Comedian Tracy Morgan says needs more time after 2014 crash

Tracy Morgan (left) performs in a scene from the movie Cop Out. The entertainer, speaking on television for the first time since being injured in a crash a year ago with a Wal-Mart truck, vowed on Monday to return to comedy but says he needed more ti
Tracy Morgan (left) performs in a scene from the movie Cop Out. The entertainer, speaking on television for the first time since being injured in a crash a year ago with a Wal-Mart truck, vowed on Monday to return to comedy but says he needed more time to heal. -- PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

WASHINGTON (REUTERS) - Entertainer Tracy Morgan, speaking on television for the first time since being injured in a crash a year ago with a Wal-Mart truck, vowed on Monday to return to comedy but said he needed more time to heal.

"I love comedy, and I can't wait to get back to it. But right now my goal is just to heal and get better because I'm not 100 per cent yet," a sombre-looking Morgan, who settled his lawsuit with the retailer last week, told NBC in an interview.

"And when I'm there, you'll know it. I'll get back to making you laugh, I promise you," he said on NBC's Today programme, holding a black cane and at times wiping away tears.

Morgan, 46, suffered a serious brain injury and several broken bones in the accident on June 7, 2014, on the New Jersey Turnpike that also killed comedian James "Jimmy Mack" McNair.

On Monday, he still appeared shaken from the incident and pointed to scars on his head. "I can't believe I'm here," said Morgan, who starred in the TV show 30 Rock and the late night comedy sketch show Saturday Night Live, both on NBC.

Morgan said his injuries and the emotional fallout of the accident had taken a heavy toll. "The cases is settled, but the pain is always going to be there for Jimmy Mack," he said.

He appeared alongside his lawyer Benedict Morelli, who said Wal-Mart chief executive Doug McMillon planned to meet with Morgan this week to deliver a personal apology.

On Wednesday, Morgan and other people injured in the wreck settled their lawsuit with Wal-Mart, the world's largest retailer. Wal-Mart apologised for the involvement of one of its trucks, and Morgan said the company "did right" by him and his family.

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