but he makes the best of what he's given. He plays Jack's cousin Mason, a bizarre kid who finds it perfectly natural to light firecrackers in the basement and to start a rock band without an iota of musical talent.
Perhaps the most remarkable thing about the performance is that the character is 15. Pemberton is 31.
His boyish look is the result of ulcerative colitis, a rare and sometimes fatal inflammatory bowel disease that can stunt one's growth.