Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - 19. Adam West
Episode Date: October 3, 2014To celebrate the 75th anniversary of Bob Kane and Bill Finger's Batman (and to coincide with this week's New York Comic Con) Gilbert and Frank tracked down the caped crusader of their childhoods, the ...legendary ADAM WEST, who shared memories of everyone from Gary Cooper to Jackie Gleason and joked about some of his more "challenging" gigs ("Voodoo Island" anyone?). Also, Adam duets with Dino, makes history with William Shatner and pays Gilbert one of the greatest compliments of his career. PLUS: The origin of the Batusi! Liberace gets tough! Adam turns down the part of James Bond! And the Riddler goes to an orgy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hi, this is Gilbert Gottfried, and this is Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast with my co-host Frank Santopadre.
And I remember when I was a kid, the biggest show on the air was Batman.
when I was a kid, the biggest show on the air was Batman. That was a show every major star wanted to be on. So we got in touch with the great Kilmer, George Clooney, and Kristen Bale, because now, on the 75th anniversary of Batman, we are speaking to Adam West!
Adam West!
Hi, this is Gilbert Gottfried, and this is Gilbert Gottfried's amazing, colossal podcast.
I'm here with my co-host, Frank Santopadre. And now, on the 75th anniversary of Batman,
anniversary of Batman.
Ladies and gentlemen,
the only true
Caped Crusader,
Adam West.
Thank you,
Gilbert Grape.
Hey, it's wonderful
to be with someone who's so alive.
That he is.
You should sit six inches away from him.
Yes.
Now, we were talking before we got on the air that we had met before, and you remember meeting me.
Yes, I do.
Who could forget?
Yeah.
No, you give a wonderful
impression.
Oh, thank you.
Because when you're offstage,
when you're normalized
in a sense, you're so wonderful
with people.
Oh, wow.
You were nice to everyone, including me.
Was this at the Tonight Show?
Yes.
So I was even nice to you.
Yes.
How strange.
The first time
you guys met was at the Beverly Garland
Hotel at a nostalgia show.
Well, yes.
I think she's gone, isn't she?
Beverly? I don't know. I don't know. Gilbert was there. He was accosted by the actress who played Snow White.
Yes, it still haunts my nightmares.
Oh, what a perversion.
Now, let's get to... Okay, you worked in a movie.
The Outlaws is coming.
Well, thank you.
That's very nice.
However, I'm pleased and proud that I was
because I've done a lot of strange movies,
but The Three Stooges remains, as you know, so popular.
And what was it like working with the Stooges?
I don't care.
It was just, send the check.
The thing is, they were very quiet, introspective characters off camera.
And then, of course, when they got on, you know what they did.
But they were really sweet, nice people.
And at the end of the movie, get this,
Moe stood up after we had done everything in the plot of the movie
to save the buffalo, the bison, and the Old West.
Mo got up and said, okay, you're all invited to a buffalo barbecue at my place.
Kind of the way they were, Gilbert.
So you were eating buffalo with the three stooges?
Yes.
My life has taken strange turns.
But they were nice guys, you say.
Oh, wonderful, really.
And, you know, Larry Fine just sat around and never said much of anything.
And Curly was very nice.
He spoke occasionally.
And Curly was very nice.
He spoke occasionally.
And Moe was the nicest person he'll ever meet.
Wow.
The picture was directed by his son-in-law.
Oh, Norman something. Not Bill Maher.
No, no.
Norman something.
Norman Moore.
Yes.
And didn't you speak, Adam, when the Three Stooges were given their Walk of Fame star?
I was supposed to, but I couldn't.
I was speechless.
I thought it was about time.
You also worked on a few very strange movies.
You see.
Yes.
Yes, I did.
I'll admit it.
It's called Survival.
Yeah, it's just hand me the check and let me get out of here.
Oh, my God.
You know what it's like.
You have a family.
You've got to make a living.
Pay the rent. Pay the rent, whatever.
And I find that the worse the movie that comes along, the bigger the challenge.
And the more you've got to cook with it and try to bring something fresh, which I certainly did in Zombie Nightmare.
I saw like a
trailer for Zombie Nightmare.
Yes. I think
that's all we shot. Yeah.
It looked
like it was shot on someone's phone.
I know.
It was just awful. But I've got to be honest, you know, when you have a family and you're struggling to put kids through college, I couldn't be too elective of what I did.
me quite a bit of money to go to Canada and work with a zombie.
And that was popular on TV.
Walking Dead.
You were ahead of your time.
Yes, yes, of course.
I was walking dead. Now, speaking of another movie like that,
but with a bigger star connected to it,
Voodoo Island.
With Karloff.
You know, that was the first movie I ever did.
I was working on TV in Honolulu,
and they offered me the role of a radio operator in the jungle.
And they said, in the plot, Boris Karloff comes through the jungle to meet you.
Well, I said, gosh, that sounds really good.
And so they flew me into the jungle on Kauai.
And I had to walk for a couple of days.
And then they left me.
They left you there?
Yeah, there was no Boris Karloff.
There was no one.
There was no one except mosquitoes and things.
And very scary nights.
So you never met Boris Karloff?
Well, only after I finished in the jungle and fought my way out.
A Filipino guy happened to be a few miles toward the shore, and I borrowed his machete for the producer.
But, yeah, I got a chance to meet him.
And, you know, you do these things.
Then the second movie, lordy.
I was hired to be a scuba diver on the top of a three-tiered boat anchored in the Hanama Bay off the coast of Oahu.
And on the cue from the German director, I and four other scuba guys were supposed to jump from the top of the boat into the water and stay down while somebody
did something.
Well, I knocked myself out with my tank, but I happened to have the reflex of grabbing
a coral reef.
What was the name of that picture, Adam?
Well, I can't tell you.
I may think of it. I may think of it.
I may think of it.
So that's the movie you almost died for.
You can't even remember.
No, but when I came up, the director said,
Oh, my God, you are so brilliant.
You are the only one who stayed down for the take.
Everybody else came to the surface.
He didn't know I was knocked out.
Now, here's a very strange one.
You were offered the part of James Bond after Sean Connery left.
You know, when I was doing Batman and even before,
and doing a few films immediately after,
I was in London, and I had dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Cubby Broccoli
and a couple of other folks.
And at the end of the dinner,
they looked at me and she said,
you are the new James Bond.
And I said,
Bond, James Bond.
And what happened was
I couldn't do it.
I had a contract that tied me down.
Now, can you imagine, Gilbert, guys, had I done Bond and Batman and then played drums with the Beatles.
The three Bs.
play drums with the Beatles.
The three Bs.
I would have been your go-to guy.
So contractually, you couldn't play James Bond?
No, I couldn't do it. But I also told them in a nice way that I really was very grateful, but I felt it should be a Brit.
And instead they hired an Australian at the time, right?
George Lazenby.
Isn't that, no, I think, wasn't it Roger at that time?
I'm not sure.
No, George Lazenby was the next.
Yeah, then Lazenby.
It was Lazenby when you were up for the part.
Okay, and you know what?
That was a wonderful Bond film, I thought.
Now, I'm not talking about Lazenby in any way,
but that film, wasn't it On Her Majesty's Secret Service?
Yeah, Telly Savalas.
Yeah, Diana Rigg.
Yeah, that was really good.
That's a good one.
It's one of the best Bond films.
I think you're right.
And then he was one and done,
and the press savaged him because he wasn't a Brit.
And then Roger.
Yes, that's right. I'd forgotten.
Who was an old friend of yours?
Roger and I started together at Warner Brothers under contract.
Tell us a little bit about those days, Adam.
Tell us a little bit about your Warner contract and some of the things you did.
You did a lot of TV under that contract, Maverick and Hawaiian Eye and 77 Sunset Strip.
Yeah, it was the best learning experience an actor could have because I worked every week playing different roles.
And it was just a constant demand.
And I thought it was great that I had a chance to learn from all those people.
Who was there with you at the time, with James Garner and Roger Moore?
Yeah, Jimmy Garner, Roger Moore, and I were signed like the same day.
And who else?
Will Hutchins, Roger Smith.
Was it Connie Stevens?
Jack Kelly, Connie Stevens, Bob Conrad.
That's a lot of talent.
I mean, it went on and on.
But where are they now?
It's funny that people complain about the studio system,
but hearing you talk about it,
it's like the idea of steady work for an actor.
Gilbert, you've really got it nailed. It is. And I can't think of a better way to loan your craft.
So you learned while you earned.
Of course. I've been doing plays in Sacramento when I was working there briefly for the McClatchy Broadcasting Company.
And when I was in Honolulu, I did Picnic.
And that's how I was, I guess you'd say, discovered.
And the two agents were there, and they came to see the play.
Because I'd hired a friend of mine to give me a pep talk and a hundred bucks to get off.
Now, you said you played drums with the Beatles?
No, he was fantasizing.
Oh, you are.
I was hoping that was true.
You know, I was too.
Don't you love those guys?
The best.
So you didn't fulfill the contract, though, Adam, right?
You didn't stay there for the seven years on the contract.
No, no, because what happened,
Warner's lost their deal with ABC with all those Western movies.
And so there just wasn't that much work and i knew that the time
was coming when they were going to let us all go which they did and so i began to freelance
and eventually i got lucky again and that's what this business is it's you know mostly luck. And I connected with a production company
who was doing a film in Durango, Mexico, a Western,
with Chuck Connors as Geronimo.
The only blue-eyed Geronimo I ever met.
Anyway, so I played the young kind of cavalry officer good guy.
And when I got back, the same producers were doing a series for NBC called The Detectives with the late Robert Taylor.
So they cast me as the kid cop.
And how long did you do The Detectives?
36 hours, 30 or 36 hours in color.
Then there was a writer's strike, and I starved.
I mean, it wasn't easy.
It never is, you know.
But things began to work.
You know, you just keep pushing and you're persistent and maybe something happens.
Like zombie nightmares.
Can you tell us the plot?
Do you remember the plot of Zombie Nightmare?
I don't think there was one.
It was
some creature comes out of a hole.
I thought I was Bill Murray
in the
you know, that film.
Now, you once met or were coming on to Natalie Wood, I heard.
Talk about changing the subject here.
What was that, Gilbert?
With Natalie Wood.
Well, no, there was nothing with us at all. We just went to dinner, and I just sat there and stirred my little cocktail in Hawaii with Umbrella.
Go on, Adam.
And lusted.
Wasn't she dating Raymond Burr at the time, according to your book?
Yeah.
Now, that was a strange guy to date well i thought so i would
never date him but i but i did i did his show but i'm sure raymond burr as what i've heard
would have liked to have dated you yeah but i said no no. You just move that wheelchair away.
You know, it was like the guys in Hawaii discovered me when they saw the play Picnic.
And they said, kid, we're going to sell you in Hollywood.
And I said, well, gosh, that's really neat. That's nice. I was really a dweeb.
That's great. Get your hand off my thigh.
There was a very famous manager that you probably have read about or knew about. It was
one of them. But he had proclivities that I couldn't share.
Batman versus the casting couch.
I guess.
Now, you were in Soldier in the Rain.
Yeah, I did.
You know, I did a few fairly good films.
You know, they weren't all turkeys.
That's a good films. You know, they weren't all turkeys. That's a good film.
Yeah, Soldier in the Rain
and Marriage of a Young Stockbroker
and The New Age.
And, you know, I got really great reviews.
But then I had to do the other things, too.
And I don't care what anyone says,
laughs about what the critics do.
I'll tell you, you learn from those experiences.
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What do you remember about Jackie Gleason when you made Soldier in the Rain, Adam?
Anything?
Well, the best.
By the way, when I was in the Army at Fort Monmouth in New Jersey,
And by the way, when I was in the Army at Fort Monmouth in New Jersey, I happened to scavenge a ticket to go to a Honeymooners rehearsal because I love those guys.
And I got into the rehearsal, and he was so nice, he spotted me in my GI uniform, and he came over and said hello.
And, you know, you don't forget those things.
That's great.
Well, that's why I'm nice to you guys.
Yeah.
We were counting on it.
This is really fun.
You do such a good job.
You make me feel at ease.
We're happy to do that.
And Steve McQueen was in that movie.
Yeah, Steve and I were friends.
You know, I had a place out, I had a little shack out of Malibu because I did a lot of surfing and I had a couple of motorcycles.
And Steve came to visit me on the Batman set.
And, you know, we just kind of became friends
and he was a cool guy and it was good.
And you met Gary Cooper at a party in L.A., Adam.
And you said that was a kind of a turning point for you.
Yep.
You can't elaborate
on this.
Yeah, I know.
I know.
Let me tell
you guys. Let me
tell you something.
Gary and
I, well, I'm his brother.
Gary, well,
he used to play the radio
out of his saddle.
He had a tuner, a knob, on his saddle horn.
And he used to sit there and listen to the radio.
When he was doing these Westerns, you know, he was probably
one of the best actors working, guys.
He really was.
There was nuance.
There was a gentleness.
There was a toughness about him
and a vulnerability.
Don't you have to have that?
So he talked that way in real life? Yep. Adam, tell us where the name Adam West
came from, because you were born William Anderson. Well, my middle name is West, and nobody knew where
it came from. And so I looked in the mirror and I made a vow.
I said,
I will make that name famous
worldwide.
Where did
Adam come from?
The mirror cracked.
And
I thought, that's it.
Adam, just something
I made up because four letters, the same as West, and a balance.
And I went around the studio a little bit testing it, and nobody forgot that name, Adam West.
And I thought, well, that's pretty good. It fits on the marquee better than Billy West Anderson. And Billy West Anderson was the first movie cowboy.
He was a Jewish cowboy from the Bronx.
And I didn't quite measure up to this.
But, you know, so I said Adam West and they loved it.
And that was it.
And you were in Alexander the Great with William Shatner.
Oh, please.
Yeah, you know, I'll tell you, Shatner and I did a pilot.
And he was to play Alexander.
And it was the most expensive pilot ever shot at the time.
And I was to play General Cleander, who was the wine woman and song general.
Well, Bill was to have the lead one hour, and I would have the lead the next hour, and so on.
Well, the pilot featured Bill as Alexander, of course,
and, you know, I was okay.
I had a few things to do,
but we had a great cast.
Joseph Cotton, John Cassavetes,
on and on.
It was the worst damn script
I ever got involved.
We had orgies eating rubber grapes.
But, you know,
we tried
and Shatner really tried.
He rode that Arabian stud
across the desert like,
oh my God.
Because when you think of Alexander the Great, of course you think of
William Shatner.
Of course.
Can you do
an imitation of William Shatner
as Alexander the Great?
Well, I'm not sure.
Okay.
Hello.
Tell us about how William Dozier came into your life and everything changed.
Well, I was doing my spaghetti westerns in Italy and Spain.
And I came back to the States to see my kids.
And while I was there, very shortly after I arrived,
my agent got a call from Fox and ABC.
And it was Bill Dozier's office.
And he said, I want to see this kid.
And my agent told me, and I said, what is it?
And he said, they're doing this big thing out there called Batman.
I said, come on.
I'm trying to have a serious career here.
What are you doing?
And he said, they want to see you about playing Batman.
So I went out.
I read that pilot script by the late, great Lorenzo Semple Jr.
I fell down 18 times.
I laughed my head off.
I said, I'm doing this.
So I said to the agent, if they sign me now,
I would love to test with whomever they elect to have Robin,
because I want the chemistry right.
And indeed, we did test. but I signed on the spot.
And Lyle Wagner was up for the part, too, was he not?
Well, that's what I heard and I saw on the test, but I don't know.
I don't know.
The screen tests for both of you are actually on YouTube.
Yeah, but you know, it wasn't my test.
That's a strange thing.
And I guess Lyle found out later, but they'd already assigned me.
Oh, I see. It was Bert's test.
It was Bert's test because I wanted the chemistry right.
And I said I wanted to test with this kid.
So we put on those silly makeshift costumes and did the test.
I knew within 10 seconds that he was perfect for the role.
Now, Batman was one of those
like tremendous hits back then,
and it didn't last that long.
It was one of those shows
that was a monster hit,
and it was only like, what, two years?
Yeah, it was two and a half seasons.
It was just like Star Trek.
And they're the only two shows
that have become iconic.
Isn't that weird?
Must be my...
Oh, go ahead.
No, I just think it must be my legs.
You know,
guys in rocket ships and guys who run around in tights it's amazing
well adam you took you took the part of reading in your book you took the part very seriously
and you were you respected the role and you did you actually researched the character
well yes you know i made it a point to read the old Batman
comic books because I knew and we all agreed this was going to be an homage to the Batman comics
and DC comics. Well, at the same time, we, Dorcher and I, and a couple of others,
made up our minds that it would be a comedy.
Serious, dashing for the kids, electric, but for the adults, you know, a laugh after another because of the exaggerated morality, stuff like that.
I remember an episode where you had a talk to the head of the bank or something,
and you're in a bank, and they told you,
Batman, step right ahead of the crowd.
And you said, no, I'll just wait here with these other good citizens.
Yes. Sounds like it.
That was, Gilbert, yes, that was the tone of the show,
which just knocked me out.
I thought it was really hilarious.
And, for example, in the first episodes with the great Frank Gorshin as the Riddler,
you know, when Batman walks into a discotheque and he says,
I should wish to be conspicuous.
I'll just sit at the bar.
And then Jill St. John slips him a Mickey and his orange juice,
and he gets totally abandoned.
He just gets up and dances like a crazy man.
Now, is that where you did that famous,
who came up with the famous Batman dance?
The Batusi.
Yes.
Oh, the Batusi, the dance craze of the world.
They're still doing it.
John Travolta in movies.
And what happened?
I was driving in from my place to the studio,
and I happened to come across a page or two that said,
Batman dances.
And I thought, well, I don't know.
You know how you get those moments of cooking with it.
And I said, I know what I'm going to do.
Because if he's been drugged,
he could lose all of his careful, studied moves and attitudes.
Now he's just another crazy hip-hop artist.
By the way, you know my nephew Kanye West?
Oh, we didn't know there was a relationship.
Yes.
Well, I could see the physical resemblance. Well, we didn't know there was a relation. Yes. Well, I could see
the physical resemblance.
Well, of course. I just did.
I just did a rap
on a TV pilot
with Ralph Garman and Kevin
Smith. It was very funny.
And I did a rap.
I did Kanye West.
Only very dramatically.
Can't wait to see it.
Oh, bitch.
Hey, dude.
Oh, bitch.
Oh, bitch.
All I want is more bitches.
You know, it just went on like that.
Every word faithful, you know, just went on like that every word faithful you know to the thing
you realize how ridiculous it is
I never thought
I'd be hearing Batman
saying I want more bitches
oh lord
listen I have no
taste
speaking of which Oh, Lord. Listen, I have no taste.
Speaking of which, you were in Happy Hooker Goes to Washington.
You got the wrong state.
Oh, which state did the Happy Hooker go to?
It was Happy Hooker Goes Hollywood.
Oh, I'm sorry.
That was a better one.
Yes, and I was told that it was going to be really a comedy making fun of all that stuff, a spoof.
And then they brought in a second unit and they shot all that naughty stuff.
They inserted footage you didn't know about, huh?
Huh?
They inserted footage that you weren't aware of.
Correct.
Interesting.
So you are basically, aside from being in bad movies, in porn also.
Oh, my God, Gilbert, don't. Yes, I have agreed to and done my best in a panoply of films.
But isn't it weird?
And such luck.
I am the most grateful actor in the world that I've become an icon.
And there aren't many of us.
Now, when you were in Batman, it seemed like every star in show business wanted to do a guest appearance on Batman.
Yes, half the time I didn't know when I went onto the stage,
who would be waiting
to pop out of a window or something,
or who would be cast.
For example, Jerry
Lewis popped out of a window.
Dick Clark. Milton
Burrell was, you know,
one of our villains.
Liberace played a villain, which was quite a...
Sandell.
Yes, which was quite amusing.
Oh, my God, he was two characters, the concert pianist, and a real mean villain.
When he walked around that stage for a week trying to be mean.
And I kept looking at him.
I just couldn't believe this.
He was going,
hey, I'm a maid guy,
and you just watch out.
It was very amusing.
It sounds like it.
We should just clarify
for the listeners, Adam.
He played Shandell.
He played a concert pianist based on himself, of course,
and then he played his evil twin brother, Harry.
Yes, yes.
A very macho.
Our writers came up with the darndest things.
Now, what did Milton Berle play on this show?
He played Louis the Lilac.
Louis the Lilac.
Yes. You know,
Milton liked to dress kind of strangely
occasionally.
And the part was just
really written for him.
I have my paintings now that I
do of all these characters.
Oh, you want to buy a
painting? But anyway, yeah, Louis the Lilac had flowers all over
and, you know, his hat and this and that.
But these people who were celebrities
and really fine actors and comedians and so on
loved to do that show
because it was a hot show, of course.
But they could watch it with their kids and their grandchildren.
I remember watching the show,
and I was always a big Jerry Lewis fan,
and when Jerry Lewis popped out of the window,
that was...
So what do you remember about working with Lewis?
Oh, it was very difficult.
From time to time.
20 seconds of film.
Well,
Denny directed, or tried to, I don't
know, but I was always
kind of the Dean Martin.
Well, you sang with Dean Martin,
did you not? Yeah, I did.
And I was, again, lucky.
My God, I sang with Dean Martin.
I'd hosted the Hollywood Palace three times.
I introduced George Carlin.
I was looking at it online today.
It's the very young George Carlin before he let his hair grow and changed his image.
Yes, he really did, didn't he?
It was fascinating.
And Ray Charles was on the show.
You introduced Ray Charles.
One of my favorite guys. Yeah, yeah, I did. Go on the show. You introduced Ray Charles. One of my favorite guys.
Yep, yep, I did.
Go on, please.
I remember when, even as like when you were two, watching Batman,
when you and Robin would allegedly be walking up the side of a wall.
The Batclimb.
Yes.
It couldn't have fooled a half-witted one-year-old
how they did it.
You know, one of the Adam West naked behind the scenes
revealing all secrets.
That's the DVD that you could buy.
Anyway, what we did, we placed the building on its side at about a six-degree angle.
And then our capes were attached with fishing line filament to give it a sense of gravity pulling at us.
And then we had to hop, skip, and jump up the wall.
So it was not exactly George Lucas.
No.
Good morning, citizen.
Why, it's Dick Clark, Robin.
What?
I hear music coming through the window.
It must be the shamans.
I don't know.
Well, you know what was great about those cameos in the window, Adam,
is not only celebrities of the day,
but characters from other series, like Lurch from The Addams Family.
Right.
The cross-promoting ABC series pokes his head out of the window.
Sure.
And Colonel Clink.
Oh, yeah.
You have to ask each one of them what the hell they're doing in Gotham City.
That's right.
It was like Vegas.
What stays in Gotham, you know?
Now, can I ask you, while on that topic of what stays in Gotham?
Yes. You. Be careful, Adam. One. Now, can I ask you, while on that topic of what stays in God? Uh-oh.
Be careful, Adam. One of the biggest villains on the show, of course, was the Joker, played by the great late Cesar Romero.
Yeah.
Who was a romantic lead and a great dancer and everything. And I heard that he in real life was gay.
And I mean, to quote Jerry Seinfeld,
not that there's anything wrong with that.
But here's the rumor I heard.
And please tell me it's true.
Even if you've never heard this rumor, for God's sakes, Adam, tell me it's true. Even if you've never heard this rumor,
for God's sakes, Adam, tell me
this is true. So far, I've never
heard it. Okay.
I heard Cesar Romero
used to hire
young boys, and
he would stand there, pull his
pants and underwear down,
and they would fling
orange wedges at his ass.
I'd love to see the look on Adam's face, right?
Hello?
Yes.
Just saying.
Yes, Gilbert, that's true.
Gilbert, I've heard more damn rumors around that town.
And Caesar, well, I'll tell you,
I don't think I was that cute.
Caesar didn't make a play for me, I'll tell you.
But he was always
a perfect gentleman. The thing about
Caesar was, he thought he was
a great Latin lover.
And indeed, his career was based
mostly on his mustache.
At least that's what he believed.
He was very modest.
And so he wouldn't shave it.
So we said, well, that's fine.
Just put some white makeup over it.
Toward the end of the day, it'll pop out.
It'll be funny.
And he was always wearing a wristwatch of the Joker.
Was there a story attached to that, too?
I don't know. I never noticed.
I read somewhere that he got the wristwatch as a gift from the president of Mexico,
and he refused to take it off. I don't know if that's like the oranges.
It isn't, but it's the wrong time. He never asked you to fling orange wedges at his ass, is what I want to know.
No.
No.
No, I think it's one of the most bizarre things I've ever heard.
I think it's very funny.
Welcome to the show, Adam.
Well, it's wonderful fun.
I had no idea when I answered this phone that I would be treated like that.
No, that I would hear things like that.
This is funny.
That's funny.
Gilbert is a big fan of Vincent Price, Adam.
As a matter of fact, he has a death mask.
Or is it a life mask?
Yeah, I have a life mask of Vincent Price in my house.
I don't blame you.
Everyone should have one.
So what was Vincent Price like to work with?
Well, he was thoroughly professional.
And he was a raconteur, as you know.
And he told a lot of stories.
And he was a collector of art.
And he would talk about his art occasionally.
I don't know art who, but he would talk about his art.
And, you know, he had a great sense of humor.
Because in one sequence, we were throwing eggs at Egghead.
Because he was Egghead.
That's right.
Yes.
This wasn't like Cesar Romero.
No, no, no.
Exactly.
Exactly.
And what happened was the egg fight got a little out of hand.
It got a little too ambitious.
And we started throwing eggs at Vincent.
And they were rotten, and they cracked on his head and so on.
And he began to pick up dozens of eggs and throw them at the crew.
Well, this moment in time degenerated into the worst, messiest scene I think ever not seen on film.
We will return to Gilbert Gottfried's amazing, colossal podcast.
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And the other famous one, you worked with, there was the Penguin.
Yeah, Burgess.
Yeah, Burgess Meredith, who starred in Mice and Men with Lon Chaney Jr.
You remind me of Burgess a bit.
Wait a second.
Hold on.
Hold on. Hold on. This is the first time.
This is the first time in my career, in my life maybe,
that I've been compared to Burgess Meredith.
If I were directing that movie,
My Cement or Whatever Again,
some of the work he's done,
I think I'd cast you.
Wow.
By the way,
you would have made
a really good penguin.
Oh, thank...
You have no idea
what an honor
it is to have Batman
tell me I could have been a penguin.
Well, I'm just done listening to you now
because if you had a cigarette holder,
a long cigarette with the ash falling
and me smoking under my cowl,
I'd believe you.
With your umbrella gas,
oh my gosh.
And the monocle.
Don't forget the monocle.
Oh, the monocle and the long pointed nose.
No, Gilbert, really, you could have played that role.
Oh, wow.
Very flattering.
This is a complete honor.
Oh, nah.
You also would have made a disturbing Riddler, Gilbert.
Yes.
Okay.
Now, back to more filth and perversion.
Yeah.
This one.
Adam, please tell me this one's true.
I heard there was, you once were in an orgy,
and Frank Gorshin was there, too.
And the two of you started yelling at each other
in your characters.
Well, you know, what happened is
we have goofy senses of humor.
I've got to be very careful here.
My wife just walked in.
Frank and I were invited.
It's okay, Marcel.
Frank and I were invited to a party in Hollywood, and it was after the day's shooting.
So we said, what the hell?
Let's go see what this party is.
And we walk in.
There's an orgy going on.
You know, down a few steps in the middle of the living room.
And I looked at Frank, he looked at me, and we started to laugh.
And we got into the characters.
Well, we were kicked out of the orgy immediately.
That wasn't
nice.
I thought orgies were gentle
people fooling around.
So Batman and the Riddler
were kicked out of an orgy?
Yeah. Don't tell anyone.
It's embarrassing.
So you never got a chance
to partake?
No.
No.
I have my own secret life.
Adam, tell us about some of the people that wanted to do the series,
like Frank Sinatra and Gregory Peck and Liz Taylor,
and people that you never got to. Well, when Gregory Peck was told that possibly he could play a villain,
I don't know what happened.
I really don't, because those people wanted to do the show.
But Mike McClain and Bill Dozier and those people did the casting.
I mean, it was wonderful to be surprised, you know,
when you go into the studio and you don't know who the hell's going to be standing there
in some really crazy costume.
Every kind of Hollywood legend on that show.
I mean, you work with Tallulah Bankhead,
you work with George Sanders and Anne Baxter
and Otto Preminger, and the list goes on and on.
And weren't they wonderful?
You know, it was Tallulah Bankhead's last show,
last film before she passed on.
And she used to sit in the half dark back in the corner of the stage, you know, between takes.
She had long waits.
And I'd walk over there.
Nobody spoke to her.
I don't know why, but I'd walk over there and I'd start a little conversation.
And she was so nice.
She was lovely.
But the one thing that struck me about her was the courage that she displayed.
You know, being that ill.
She played the black widow.
Yes.
Now, how many...
Oh.
Go on, Gilbert.
There's that penguin laugh.
Yes, I love it.
I'm getting a little frightened.
Robin!
Robin!
Where did you go, damn it?
Damn it, Robin!
Get your cowardly fights over here.
Really, Gilbert could do that.
He could.
Now, you must
have been quite popular with the
ladies when Batman
was on. Okay, I know where you're going.
I don't
talk about
personal things. My wife
just walked in, for God's sake.
Tell us when she leaves,
and I'll go back to my line of questioning.
What an excuse I just gave.
What a thing.
Go on, Gilbert.
How many people, how many actresses played Catwoman?
Three.
Yeah, I remember Julie Newmar, Earth, not Eartha Kitt.
Eartha Kitt.
Eartha Kitt.
Yep.
And who's the third?
Oh, Merriweather.
Leigh-Anne Merriweather.
Miss America.
Wow.
Was a very good actress.
And she was in the feature film.
She wasn't in the series.
That's correct.
In the feature.
And then, and seemingly, she did two or three series.
My gosh.
Oh, yeah.
I think people would know her best from Barnaby Jones.
Of course.
And she worked a lot.
Tell us about Bert's infamous meeting with Bruce Lee, Adam.
Well, Bert likes to tell people that he's a master of, you know, martial arts.
A super black belt, and I don't know, green belt, whatever.
And we played a little joke.
We asked Bruce if he would, every time he walked past Bert,
if he would scowl and look as mean as he possibly could,
which he did for one week.
And I got to give Bert a little credit for being courageous
because when it came time
for them to get up
and do their stuff,
you know, Bert did it.
And of course,
it was choreographed,
so nobody got hurt.
But I would imagine
Bert was scared to death.
How would you like Bruce Lee
scowling at you every second?
Now, I heard when
the show was canceled, NBC
was interested in picking it up.
That's true. And what was the reason why
that didn't happen? Well, they had gotten prematurely, I don't know, they tore all the standing sets down, you know, the stage and so on.
And we had, you know, the Batcave, all that stuff was very expensive and rather large, as was Wayne Manor and all those interiors you know the standing sets so
they decided I'd be too expensive and ABC Fox had done enough with 120
episodes to go under reruns and recoup the money I see so so they didn't really care if the series went on or not.
Correct.
It's been playing, you know, for over 40 years.
Globally.
By the way, I'm very big in China.
Really?
I speak Chinese with a very high voice.
And Robin.
Holy, holy,
holy guacamole Batman.
Robin speaks way down there.
But,
you know, Batman and Lucy
have been vying for first place
in China for a long time.
So the show is popular in China?
China and Russia
and Belgrade, all kinds and Russia. I didn't know that.
And Belgrade, all kinds of places.
I get letters, my God.
And these craven people.
Now, you're currently working on Family Guy.
And I forget the name of your character.
family guy.
I forget the name of your character.
I wish many would.
I play Mayor West.
Yeah, you play Adam West.
Mayor Adam West.
Adam West.
Adam West Adam West
yeah
I was going
I was thinking of asking you
to sing that I remember
out of nowhere
you start singing
Gabriel I did because
everybody asked me to do that
wow
did you come up with the melody
I think it's Edelweiss.
It sounded like Edelweiss.
I think it is.
That's what it is.
You guys got it immediately.
I am happy to see me.
Adam, how did Seth and Family Guy come into your life?
Well, Seth had written the pilot for me as an episode of Johnny Bravo,
which he was producing and writing at the time.
And we had kind of the same comedic sensibilities as you guys and I do. And so he simply called
and said, look, would you play Mayor Adam West of Quahog? And I read the stuff. And
I said, Seth, of course. We were good friends. And I thought, if I can do this, that insanely different mayor, bring it to life and retain a little bit of dignity, that's a challenge.
So I did.
I don't know whether I retained dignity or not.
That's a wonderful character.
Thank you.
Well, he's really mad
I mean all you have to do is
call in the quirkier aspects
of your personality
some of the dumb stuff I've done
or thought and
you know kind of magnify that
and it works
and I remember there was an episode
you're having an affair with
Peter's daughter.
Yeah.
Oh, jeez.
Oh, and then there's Lois.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, man. Adam, speaking of unhinged characters, and I was telling Gilbert before we called you,
we were telling him about the wonderful Lookwell.
Oh, golly.
You know, that's one pilot I've done.
I've done about 12, I think.
The one pilot that I really, really, really wanted to see go,
because I got a chance to do comedy, just outright comedy, which I've always kind
of had a leaning toward.
And they loved it.
And then the head of NBC, it was his favorite.
He passed away.
He died.
Oh, Brandon Tartikoff.
Yeah.
Yes.
And so, you know, whatever happens with those things, I don't know.
But now they're playing it in movie houses even as the funniest pilot that never sold.
It's wonderful. We should point out it was co-written by Conan O'Brien and Gilbert's pal Robert Smigel.
You bet. And Gilbert, you could have played the character.
Robert Smigel. You bet.
And Gilbert, you could have played the character.
So you're basically telling me I could have
starred as any character
in movies or TV.
Except one.
Okay.
and who who was that one character i think we know the hulk adam you're so great about sending up your character and sending up yourself.
And Gilbert and I also watched the Funny or Die short.
We watched Batman's Garage Sale, which was wonderful.
What about the one where Adam West hits?
In other words, oh, God, it was funny for me to do i mean the guy's sitting at the bar you know a really sharp kind of
place and he's drinking his funny drink and every woman chick whatever who walks by he makes him
play for him and he always gets knocked out i don't know whether you saw that. What is it called? Is it on the web?
Well, it's Funny or Die. Funny or Die, okay. Adam West is.
I did a third one,
which I played a hard-nosed
film noir
detective.
But yeah, those things
are really funny to do.
You're great in them.
Well, thank you. They're a challenge
and I love to do comedy.
We should wrap up and...
Well, I hope so.
Give poor Adam a break.
May I say, it's been one of the most festive occasions
I've ever been witness to.
Okay, so if I may, you've completely, 100% confirmed that young boys would throw orange wedges at Cesar Romero's ass.
You know, I never really got to know these people.
Thank God.
Now that you tell me these stories, I'm fascinated.
It's a shame I couldn't look in the window or something.
Hey, guys, I hope you got a fairly decent show out of me.
It was great, Adam.
Oh, great.
Great, Adam.
Let's mention quickly your pilot.
You're doing an animated pilot with Rob Lowe.
Yeah.
You know, it's a thing called Razzle and Dazzle, or Dazzle and Razzle, I'm not sure.
And it's animated, and it's really very funny, very good.
And I play Rob Lowe's stuntman father.
You play his stuntman father?
Yes.
And he's an aspiring stuntman who keeps screwing up.
But I don't know what's going to happen with that.
You know, I just went in and did it.
We'll see what happens.
And you seem busier than ever because you also have a show on the Travel Channel.
Yeah, it's called What You Get for the Money with Adam West.
Who plays Adam West?
Well, guess.
And we travel all over the world and film strange things, you know, that cost money.
And how much money and what you actually get for your money.
Interesting.
When does this debut, Adam?
I think maybe it has on the Travel Channel. Okay.
I don't know.
Jesus, you guys I don't even watch.
Appreciate your honesty.
Well, you know,
I just go in and do the damn thing
and send a friggin' check.
We should point out
that this is the first time in November
that the original Batman series
is going to be available on DVD,
which a lot of fans have been waiting for a long time.
Thank you.
I'll tell you, I'm so happy about that because they have been,
and I'm constantly asked, when is it coming out?
When is it coming out?
And it will be November 11, and it's going to be Blu-ray, high def,
whatever you say, all kinds of pixels and electrons running around.
You know, modern times, it'll be beautiful to watch.
You'll be even bigger in China now, Adam.
Gosh, I hope so.
Do you go out to China a lot?
Well, I spend weekends there.
I love that. I love that Szechuan Chao.
No, I've only been once.
I'll never go back.
And
you've confirmed also
that you've been in perverted sex acts
with Frank Gorshin
don't say that
the only perversion we had was
running out of the house
we were kicked out
said you ain't going to
all of you babbers
oh my god out. Said you ain't going to all of them, would you, Babber?
Oh, my God.
Well, this was an honor to be able... Thank you.
Oh, thank you. You're a great sport,
Adam, I gotta tell you.
Well, I hope so. You know, this
is a tough racket, and if you
can't look at it with some kind of realism
and humor as you guys
do, you might as well get
out.
A lot of people wish I would get out.
Well, I was about to say that.
Are you kidding? You are one of a
kind.
That he is. To have
the greatest Batman
of all time tell me
I could have been the Penguin
was
just, what an honor.
Well, it's
true, Gilbert, because
there are certain things with
movement, voice quality,
attitudes, sense of
humor. Yes, you could have done that.
See, I wish my agent would feel the same way you do.
Wait a minute.
I just got a wire from him.
He died.
He died.
No.
If he's like mine.
Anything else you want to plug, Adam?
AdamWest.com?
Yeah, AdamWest.com.
Thanks for mentioning that, you guys.
Sure.
And the Adam West Naked DVD,
where you tell many, many anecdotes
about the shooting of Batman, the filming.
Yes, and that'll be part of the new
Batman Blu-ray DVD.
Great.
In addition to standing on its own.
And then I'm painting, and I've got stuff in galleries, and it's moving a bit.
And I want to send you a picture of one of my paintings.
Oh, my God, yes.
This I call space...
I can't do it.
Space archaeology.
Space archaeology?
Yes.
My wife says, what is that?
And I say, I don't know, I just paint my
dreams.
And you paint Batman villains?
Do we have that correct?
Yes, I've got a series of those.
Maybe I'll put them on my website.
Oh, absolutely.
And you
admit, you fully admit
to throwing orange wedges at Cesar Ramirez.
Good God, no.
I'll never look at another orange.
Okay.
Boy, you guys have been a lot of fun.
Really, really fun.
You've been a ton of fun.
Thanks for doing it.
Well, I'll let you go.
Oh, you've been such a great sport.
Thank you.
So much fun.
Thank you, Gilbert.
We've been listening to the greatest Batman of all time, Adam West.
This has been Gilbert Gottfried's
Amazing Colossal Podcast
with my
co-host
Frank Santopadre
and we've
been talking to the greatest
Batman of all time, Adam West.
Thank you again, Adam.
Thanks, Ben.