Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - 267. Charles Fox
Episode Date: July 8, 2019Gilbert and Frank welcome one of their favorite composers, Grammy and Emmy winner Charles Fox, who looks back on a six-decade career of writing top 40 hits ("Killing Me Softly with His Song") as well... as music and themes for TV shows ("Happy Days," "Wonder Woman") feature films ("Barbarella," "9 to 5") and game shows ("Match Game," "What's My Line?"). Also, Charles teams with Barry Manilow, pens a tune for Burt Reynolds, witnesses the Ed Ames tomahawk incident and remembers friends Neal Hefti, Jerry Goldsmith and Henry Mancini. PLUS: "Love, American Style"! The Charles Fox Singers! The inventiveness of Ernie Kovacs! Gilbert sings the soundtrack from "Zapped!" And the boys pay loving tribute to Paul Williams! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hi, I'm Beverly D'Angelo and you're listening to Gilbert Gottfried's amazing, colossal podcast. On a new road On a new road On a new road On a new road
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On a new road On a new road On a new road On a new road On a new road Hi, this is Gilbert Gottfried, and this is Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast
with my co-host, Frank Santopadre, and our engineer, Frank Furtarosa.
Our guest this week is an Oscar-nominated, Emmy-winning, and Grammy-winning musician,
This week is an Oscar-nominated, Emmy-winning and Grammy-winning musician, songwriter, arranger,
and conductor, and a composer of some of the most recognizable and admired film and TV scores and TV theme songs of the last six decades.
He's created scores and individual songs for over 100 films, including Barbarella, Goodbye Columbus, Victory and Entebbe, Foul Play, 9 Night Football, Watch My Line, Match Game, The Bugaloos, Happy Days, Laverne and Shirley, Wonder Woman, The Paper Chase, The Love Boat,
co-written with our one-time podcast guest, Paul Williams.
With another occasional writing partner, the late Norman Gimbel, he penned the hit song, I Got a Name, Killing Me Softly with his song,
I Got a Name, Killing Me Softly with His Song, a number one hit in 1974, and a personal favorite of yours truly, Ready to Take a Chance Again. His songs have been performed by a who's who
of popular music, including Roberta Flack, Jim Croce, Johnny Cash, Lena Horne, Johnny Mathis,
Barry Manilow, Olivia Newton-John and the Boston Pops, and even Fred Astaire. He's also composed
the music for stage plays, live concerts, and ballets, and conducted symphony orchestras
all over the world.
And in 2010, he authored a terrific memoir called Killing Me Softly, My Life in Music.
Please welcome one of our favorite composers, a member of the national songwriters hall of fame
and a man who promised that he would do this podcast on the condition that i didn't sing any
of his songs the multi-talented Charles Fox.
Wait, I think I said that
in jest.
Where did you get
that quote from?
We assumed you had
heard him sing.
Hey, so guys,
thank you very much.
I'm very honored to be here.
Thank you for the
lovely introduction.
I think I need to take
a vacation.
I did so much work.
You did a lot, Charles.
It's dizzying. Now, before
our listeners, some of our
crazed listeners, are going to
get angry that we left out
your most important credit.
Which was that? The green slime.
Had I known you would put that up,
I would have said, could you sing one of my
songs instead?
Truth be told, I told him the section from the book
where you said the green slime followed you around for decades.
It does.
It does.
I didn't write any music for that at all.
It was my first, well, first opportunity to make some extra money,
if you want to know the truth, going back years ago.
And I took the job.
And it turned out that all i had to
do is help them to find existing music and cut into the picture and i took the job and i uh why
are we talking about the green sea it was a throwaway joke really yeah let's call this prologue
a japanese sci-fi movie anyways a japanese sci-fi and uh Anyway, it was a Japanese sci-fi. And at first I called the producer back, the director,
and I said, you know what?
I can't do it.
I can't do it.
I can't spend the next few weeks cutting someone else's music,
canned music.
I said, it just goes against me.
And I needed the money, to be honest.
Going back 100 years of my career, before I did my first picture.
And he convinced me.
He said, you know, I'm counting on you. Anyway, so I, before I did my first picture. And he convinced me, he said,
you know, I'm counting on you.
Anyway, so I said, I'll tell you what,
I'll do it under one condition,
which took me a week or two.
And you know, when you use that kind of canned music,
it was like, all right, you go into your audition,
some of the music might be right for a scene.
And he said, oh, that sounds pretty good.
Let me have about a pound and a half of that music,
you know, and a quarter of a pound of this kind of music.
And he put it into the picture.
I said, I'll do it under one condition,
that you don't put my name on the screen.
That was my only condition.
And he did not live up to that condition.
So it came up with the original Japanese composer,
who was hard.
And whatever I did i you know i took
demos and i threw it into the film whatever uh and for years after that i could be someplace
in the film business music business someone say hey i saw your picture last night green slime
and they said really why'd you do that picture i said really why'd you watch that picture
that's the perfect answer.
Had you heard of the green slime before this, Gilbert?
Because you know every bad horror movie known to man.
He knows them all.
Well, don't remind me, okay?
Now, years ago, before I even knew you did the music,
years ago, I saw the movie Zapped.
Oh.
With Scott Baio, Willie Ames, Scatman Crothers, and Heather Thomas, which I thought was going to be, and we'll be discussing this with our next guest. We'll be talking about it later, too.
Because this was a TNA teen sex comedy.
About telekinesis, right?
Yes, yes.
It was like kind of a takeoff on Carrie,
and it was a terrible movie.
But I swear to you, I like the music.
Stayed with him all these years.
The set.
Really?
Well, you know, it's a funny thing,
because she started with two of my least favorite
prices.
Where do we go from here?
But.
We're good at that.
Practicing scales of hand and channel.
No matter what I promise you, we are going to sing some songs from Zapt.
You're just getting even with me now.
I'll tell you about Zapped.
So I wrote a bunch of songs,
and two of them became classics in the Philippines.
Wow.
Only in the Philippines.
You're big in Manila.
Tell me which one.
I'll sing it right now.
Gotta Believe in Magic?
Okay. Okay. I'll... All right now. Gotta Believe in Magic? Okay.
Okay.
I'll...
All right.
I'm ready.
Be careful, Charles.
Be careful.
You want to sing it?
Yeah.
Take me to your heart.
Show me where to start.
Let me play the part of your first love.
All the stars are bright Let us make a wish tonight
my love
Pity those who wait
Trust in love to fate
Finding out too late that they've lost it.
Never let it go.
You will never know the ways of love.
Got to believe in magic.
Show me how two people find each other
in a world that's full of strangers.
Got to believe in magic.
It's stronger than the moon that shines above.
Longer than the moon that shines above.
Cause it's magic when two people fall in love.
You know what?
I'm so amazed.
This is, first of all, I haven't played that in 40 or 50 years.
And you are still singing that song.
Yes.
Yes.
I'm afraid to tell you the other song that's in the film. Okay.
I'm ready. I'm ready. I can't remember. Wait. Don't say that song. Yes. Yes. I'm afraid to tell you the other song that's in the film. Okay. I'm ready.
I'm ready.
I bet you.
I can't remember.
Wait.
Don't say another word.
Yeah.
Is it King and Queen?
Yes.
Okay.
Okay.
Want me to start?
Come on.
I'm ready.
I'm ready.
I love this.
I don't remember it myself.
Okay.
I don't remember it.
Fake it.
Fake it.
Okay.
Okay.
Sing along.
Okay.
Yeah, you do it.
We're the King and queen of hearts
hold me when the music starts.
All my dreams come true
when I dance with you.
That's great.
Oh, wait.
Promise me you're mine tonight.
I will wait in line tonight.
I with the lights down low.
I with the lights down low Never let you go
Did you dream that we'd dance together
In a night that we'd stay forever
In a dream that we thought would never end
And it's not my imagination
Or a part of the orchestration
This began
with the coronation
where the king
and the queen
of hearts
I am really amazed.
Oh, this is
this is the greatest moment.
So, for me it is.
I will tell you this.
Yeah.
It's only famous in the Philippines.
Until now.
Until now.
Until we post it on Facebook.
You know, this may be the start of big things for me here, you know.
I may have a career after this.
In the Philippines, I'm considered the next Charlie Chaplin.
I want to tell you something. You can go to the Philippines
just singing that song, They'll Love You There.
I think Dara would like you to go to the Philippines.
And we're not going to do it now,
but when the show ends, we have
to do the ending of
Zap, which is
Oh, I won't remember that at all.
Ready to get what you got
oh I can't go there
well fake it
that one I love
it was performed by Plain Jane
was the name
of this imaginary
we had two or three different groups
but David Pomerantz sang those two songs
and here's what happened
the movie wasn't a great movie
and it was over and done with, right?
Years later, about four, five, six, seven years later,
I went to see David Pomerantz perform
the show with David Zippel, the great songwriter.
A friend of mine who we've collaborated with.
Good writer.
Wonderful writer.
And after the show, David Pomerantz comes up to me and says,
you do know that those two songs you wrote for me are big hits in the Philippines. I said, how would I know that? I never saw
royalties. No one ever mentioned it. So he sent me a video of him singing. And as soon
as they played a little bit of an introduction to Gotta Believe in Magic, about 5,000 girls start screaming
because they know the song. Since that
time, because he's become very famous
in the Philippines. They've been trying to get me
there too for a while. Amazing.
But
every place that I've gone, whether we
were on a cruise last year, we were on a love boat
cruise, they got me to play the piano
and sing some of my songs. All the
waiters were filipino
and if i ever mention i give people the filipino test
i know if they're really filipino if they know that song that's hilarious yeah and then they
start singing anyway so it was uh what else about my past do you know this is an interesting thing
from the book that i was sharing with gilbert tell us it was almost destined that you would be a musician because of something called the music bump
well did you explain this to our listeners i don't think i explained that to anyone
but i'll tell you the fable story in my family supposedly when i was born i was the middle of
three boys the doctor supposedly looked at the young-born child that I was and said,
there's a bump.
That's a music bump on the back of his head.
Amazing.
And it meant what?
It meant the doctor was drunk.
But there it is.
I followed what he said.
And started playing the piano at age nine.
I did, yeah.
I did.
And Frank and I were both interested
is that you used to play in the Catskills.
Oh, yeah.
You put your first band together.
You know, that's where we all got started.
I have so many friends who got started in the Catskills.
That's where all the great comics started, you know.
Could you tell us some of the comics you worked with?
You know, I play the piano.
And the first place I played, I was 15 years old,
had my first band.
And we were pretty thrilled to get a job, you know.
And there were other hotels.
There were big hotels.
There were 450 hotels in the Catskill Mountains.
It was a pretty amazing place.
How about that?
And some of the biggest comedians in the world.
But big bands.
You know, they were very beautiful places.
They were large.
I played a little place.
And we didn't have new entertainment that came in.
We had two people who came from Yiddish theater.
Harry Steinman being one of them.
You know too much about him.
And Velma Ravel was the other one.
Velma Ravel.
Did they go back to vaudeville?
They do.
And they used to put on skits.
Amazing.
And Harry Steinman used to actually put lipstick on,
like the old vaudeville theater,
with pancake makeup.
And they would act out plays and stuff.
And I would sit there.
You know, just make up things.
And I had the Jewish moment, you know.
You guys are 15.
You probably didn't know what hit you.
Well, maybe it's the start of my motion picture career.
Anyway, that's where it started for me
um uh i'll tell you who i did work with it was shelly shelly berman yes shelly did a show for me
uh we went to we did in florida for six weeks and he was a friend what a funny guy yeah he was a
nice man we we wanted to have him on this show but he had taken the turn for the worst by the
time we started yeah yeah yeah he would have been great had taken the turn for the worse by the time we started
he would have been great
but you know it's very romantic in the book
because you're talking about not only the cat skills
you romanticize it
you were 15 and the world was your oyster
but also the coming of age in New York
at that time and you're describing
hanging out at the Blue Note
and going to these jazz clubs
and there's a doo-wop group on every corner
I was explaining it to Gilbert
it must have been great times.
It was great times, yeah.
It was an innocent time.
So, you know, the truth is those days I really wasn't into pop music, rock and roll.
I discovered Latin music, you know, and I loved jazz, and I loved classical music.
But I wasn't into rock and roll of the 50s.
I didn't get depreciated, honestly, until I got to do Happy Days.
And they asked me to, you know,
I did a lot of the shows for Gary Marshall,
and that was one of them.
And that was actually an outgrowth
of Love, America, Stone.
When I sat down to write Happy Days,
I realized I was not into the 50s.
I have to get some background.
So I went out and bought 50s records.
And, you know, the 50s was a pretty simple time.
I was in...
Orem. and you know the 50s was a pretty simple time it was either the blues of 1-6-2-5 chord progression
and so
the early happy days
was 1-6-2-5 chord
meant to sound
like a 50s song
that would somehow
come back and be a hit,
which it turned out to be.
Big hit.
Became a big hit.
The thing about Happy Days, too, is, as you mentioned,
they started with Rock Around the Clock.
Yes.
So at what point did Miller and Milkis, those guys,
came to you and said, we need an original song for this?
Well, first of all, it was in Love American style.
They used to have three episodes a week.
Oh, yeah.
People forget that it came from Love and the Happy Days.
Love and the Happy Days.
Yeah.
There's always Love American style.
And so that was one of the episodes since ABC decided that they would make a pilot.
They thought it would be a good idea.
And they decided to shelve it eventually because they thought that the world wasn't
ready to revisit the 50s. Yeah, we had
Henry here. Told us that.
Yeah. So then finally
when American Graffiti came out, and that
was a big hit, ABC
decided to give it a shot and put it on the air. So
American Graffiti's theme was Rock Around the Clock.
We wrote, Norma
Gimbel and I wrote Happy Days song right
away for the pilot but they were they
thought well let's hold it for the end title for the main title just wanted to create that 50s
sound that everyone knows they use rock around the clock so the show was on for a year and it
was doing pretty well not great but great enough they gave it a second year. And they realized somehow after a few episodes
that Henry Winkler was fast emerging,
the star of the show, even though Ronnie was great, Ron Howard.
And also, Henry was getting a lot of letters.
You know, people really, he was fast becoming the star,
a star, actually.
And the other thing they said is,
let's try to, we went from a film show
to a four camera live right with an audience and gary marshall was you know like one of the
funniest men ever and he would warm up the audience and and they they loved the the people
and so they decided well if we're going to give it a new look and a new sound we can do after
the fans at the store. And four cameras,
let's use our Happy Days theme song at the beginning.
And then it all broke open.
You know, we had a top, I don't know,
it was number one record in Europe, I know that,
but it was top five, I think, around the country.
Still one of the most beloved theme songs.
And Gilbert and I got a kick out of the fact
that you wrote a Ralph and Patsy,
you wrote music for a Ralph and Patsy pilot
and a Pinky Tuscadero one.
We did, we did. We did spin-offs. They tried to spin it off. Well, Laverne and Shirley was a spin-off. Right. You wrote a Ralph and Patsy? You wrote music for a Ralph and Patsy pilot and a Pinky Tuscadero one?
We did.
We did. We did spin-offs.
They tried to spin it off.
Well, Laverne and Shirley was a spin-off.
Right.
Yeah.
Right.
And finally, Mork and Mindy.
And you wrote the theme music to Love American Style.
Mm-hmm.
And also that interstitial music that would play.
You know what I did there?
We had little vignettes.
Yeah.
So on those little vignettes,
I treated them like a different classical composer
would do that.
One time it was Beethoven,
one time Chopin, Brahms,
and I would just treat them as separate
and different musically than the theme itself.
Yeah, those were some of the greatest scores.
They were fun.
Actually, one other truth,
on the 17th,
if Arnold Margolin is hearing this, he was a creator.
Yeah, I met Arnold at a party a couple years ago.
He's a sweet guy.
I'm going to see him at a party in a couple weeks.
Oh, good.
Please give him my best.
They're having a Love America Saw reunion at the Paramount Commissary,
which he called me to make sure I'm going to get there.
Wow.
And so those of us who are around.
And Stuart's coming too?
I don't know if Stuart's coming.
He's in the Midwest.
We had him on the show too.
We had Stewart.
Stewart's right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, that's probably the first time I saw the name Charles Fox on my television was Love American style.
It probably was the first time.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I know you had done some composing of, well, Wide World of Sports came before that?
It came before that.
Well, I did Monday Night Football came before that too. Right. The original before that. Well, I did Monday Night Football.
It came before that, too.
Right.
The original Monday Night Football one.
The original Monday Night Football.
Yeah.
Oh, and one movie I recommended on this show was a strange film in black and white.
Oh, here we go.
Another one of these.
Oh, no.
This is your friend Larry Pierce.
Oh, well, my friend Larry Pierce is, I'm going to see him for dinner.
Oh, he's still around.
He's a good boy.
I like his stuff.
Oh, my God.
Larry's one of my closest friends.
Oh, my God.
I'd love to talk to him.
This starred Martin Sheen, Tony Mocente.
Everybody.
Mocente, yeah.
Jack Guilford.
Oh, what's his name?
Bo Bridges.
Bo Bridges, yes.
And what's his name? Mike Kellan. Bo Bridges, yes. And what's his name?
Mike Kellen.
Yeah.
Ed McMahon, Brock Peters.
You have a fantastic memory for things.
My God.
I tell you, this has come up on the show before.
Oh, really?
We had a whole episode about the incident.
A shorter episode.
Yeah, I really like that movie.
Well, you should speak to Larry Pierce.
We should speak to Larry Pierce.
He just came in town, I think, today.
We like Goodbye Columbus, too?
Well, Larry really
is one of my closest friends to this day.
My very first picture in 1967
was of Larry Pierce.
And that was the incident.
And it was a black and white picture, and it was
a very, very fine picture.
And it was a picture in
black and white of two tough guys,
Tony Bizzente and Marty Sheen, terrorizing a subway car.
And it was such a frightening episode.
In the 60s, there was a lot of stuff going on in subways.
Yeah, sure.
And I wrote the score.
And it was a hit, but it was also, people were very bothered by it.
It wasn't just a sit-back, relaxed picture.
It was very intense.
My next picture was Barbarella.
That was Dino Laurentiis.
Sure.
Rajavadim.
Yeah, sure.
Two characters.
Dino, Dino Laurentiis, and Rajavadim.
Well, and actually, that was a really nice situation for me
because that was Bob Crew.
Yeah.
You know, great genius of the record.
Of course, Four Seasons.
So we wrote a bunch of songs for that, and I did the score,
and that was a lot of fun.
That was a hit.
That was a big hit around the world.
And the next picture that I was up for was Good Bye Columbus.
And so when Bob Rilla came out, the people from Paramount came out to see who this young fellow was in New York doing a big film, No One Knew Me, because Bob had got me to do that.
So that led to Goodbye Columbus, which was Larry.
So I've done a lot of pictures of Larry.
But I'll tell you what, in Barbarella, so many memorable things.
But I'll tell you what, in Barbarella, so many memorable things. When we were finished with the film, I had to go to France to teach Jane Fonda how to sing the theme of the song.
And that was, you know, I was a young composer, and she and Vadim, Raja Vadim, lived in a farmhouse.
I spent a couple days out there with him in the farmhouse, in France, and teaching her how to sing the song.
And he had a red Ferrari.
He lived a good life.
Yeah, he lived a good life.
And that was the inspiration for many years later
to get a red Ferrari.
Really?
I always remember that.
Were you going to cut a record with her, Jane Fonda?
There was some talk of that?
Well, we were supposed to do an album.
Bob Crew and I were supposed to go to San Tropez,
spend the summer, and do an album for Jane Fonda.
Amazing.
And she decided that she didn't want to sing, you know.
Yeah.
Barbarella is another movie that's come up on this show.
Did you have any direct interaction with De Laurentiis,
who's a larger-than-life figure?
Very little, to be honest with you, very little, yeah.
But I worked with Vadim, the director,
which, you know, in movies I work mostly with the directors.
Television is an odd thing, but mostly with the producers.
The interesting thing about the incident, too, and I read in your book,
the way people reacted in movie theaters, that people were actually having negative,
in some ways, very emotional negative reactions to the movie.
People were tearing up movie theaters.
The incident?
Yeah, the incident.
Going back to this.
Yes, because there was such intensity.
I wouldn't even want to repeat it on the air on this show.
But there was such intensity.
These two guys terrorizing couples and individuals.
And it finally got to the point where Bo Bridges,
and that was, I spoke to Bo recently about that.
It was not his
first film
but it was
Tony Mizzante's
first
not Tony
it was Tony
Mizzante's film
also
Martin Sheen
Martin Sheen
it was his
first film
yeah
everybody's good
in it
everyone's great
very powerful
very powerful movie
I'll tell you
they shot that
on a subway set
they built
in the Bronx
at the
I forget the name of the theater but it's where Charlie Chapman used to, and I was on the set, and it was just a subway.
The Biograph Theater?
Biograph Theater, that was it.
And the thing was shaking, and the lights were passing by, so you thought you were moving, and the whole thing was shut right there.
It's a wonderful movie, but it's an unsettling movie. And it still holds up all these years later. It was the screening just last year.
That's why we got to talk with Marty Sheen
and everyone else was there.
And it was honoring Larry, the screening.
It was part of the Turner Film Classics
episode. Gilbert brought it up
on a show. We've done so many of these.
We used to just talk about favorite movies.
And he brought that up one day and we did a whole show
about it. Yeah, that was one of those movies
I just caught on tv years ago yeah and it was like you know it hooks you in the blu-ray
just came out the blu-ray just was released they sent me a copy yeah oh well if larry wants to
talk to us you know we'd certainly love to unfortunately i don't know the theme song
you're in luck i didn. I didn't write that.
No, I didn't write it.
No, I didn't.
But another nice story in the book, too,
is when you first got out to L.A.,
I think it was your first day in Hollywood,
you met Henry Mancini.
You know, Hollywood was a dream.
Can't even start.
Who could have imagined to get out
and do big movies in Hollywood?
I remember seeing, fantasizing, seeing it in Life magazine with Henry Mancini's story, you know.
And he started off and he was in the Army.
He played the piccolo.
He played the piano.
And he was an arranger and he got to do movies.
And, of course, he was the king of Hollywood, you know.
And the nicest man in the world, by the way.
So my very first day in Hollywood,
I came out to Do Good by Columbus.
And Paramount sent a limousine for me and my family.
And it was all totally impressive.
You know, here we are again,
a limousine going to an apartment.
The next day I showed up at the studio.
And the guard said,
go through the studio
find left turn right turn in front of the
you'll find your parking space
and I pull up to my parking space
and to the left of me is Neil Hefty
oh we love Neil Hefty
and to the right of me is Henry Mancini
I thought I had died and gone to heaven
between those two guys
Neil Hefty was odd couple and
had to murder your wife
he was a friend too Batman Between those two guys. How about that? Neil Hefti was Odd Couple and How to Murder Your Wife. Yeah.
Lots of good stuff.
He was a friend, too.
He was a great guy.
Oh, Batman.
He was great.
The TV show.
Wonderful composer, arranger.
We love these guys.
One thing you have in common with Henry Mancini is you've gotten your pass the green slime,
and Henry Mancini, I think, made his living early on with these crappy sci-fi films.
I don't know that, but everyone gets started.
Of course.
He was like this brilliant composer.
Totally brilliant, but as nice as he'd be.
He came into the commissary.
I was there with the music editor and the head of the music department,
kind of entertaining me, a new composer in town
my very first day in california and henry comes in he says they wave him over come on over here
hank i want you to meet someone so we had lunch together and he turns to me after a few minutes
and he and he says uh are you in the motion picture academy i said no i'd love to be out
i don't know how it happens he said well you need to have three
pictures how many pictures have you done i said well this is my third i'm working on this is good
he said someone has to you have to have two people sign for you to bring you can't
apply you have to be invited he said so i'll invite you he said i'm happy to do this so we
need new blood in the academy that's great wow. Wow. He said, do you know anyone else?
I said, honestly, I don't know anyone.
He said, I'll ask Elmer Bernstein.
Wow.
Oh, my God.
So my first day in Hollywood, I get invited to join the Motion Picture Academy.
How about that?
Neil Hefti, Elmer Bernstein, and Henry Mancini all at once.
And we should give us some context.
I mean, you're a kid from New York who used to go to the pier and look out at the ships
and hope that one day you would be able to see the world.
And dream about doing what I was doing.
You bet.
And you're living it at this point.
Living the dream.
But honestly, I still am.
Good for you, Charles.
Good perspective.
And I've had great parents, you know.
They supported this all along.
They supported my dream.
They didn't think it was in any way crazy, like, what are you going?
I never heard that. No. going? I never heard that.
No.
No, I never heard that.
Oh, nice.
And how easy, I mean, look, how many people grew up in the Bronx,
a middle-class family, and then want to go to Paris to study music?
You know, not a lot of people.
But my parents supported that, you know, and my dreams.
How long were you in Paris with the great Nadia?
Two years?
About two years.
Two years.
Yeah, and in the book, and people can tell our listeners to pick up the book,
which again is called Killing Me Softly, My Life in Music.
Thank you, yeah.
The stories of you and your teacher, your mentor, Nadia.
Fair to call her that?
I call her Mademoiselle Boulanger.
You can call her Nadia because you don't know her.
Yes.
Now, here's the thing.
A woman, she was 72 years old when I was 18.
Yeah.
And I came home when I was 21.
A woman, a French woman of that age should be called madame.
Yes.
Her mother was madame, so she was mademoiselle.
I noticed that in the book.
So we all called her mademoiselle, you know.
And who else did she teach besides you?
We were talking outside. Well, 40 years
before me, Aaron Copland was the first.
But people came from around the world
and some of the
great composers around the world.
A. Lee Carter and... Michelle Legrand.
Michelle Legrand, yes. Philip Glass.
Philip Glass. I once was talking
to Michelle Legrand about that. He said. Philip Glass. I once was talking to Michelle LeGrand
about that,
and he said,
well,
I was there
with her for six years
or something.
He was also French.
He had a leg up on you.
He was there anyway.
But however,
wait a second,
Michelle LeGrand
is one of the great.
Oh,
of course,
we just lost him.
Yes,
we did.
One of the greatest
musicians and composers
ever.
And Quincy Jones.
Quincy's a friend.
And you know, when I get to have a Quincy, we talk about it.
You do.
That's nice.
We speak a little French also sometimes.
I was telling Gilbert, you know, part of the fun of reading the book is you're talking about,
I'm a kid who kept kosher and suddenly I'm in Paris.
And there's food everywhere.
And you didn't, you know.
I didn't know what to do.
Suddenly a new world.
The first day, we hooked up.
I think we were on a chartered flight.
A bunch of us went to the...
For the summer, the summer school Fontainebleau
was in the Palace of Fontainebleau.
That was Napoleon's summer palace.
And built by Francois I.
But anyway, I hooked up with some other people
going to Paris, part of the school.
And we had a week to spend in Paris
before the school started at Fontainebleau.
So we all kind of stayed together
because no one knew anyone or anything.
We walked together.
We took a train together.
And we went,
we had meals together.
And I didn't know anything about food
that was,
didn't come from my own house, frankly.
Right.
Corned beef sandwiches, I knew.
And every night
I would have steak
because I could understand
the word steak.
All the other things,
rabbit,
mutton,
lamb,
I was,
cornichon.
Anyway,
so after a while,
after about a third day,
there was steak,
ta-ta, and I thought, well, I'll give it a third day, there was steak tartare.
And I thought,
well, I'll give it a shot.
That's probably steak with the sauce.
Yes. Or sauce.
So I asked for the steak tartare.
Well done.
Right.
Which they rolled out
because steak tartare is raw steak.
Right, exactly.
We will return to Gilbert Gottfried's
amazing, colossal podcast.
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And we were talking, because we're both fans of Get Smart,
that you wrote a song for one of our guests, Barbara Felden.
Was she here?
We had Barbara Felden.
Oh, really?
She lives a few blocks from here.
I didn't write the songs.
I arranged the write the songs. Yeah, well, you've inducted and arranged that one.
I arranged the songs, yes.
And that was for David Susskind.
99.
Ancient 99.
Yeah, we had a song called Ancient 99.
Yeah.
I found it online.
It's on YouTube.
Is that so?
Yes.
And Dan Melnick.
Now, that was his partner.
And Dan Melnick, during that recording session,
put his arm on my shoulder and said,
hey, kid, it sounds like you could do pictures.
I was an arranger, and I said, I sure would love to.
And then I ended up getting a picture,
one of my first pictures for David Susskind.
So that was a turning point, doing this.
Yeah.
You know what?
There have been a lot of turning points,
to be honest.
People have asked me that question.
Sure.
I got started, I guess, I got a lot of turning points, I'll be honest. People have asked me that question. Sure. I got started,
I guess,
I got a lot of starts.
And one of my starts
was for Skish Henderson
on The Tonight Show.
Yeah, tell us about that
because there's also
a famous Tonight Show episode
that falls into that story.
Oh, I was there.
Yeah.
Yes.
There's one of the,
when you see like
some of the greatest
funny moments
for Johnny Carson or television.
It's an iconic moment.
It's an iconic moment.
Ed Ames throwing the tomahawk.
And I was with Ed Ames that day.
Incredible.
And he sang Try to Remember and one other song.
And I did the arrangements.
So in the afternoon, show tapes in the afternoon, we did the show.
I did rehearse the band.
And then he played an Indian on Daniel Boone.
He was no more an Indian
than you or me.
But that was who he played the role.
I forgot his character.
So they wheel out
this big backboard of a
wooden thing with a kind of a carving
or cut out of an outline
of a sheriff, of a cowboy.
And they handed it to Tomahawk.
He never threw it, Tomahawk.
He said, here, throw it.
He said, I don't know how to throw it.
So he just naturally pointed the point of it
towards the screen, the backdrop,
and threw it.
And 10 times in a row, it kept bouncing off.
And one of the stagehands came to him and said,
here, turn it the other way so that the point is facing you.
He threw it once.
It stuck in.
And they marked the spot.
And so he sang us one or two songs.
And then they handed him the tomahawk.
He threw it.
And he had no idea that he was going to circumcise this cowboy.
And he got, you can't see, of course, it's black and white TV.
Yeah.
He got all red in the face.
Oh, that's a great one.
He was so mad.
And all he wanted to do was get out and remove this thing.
And Johnny, who's a comic genius.
Sure.
He kept, you watch it, he keeps pulling it back.
He tries to make his way over there.
He's sharpening the two things.
He's sharpening it, yeah.
He's waiting for his line.
He milked that joke as much as he can milk it. And he
Carson said to him,
it's okay, you can't
hurt him any worse.
First he said, I didn't know you were Jewish.
Oh, yes.
Yes!
What did you do
with Skitch on the Carson show?
I used to do, first of all,
themes, original themes as the
show went on the air and off the air to do, first of all, themes, original themes as the show went on the air
and off the air.
Band,
not the Tonight Show theme.
Right,
of course.
You know,
they play music.
I used to write
some of those themes.
They show on the air,
off the air
for the big band
with Doc.
You know,
Doc was the trumpet player.
Right,
of course.
Later on,
I did an album with Doc,
actually.
A whole album with Doc.
And then,
every now and then,
Sketch would do
a separate piano
arrangement where he played the piano of the band that i would arrange that for him too
so he really was great now one thing we love on this show and we played it a few times
and that's the nairobi trio oh yeah earlier in your career i made a note that you did an
arrangement of the nairobi trio piece from Ernie Kovacs.
You know, as a young arranger, if you're dreaming about being an arranger, all you want to do is write something and hear it.
So you can put the notes on paper, but until the trumpets play it back and the saxophones, you have no idea how it's going to sound.
The guy who was the head of the jazz band when I was a freshman, maybe a sophomore in high school, we had a the jazz band. When I was a freshman,
maybe a sophomore in high school,
we had a fantastic jazz band.
His name was Joel Greenwald, actually.
And one day,
he was a trumpet player that I knew professionally because he had worked the same place
you mentioned, the Catskill Mountains.
He had been in that same hotel two years before.
And he said to me,
well, if you want to write something for the big band,
we'll play it. And he said to me, well, if you want to write something for the big band, we'll play it.
And so...
That makes Gilbert so happy.
We're picturing the chimps.
So what I loved about that,
there was,
if you remember, people who remember, there were three gorillas.ps. So what I loved about that, there was, if you remember,
people who remember,
there were three gorillas.
Yeah.
Oh, they were gorillas.
And this,
you remember, I'm sure.
Yes.
Oh, yeah.
And while this music was playing,
the three gorillas were standing
and one gorilla had a big stack of blocks,
which one by one,
he would pass to the guy in the middle.
And he'd pass block after block.
And the third guy just stood.
Didn't do anything.
That was the whole bit.
And then one had like a drumstick or something that he would hit the other one on the head with.
That was Ernie Kovacs, right?
Yeah.
That was his show.
Yeah.
He was a comic genius. 100 years this year of Ernie Kovacs, right? Yeah, that was his show. He was a comic genius. 100 years
this year of
Ernie Kovacs' birth.
I would say he would have been 100,
but that's unlikely. I love your career
at that point, too, because you're bouncing around and you're doing
so many interesting things. You did commercials.
You did the Parker Brothers commercials.
I did a lot of commercials.
And White Owl Cigars.
When the values go up, up, up, and the prices go down, down, down,
Robin Hall in season will show you the reason.
Low overhead, low overhead.
Yay!
Oh, man.
Hilarious, Charles. I think I'm going to regret this hour. Hilarious, Charles.
I'm thinking of regret this hour.
Hilarious.
Our listeners are going to eat this up.
Are there any other famous ones like that?
You remember the White Owl cigars?
You know what?
I have to confess.
Honestly, I didn't write that song.
I only arranged it.
You arranged it.
But I arranged it a hundred different ways.
We had the Christmas thing.
I don't know.
I did all the commercials.
Like, I think Barry Manilow said in an interview.
Oh, he did a lot of jingles.
Yeah, because he had a history of writing jingles.
He did, yeah.
And that he said, now I can't write a song that's not catchy.
Oh, well, that's true.
Barry's a great writer.
Great writer.
Another thing you wrote then
that Gilbert and I are interested in too
is game show music
for Goodson and Todman.
And I like the story in the book about you,
about what a hard sell.
Was it Todman?
The other guy.
Mark Goodson.
No, Todman.
Mark Goodson.
Todman used to come in to say hello to me.
Yeah.
They had an office on the Seagram building on the 30th floor.
They had the whole 30th floor.
And there was a big conference room.
And I got to do the shows, three or four of the shows.
Tell the truth you did and match game and what's my life.
Match game.
And it would always start off with them, Mark coming out, saying hello to me.
And then I'd go into this room to play my little theme.
You know, now if you do something, you make a demo, you synthesize it, it sounds good.
I would just have this little, and it wasn't even 88 keys.
It must have been 66 keys.
I don't know why.
There was plenty of room for a full piano in that room.
And I would sit down, and Mark would assemble all of his staff.
No pressure. Including Gene Rayburn. You remember Gene Rayburn? Yes, sure Mark would assemble all of his staff. No pressure.
Including Gene Rayburn.
You remember Gene Rayburn?
Yes, sure.
And he'd bring them all.
Come on, let's hear the new theme for the show.
And I'd sit down,, and Mark would go around.
He used to stand by the piano and lean over this piano,
this little upright piano.
And his left hand, he had a big cigar and he smoked.
And I finished this little theme.
And he turned to each one of the people in the room and say, what'd you think?
What'd you think?
But no one knew what he thought, so no one wanted to say what they thought.
Oh, one of those.
So they would say, oh, nice beat, it's nice rhythm, it's catchy, whatever they would say.
And finally, Mark would turn to me and say me he said, let's hear it again.
I go back.
And some along the way, while I was
playing, I would see his foot tapping.
And when I see his foot tapping, I knew I had him.
You had him.
And then I had him.
He was a hard sell. I think Dick DiBartolo was probably in that room.
Oh, my God.
Because he was a writer on Match Game,
and he used to punch a clock in that Sebrams building.
And how did Foul Play come about?
Well, I did a lot of work for Tom Miller and Eddie Milkus.
You know, I did most of their television shows,
Happy Days of Vernon and Shirley.
And they were good friends and wonderful guys.
And Foul Play was their second movie.
The first one I didn't do, it was Henry Mancini actually did that one.
But Colin Higgins was the writer.
Sure.
Harold and Maude.
Harold and Maude.
Yeah.
He didn't direct that first one.
Silver Streak.
Right, it was Arthur Hiller. Arthur Hiller, right first one, Silver Streak. Right,
it was Arthur Hiller.
Arthur Hiller,
right.
It was a terrific movie.
Henry, of course,
always did a great job.
The next picture,
he wrote a trilogy.
The second was Foul Play,
which is a big hit.
And the third one
never was made.
With Billy Barty.
Yeah,
Billy Barty's in Foul Play.
The third one
was the one
that never was made.
It's called
The Man Who Lost Tuesday.
Never made it.
Oh.
And Calvin died not too many years made it. Oh. And Colin died
not too many years
after that.
Yeah.
I work with him
again with 9 to 5.
And he made
Best Little Whorehouse
in Texas too.
Yes.
And actually,
I wrote a song for him
for Burt Reynolds
which didn't get used
by the way.
That's in the book.
It's in the book.
Yeah, Dolly.
Dolly upstaged you.
Well, it's okay.
Dolly's a great songwriter.
Yeah.
And she was in the movie.
She felt that was a stunt.
And no complaints, you know.
But so when Colin did his first directing, he asked me to do it, the movie.
And then I did the remaining pictures with him.
And now I got to put you on the spot yet again because that's my job.
Charles, you're a sport. do i have a choice i want to sing the great song you wrote which one is that ready to take a chance again you do
yes i do with you playing oh my god he's like he went to heaven.
You remi- Sorry!
He'll tell you when to come in.
I'm giving you a good introduction.
I'm giving you a good introduction.
You remind me I live in a shell.
Say from the past, I'm doing okay, but not very well.
Me too.
Not doing very well.
No.
No jolts, no surprises.
No crisis arises.
My life goes along as it should.
It's all very nice but not very
good.
And
I'm ready
to take a
chance again.
Ready to
put my love
on the line
with you.
You're living with nothing to show for it
You get what you get when you go for it
And I'm ready to take a chance again
Ready to take a chance again with you.
When she left me in all my despair,
I just held on.
My hopes were hold gone till I found you there.
And I'm ready
to take a
chance again.
Ready to put
my love on
the line with you.
You're living with nothing
to show for it
you get what you
get when you go
for it and
I'm ready to take
a chance again
ready to
take a chance
again with
you with to take a chance again with you.
With
you.
Barry Mantle,
eat your heart out, right?
You know, we used to sing it on the show
a cappella, and I said to Dara,
now we'll never get Charles Fox.
And now I'm going to say,
now we'll never get Barry.
Because Charles is here.
Barry's a good sport.
So you wrote that song.
I did.
With Norman.
Norman Gimbel, yeah.
Great Norman Gimbel.
That is a terrific song.
Thank you.
And that's one of those songs, like a lot of songs that Barry Manilow made famous with hits,
is one of those songs where people don't want to say how much they like the song.
Yeah.
No, there are these songs that you feel like, oh, I want to pick something really, you know, something by Captain Beefheart.
You know, there's an episode my grandson watches.
I think it's a cartoon show at night.
It's kind of a hip cartoon show, the Americans or something.
I don't know what.
That they did a whole episode on these four or five guys.
They sit around and they said, yeah, I don't want to sing any Barryman. Which shows do you listen to? Which singers? And they said, Barry they said uh yeah i don't want to sing any
barry which shows you and which singers and they said barry mann yeah i don't care for his songs
oh oh it's family guy family guy yes and uh well how about mandy yeah that's one's not too bad yeah
it's just the other songs how about um ready tickets oh i like and they all started singing
of course that's cassettes of barry manow fan, the guy that runs that show.
He's got to be.
Oh, and then in 10 years.
Barry Manilow, I have to say, is one of the nicest men.
One of the greatest.
If you ever saw his show, you'll never forget it.
I've seen his show.
I saw him outdoors, Forest Hills.
I saw his show, too.
I'm a definite Barry Manilow fan.
We're fans.
And family guy, then they get like little girls, and they say, oh, we have to see him.
And then Barry Mandelow's there singing to Quagmire.
Yeah.
And he says, you came and you gave without taking, he sings.
And Quagmire goes, I would never take from you, Barry.
goes, I would never take from you, Barry.
I think when you talk to Seth next again,
ask him if he's a Barry Manilow fan. Oh, I'm sure he is.
I'm sure he is because it's turned up a lot.
I saw him.
He would take out.
He never took himself seriously in those live shows.
He would take out the accordion and play Lady of Spain,
and then he would finish and say,
I'd like to see Billy Joel do that.
But see, that's What I saw him do.
But see, that's what I was talking about.
He's one of those guys, people are embarrassed to say they like his songs.
But everybody loves his songs. Not the people who come to see his shows.
Exactly.
Not the people who count.
And not the people who buy records.
He's one of the greatest entertainers and one of the most popular successful
singers ever.
Yeah,
I loved his show.
Was that a fun film
to score
because it's a comedy
but it's also
a Hitchcock homage
You know what,
and I've done a few
of those kind of things.
I've done a number
of movies that are
they're dramatic
and they're
sometimes suspenseful
and yet comedy
at the same time.
Well, like
9 to 5 was a little
like that. I did a picture called Trench Code too. Well, like 9 to 5 was a little like that.
Sure.
I did a picture called Trench Code, too.
Oh, I know that picture.
Robert Hayes?
Yeah, Robert Hayes.
Yeah.
But anyway, yes.
And so I remember talking with Colin Haggis before the picture was shot.
And the end of the movie was Goldie Hawn and Chevy Chase make his first movie.
Sure.
Trying to get to stop the Pope from being killed.
It was going to...
Just sort of an homage of the man
who knew too much. It was. It was.
Definitely. Colin was very quick to say
that.
He was a real fan of Hitchcock.
And so it's
going to start with
the beginning of the Mikado.
And then we're going to see we're going going to see Goldie and Chevy trying to get to the opera house
and stop this murder about to happen.
But they kept getting stopped by traffic and a singing cowboy star
and all kinds of fun stuff, you know,
and two Japanese people in a taxi singing Chop Chop something.
What was the, it was a famous television show, I don't remember.
Kojak, Kojak.
Kojak Chop Chop, you remember that?
Oh, they kept, right, right.
Anyways, and we kept, so I do a piece of music,
and then we cut to the opera house.
And every time we have to have the opera house more in progress.
So we listed five or six or seven pieces that the opera would have to sing.
And I went to New York and I recorded the New York City Opera Company doing those numbers.
And then when the picture was finished, I wrote the music that led into each operatic moment.
So that in the end, the design was at the end of this long 10-minute scene,
it would play like one piece of music,
mine and then Arthur Sullivan, then mine and then Sullivan, you know?
So that was pretty challenging.
Yeah, I can imagine.
It's a good film.
Oh, it's a great film.
It's a good film.
And now I'm going to go back and watch it again
and just listen to the music.
Yeah.
I did have a lot of fun.
Absolutely.
He was another one of our former guests.
Who's that?
Chevy Chase. We had Chevy. In fact, he sang one of our former guests. Who's that? Chevy Chase.
We had Chevy.
In fact, he sang Ready to Take a Chance Again to Chevy.
Yeah.
So I work with him on the European vacation.
Sure.
Sure.
Was that Amy Heckerling?
I think it was.
We had Amy here too.
Yes.
We're following your career, Charles.
What took you so long to get me?
We're stalking you.
Since you're talking about, this is a fun story too,
since you're talking about how you were pitching in the room to Mark Goodson,
the story of you pitching the Love Boat theme to Aaron Spelling.
That was unique.
I've told that story many times.
It's fun.
I mean, along the way, when I played new songs for people,
sometimes they had some way to hear it in the room,
a cassette machine.
Sometimes they had nothing.
I had sometimes four or five producers going into my little car,
listening to something in my car,
and I played themes over the phone for people.
Yeah, that's interesting, too.
But that particular one, Love Boat,
there was a movie called Love Boat.
It was a two-hour movie, and I did a few of them.
And then they decided to make it as a series, and I said,
it would be great, Aaron, if we got a song.
He said, who would you ask?
I said, Paul Williams.
We just worked together.
He's fantastic.
He said, great.
So we wrote a song, and I made a demo, a proper demo, with singers and band,
and I brought it into Aaron's office for him to hear the demo.
And I walked in, he kind of rubbed his two hands together like and sang gleefully,
oh boy, where'd you bring me?
Because I'd worked with him before.
Yeah.
I said, I think we have a good song, Aaron.
So do you have a tape machine I could play to the demo?
And he looked around the room and he said, no, we don't have a tape machine here.
I said, okay.
They have a tape machine.
I said, no. The television producer's office.
I said, no problem.
Cassette machine.
I brought a cassette.
I came prepared.
I said, a cassette machine would be fine.
Got on the horn with the secretary.
And he said, could you bring in a cassette machine?
She said, I'll have to find one.
She came back a few minutes later and said, I'm sorry, Mr. Spelling.
There's no cassette machine.
So I said, look, Aaron, we're on the lot of 20th Century Foxes, pianos all over.
I used to go to Mel Brooks' office sometimes to play songs for Goldie Hawn for that movie that I did.
Dutchess and the Dirtwater Fox.
Good movie.
And I wrote with Sammy
Kahn. Yeah.
And I said, so there's pianos all over.
She said, let me check with my secretary.
She came back a few minutes later and said, I'm sorry,
Mr. Spelman, there's no pianos
available.
So I look at him and I
kind of shrug my shoulder. Where do we go now?
And he looked at me and
I said, all right said alright Aaron here goes
love
exciting and do
come aboard
we all welcome you
the love boat
and that's how I
sang the song
he just sang it to him
right there
snapping my fingers
and you sold it
with no music
and you know what he said
I like it
I think he owed you that? What? I like it.
I think he owed you that at that point.
I like it.
That was a unique story.
That never happened to me.
So talk about working with Paul.
Paul's been on this show.
We all adore him.
We were talking about him outside.
You did One on One first,
the Robbie Benson movie.
We did a bunch of songs
for One on One.
Paul's wonderful.
I love Paul.
He's a gent.
I love him as a creative person.
I told you, I think, before, I was a fan of his before we ever got to work together.
We're good friends, and I love him, and we have fun working together.
And actually, I just got to tomorrow.
Tomorrow, not literally, but we have written a new song together for a movie coming out.
It'll be out in October.
It's an HBO picture.
Exciting.
But it'll be in theaters first. And it's
a documentary picture called
The Bronx, USA.
And we wrote a song called The Bronx.
And Robert
Klein
sang it. Oh, great. He sang it. He's in the
picture. Interviews a lot of people from the Bronx,
including me.
Including Colin Powell, by the way, from the Bronx, including me, including Colin Powell,
by the way,
from the Bronx and other people.
And then we needed,
Paul wrote a rap lyric
that I asked him to do
and it was great.
And we got
Donald Webber Jr.
who was,
who right now
is playing Burr
in Hamilton.
But he actually,
he was Hamilton
on Broadway here for a while.
And then I said,
I also need a background group
like the,
like the Four Seasons,
Frankie Valli's group.
And anyway, we ended up
with the cast of
Hamilton. No.
Jersey Boys.
I said, I need a group like the Jersey Boys.
Right. I was still on Hamilton.
So we got the four guys from Jersey Boys.
So they sang.
So that's this record that we have.
So then they went out to the streets of New York on the east side, the Bronx,
and they shot all the people and the singers and everything on the streets of the Bronx.
And it's a lot of fun.
So that's the opening of the movie.
And the end of the movie, the song we wrote, Da Bronx,
we had everyone, the whole cast on stage,
with the band, with myself and the piano,
playing this as an end title.
So Paul and I are very excited about that.
Great that you guys are working together.
Yeah.
When he was on the show,
I was singing his songs to him in his voice.
In his voice?
Yes.
Why are there so many songs about rainbows?
He's doing a Paul impression to Paul.
I love those songs.
I mean, not only we've only just begun,
but even some of the lesser known ones,
like Won't Last a Day Without You.
I don't know how lesser known that is.
It's a big hit song.
Yeah, but... We had a hit. It's a big hit song. Yeah, but.
And, oh, and.
We had a hit together called My Fair Share.
Yes.
Seals and Crofts.
Seals and Crofts.
The one I always liked of his, and I sang it to him there,
was Nice to Be Around.
Nice to Be Around from Cinderella Liberty.
Yeah.
That was a beautiful song.
That was John Williams' music.
Yeah.
Beautiful song.
But we started to work together.
We've been friends ever since, and we. He's great. Yeah. Beautiful song. But we started to work together. We've been friends ever since.
And he's great.
He's a giant.
Yeah.
He really is.
Not only that, but he's been the president of ASCAP.
Yep.
And he does a lot for songwriters.
We should point that out.
And very nice.
He's done a lot for songwriters for music.
Absolutely. He came to the screening of my documentary, and afterwards, he threw his arms around me and said, I love you even more now.
And he took us to a nice lunch.
Yes.
You, me, and Dara.
Terrific guy.
Let's talk about Norman, your collaborations with Norman Gimbel and these three wonderful songs that charted.
The Croce song, I Got a a name and also killing me softly which
we have to talk about jim croce's song um we did a picture called the last american hero with jeff
bridges yeah i know the picture and we wrote the song and uh we were kind of late in getting the
song going with the film and we so over the phone we called jim croce which is kind of unusual
usually send a demo we called him and he heard the the song over the phone and said he would sing it.
So I got his key.
I still hadn't met him.
I got his key by listening to his record.
He had a new song coming up on the charts called Operator.
Sure.
And he was a new, really not that well-known singer yet, you know,
before any of his hits.
Operator just coming up on the charts.
And we thought his voice not only matched our song,
but matched the character,
Jeff Bridges' character in the film.
So I got his key by just listening to some of his records.
I made a big record,
orchestral background, strings and everything,
at 20th Century Fox Soundstage in Hollywood.
And I brought it with me to work with Jim.
And when I got to meet him for the first time
in his producer's office,
he said, let me hear that song.
I only heard it on the phone.
I knew I'd have to sing it.
So I played the song and I sang it for him.
And he was touched.
And he said he knew he'd have to do the song
because he knew it reminded him of his father
who died before fulfilling his own dreams uh and then he said can i play a song for you i said sure
so he played a new song he had just written called i have to say i love you in a song love that one
so that's i always look back on that relationship two songwriters yeah it's nice song for each other
many years later i'll tell you another story many years later um lena horn was doing her broadway show lena horn broadway
and alan bergman one day said to me a great songwriter and a friend he said if you want to
hear a great version of that song i got a name he says go to new york and see lena
well i couldn't do that but then she came out
to California
I saw her there
and she came out
and she started singing
her
you know
Stormy Weather
her
signature number
and she sang about
a minute of that
and then she went
right into
I got her name
and she did her
own interpretation
her own style
and it was fantastic
and she started
talking about her father
in the song and about him.
It just got it all revved up, and the audience reacted to her by cheering her.
They got up and cheering in the middle of the second night, myself included.
So I didn't know Lena Horne then, so I didn't go backstage and plan to do that.
But the next day, I sent her a bouquet of flowers. And I said, from a grateful composer.
Oh, nice.
And she sent me back a letter, which I can pretty well quote,
because I have it framed.
It's in the book.
It's in the book, yeah.
Actually, I think it's in the book.
And it basically says to the composer, my favorite song.
Thank you for writing my favorite song.
You don't know how much meaning it has for me,
because every time I sing it, I think of my father.
Isn't that something?
So that's the interest.
And actually...
People connected to it that way.
It's interesting, yes.
And a lot of people did, yeah.
Connected through it.
And I've seen him many times since.
Croce was a big talent and, of course, left us early.
Yeah, he died way, way, way too young.
He was such a...
I love those songs.
Rapid Roy, The Star...
We talk about how people don't write story songs anymore.
He wrote a lot of story songs.
Rapid Roy, that stock car boy.
Of course, you don't mess around with Jim.
Bad, bad Leroy Brown.
Yeah.
And the love songs that he wrote.
Time in a Bottle doesn't get any more beautiful.
Great, I have to say I love you in a song.
It's beautiful.
And Frank and I were talking about how Roberta Flack came to sing that.
She was flying from Los Angeles to New York.
And, you know, in those days, 1972, 73, people didn't carry Walkman,
didn't have their own music CDs and MP3s that we have now.
So we had this record that was programmed on American Airlines.
And Roberta was with that song.
And she was flying from Los Angeles.
She had just done a concert with Quincy Jones.
She was flying home.
And she heard that song.
And she's a real musician, Roberta.
She took a pencil and paper and started to write notes and the lyrics.
And she got to New York.
She said she listened to it a few times.
She called Quincy Jones and said, Quincy, how do I meet Charles Fox?
So Quincy called me.
No, she called me, actually.
And Quincy gave him numbers of mine, where to reach me.
And one day I was walking through the Paramount Music Library, and someone handed me a telephone
and said, here, this is for you.
And I can still remember it in my ear
because Roberta Slack said,
she had just won the Grammy Award for best record,
best song.
Oh, first time ever I saw your face.
And she said, hi, this is Roberta Slack.
We haven't met, but I'm going to sing your songs.
And I had to take this phone away from me
or look at the phone.
Am I really hearing this right?
Anyway, so we met in Quincy Jones' office
when she came out to California
and that was the start of it.
Yeah.
And it's fun.
Beautiful piece of work.
They used the song in About a Boy
and it was funny.
The way they used it
gets back to what we were talking about before.
Like the whole thing is, no, he can't sing that.
It'll be embarrassing.
They'll beat him up.
They'll laugh at him.
And then when he's singing it, it looks like, oh, this is pathetic.
And then when Hugh Grant joins him and does the backup, you go, wow, this is really nice.
You know, it was a fun performance.
We've had probably about 2,000 people record this one.
How about that?
I was reading an interview with the director of that movie,
and he said he chose the song because they needed a song that was so nakedly vulnerable
or so emotionally open that kids could make fun of him for singing it.
But it also had to be a song that when you really listened to it,
it was cool.
It had to...
So speaking about that,
Quentin Tarantino made a movie that he used,
I got to name it a couple of years ago.
I can't think of the name.
Was it Cowboy Picture?
Was it Django Unchained?
Django Unchained.
And there's a whole moment,
like a two-minute where Django meets the other guy,
I forget the situation,
and the two go riding off together to be partners
and he scored
the whole scene
with Jim Croce
singing that song
and I didn't know
and no one called me
to tell me that
they don't call you
I was going to ask you
they don't call you
to get the permission
sometimes
they do with some songs
Kill Me Softly
yes
so I saw Quentin Tarantino
at the Oscars that year
and I went over
to say hello
and to introduce myself
because I never met him.
And I thanked him for doing it.
I said, I love the way he used my song.
He said, oh, that's your song.
He said, you know, I found that song listening on YouTube
with you singing.
Oh, that's right.
That clip's online.
So I said, well, you made a smart move
by getting Jim Croce and not me.
But here's the nice thing. I said, well, you made a smart move by getting Jim Croce. But here's the nice thing.
I said, you know what?
I was going to send you a note to tell you how much I liked you using my song in that picture.
He said, if you send me the note still, I'll keep it.
How about that?
I wrote him a little letter, yeah.
How about that?
Yeah.
We will return to Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast after this.
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I got a quick question about, and we jump all over the place, but the Charles Fox singers, since we were talking about Love American Style, it started out with the Cow Sills.
Started with the Cow Sills.
They sang Love American Style for me.
Right.
The second year Paramount asked me
to replace them
because of business
arrangements,
whatever that was.
Those days,
it was the Henry Mancini
singers.
Right,
so you decided
they were the...
So,
someone said,
well,
I wasn't going to decide it.
Someone said,
what should we call
the group?
You know,
you can call them
tomorrow.
I don't know.
Right.
So,
I said,
we need a name.
He said,
well,
you had the councils. Give it a name. Give it your. Right. So I said, we need a name. He said, well, you had the counselors.
Give it a name.
Give it your name.
So I said, okay, Charles Fox Singers.
But the truth is, there was no Charles Fox Singers.
Were they the Ron Hicklin Singers?
Well, Ron Hicklin and his group, his group of guys.
Okay.
They did most of my shows.
They did a little digging.
Yeah, and never take anything away from anyone.
Ron is great.
His singers are great.
They did most of my shows, Wonder Woman, all those things.
Sure.
Laverne and Shirley.
No, Laverne and Shirley, they didn't do that.
That was Cindy Greco.
Cindy Greco.
See, I promise I won't sing these songs.
It's too late for that promise.
We're way beyond that now.
If we could hear a snippet
of some of these great
like Love American style.
Love, love, love, love,
love, love, love,
love,
love, love, love,
love, love, love,
love, love, love,
love, love, love,
love, love, love,
love, love, love,
love, love, love,
love, love, love,
love, love, love,
love, love, love,
love, love, love,
love, love, love,
love, love, love,
love, love, love,
love, love, love,
love, love, love,
love, love, love,
love, love, love,
love, love, love,
love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, red and blue Love, American style
That's me and you
And then Sunday, Monday
Happy days
Tuesday, Wednesday
Happy days
Thursday, Friday
Happy days
Saturday, what a day
Rockin' all week with you
Give us any chance, we'll take it Read us any rule, we'll take it.
Read us any rule, we'll break it.
We're going to make our dreams come true.
Wonder Woman.
Wonder Woman.
Wonder Woman.
The love boat.
Anyway.
Oh, my God.
I love the way they just go right, flow right into each other.
Well, I just did that.
It doesn't usually, you know.
Actually, I didn't sing the love, I just said the word, but anyway.
Fantastic.
That was great.
You know, I got a question here.
Charles, I asked a couple of musicians, friends of mine.
I said, do you have questions for Charles Fox?
And my friend Shark, who's a musician in Los Angeles, said,
ask him, please ask him if he ever was rushed and wrote something five minutes
before he had to play it for the producer or a creator of a show.
Most of them went that way.
You know what?
Just come up right on the spot, under honestly um hollywood works that way you
know you don't get a whole lot of extra time to do things um not quite not quite that but but
the truth is you always you always get up and have to do the work and show it off and um present it
in a nice light and all that and to tell tell you the truth, with all my movies,
I always like to play the whole score for people at the piano.
And the director comes to my house, and I played the entire,
I did a movie with Arnold Schwarzenegger,
the only movie he ever directed.
Oh, Christmas in Connecticut.
Connecticut.
Yeah.
And when I went to work with him,
when I met him the first time, I went to his office,
and he said, you know, I'm not going to imitate his voice. You all know how he sounds. He said, you know, I never
work with music. I don't know how to work with music. I said, that's great. I said,
let's talk about the picture. Let me worry about the notes. So that made it easier for
him. Then he came to my house, and I played the score for him at the piano, and he got
it, and he became real astute. He was really smart in terms of hearing things and knowing
where music, where it would help, where it wouldn't.
But I mean,
there's always a challenge, but it's
simply what I do.
I've heard you say one of the thrills of your career is
sitting in the theater for the first time
and hearing the score or the music
come up full and watching
everything. Well, not even full.
You know, I went to the dubbing sessions
of every one of my movies
because it wasn't just enough to write the music.
I had to get it into the picture at the right level.
Could have been loud,
could have been as soft as anything.
It's a matter of enhancing the moment
of the undercut of the story
to what you're trying to bring out,
the emotional qualities, the dramatic qualities even.
And I always felt that if, and directors expected me to do that,
so I used to go and sit right next to the music mixer on the dubbing stage,
and very often I'd move the dials myself, you know, the faders.
And so then when it's finally finished, by the way, I didn't always get my way.
Sometimes the director wanted a lot of sound effects that would wipe out the music.
But I mean, it's a collaborative business, and the director has the final say.
It's just that simple.
So you work with the director.
Of course.
And when I sit in the theater, I hear everything's just to the right level,
whether it had to be full screened or it's a little oboe behind a delicate moment.
Yes, it's very satisfying for me.
And I'm going to ask you, who are your favorite?
We talked about Neil Hefty, Henry Mancini.
You were friends with the great Jerry Goldsmith.
Who were your favorite composers?
Well, Jerry was certainly one of my favorites.
He was a fantastic composer and a good friend of mine.
We love those scores.
Omen, Jerry was.
Night of the Apes.
So I will tell you that when Jerry was sick near the end,
when he was still functioning, but he was ill,
and he had two concerts.
I conducted for him from time to time,
not on his recording sessions, but in concerts.
He asked me to do a concert for him.
One time I was busy finishing one of my ballets,
my Zorro ballet,
and he called me and he said
he had two concerts coming up,
one in England and one in Japan.
He loved working at the London Symphony, LSO.
And he said he didn't think he could do both that
and Japanese concerts.
Would I do the Japanese concert for him?
So I couldn't say no to Jerry.
So I said, of course I would.
So in the daytime, I was writing my music, orchestrating my music at that point.
In the evening, I was studying his scores.
So when I stand in front of a 100-piece orchestra, I know what the music is.
So we actually did the first time ever episode, a suite of the Omen.
I had a 100-voice chorus.
Wow.
And it was the first time it was ever put together,
and I conducted it in Japan with the Kanagawa Philharmonic in Tokyo and Yokohama.
So he would certainly be on the short list of your favorite film composers.
I think he's one of the greatest composers ever.
And I always say about Jerry,
he's a great film composer,
but more than great,
he was a great American composer
who devoted his life to film.
John Williams is a fantastic composer.
There are a lot of...
Michael Cicchino, a youngikino with young composers on this show
has he yes he has he's a nice he's a good friend yes he's and the charming guy and he's uh there's
a lot of time i told him you were coming on did you yes i did one thing i always think about
whenever there's a composer is it's the sign of a bad composer and a bad director, for that matter, when music comes on
and I find myself going,
okay, I'm supposed to be sad
now. I'm supposed to be
invigorated. Do you
find yourself going,
okay, I've got to work against
certain... Sometimes you do.
Sometimes you play against what's on the scene. Sure,
there can be a happy scene between two
people talking,
but really what she's thinking about is something else,
a little bit underneath the skin.
She's thinking about a moment they had.
So you have that control as a composer.
You certainly want to play a design.
You have a design for how you're going to treat the music,
and you usually go through it with the director,
and it's a very collaborative thing.
But there are certainly times that you want to play against the film.
If it's a happy moment, you may play sad.
If it's a sad moment, you may play it up.
It's all a matter of what you're trying to let the audience understand
and feel at that moment is part of the grand design of the film.
And, I mean, I did a film, a television film once
with a great director, Lamont Johnson.
And it was about a woman who had 200 names, 200 alter egos.
And she had suffered horribly as a child and didn't know that she was,
it was called 100, 200 Voices or something like that.
A thousand voices, something.
It's a true story.
And the director said to me,
now, you know, I want to be very simple
because this woman has these noises in her head.
And so just not much music and very sparse, very simple.
And I went ahead and I wrote the most busy score
I've ever written in my whole life.
And he came over to my house,
and I think I did most of it in the synthesizer,
in my studio. And he came over to my house, and I think I did most of it in the synthesizer, in my studio.
And he came to my house, and I said,
Lamont, I wrote some of the busiest music I ever wrote.
I said, but when I played, I played what is in her head.
So I wasn't playing what the audience reaction was.
I played what this woman was hearing in her head.
And he loved it.
So you have to take a chance.
Of course. Do what you think is right, you know. I also found it. So you have to take a chance. Of course. Do what you think is
right, you know. I also found it interesting that you don't like TV theme songs that explain the
show. You prefer something that sets a tone. Right. Or creates a context. Right. So I did a show called
The Paper Chase. Sure. With John Houseman. Yeah. And when I went to do the show with him, John Houseman said, so
I'm going to start the show with narration. It was like the movie, The Paper Chase. I'm going to
start with narration where I talk about the kids coming to school and they're going to learn this,
they're going to learn that, and they come from different countries, different parts of the United
States, and I'm going to make a lawyer out of you. I said, what do you think about putting music
behind that? I said, for the main title, you absolutely should lawyer out of you. I said, what do you think about putting music behind that?
I said, the main title, you absolutely should have music behind it.
He said, okay.
I said, as a matter of fact, I have an idea.
Since it's the same narration over and over,
I don't want to tell him it's boring,
but since it's the same narration over and over,
it's the same story every week.
I said, why don't we start with the narration,
and then we'll go into a song explaining just those feelings about, with the feelings of doing something new in your life,
something frightening, something exhilarating, what it's like to be a first-year law student.
And then we'll cut, we'll see the kids get on buses and trains coming to Harvard,
and when they go into the huge auditorium where you're speaking, we'll cut back to you
and your narration. And he waited a beat, and he said where you're speaking, we'll cut back to you and your narration.
And he waited a beat, and he said, you want to cut out my narration?
I said, well, you know, the song would really work better.
Anyway, we ended up with a song as I wrote it.
And actually, of all my shows, it was the only one that got a lot of awards and nominations, myself included.
But it lasted
one year it didn't yeah but then it went to syndication and he took over and he went back
to his narration oh he changed it in syndication i was thinking and for one of our short episodes
we should do all the shows that hit had theme songs telling the story. All the Sherwood Schwartz
theme songs. I didn't want to
say that, but that's true. Yeah, they all explain
the show. Every Miller Boyette was also
like that. There were a handful of them.
Well, I work with Tom Miller.
Those guys are great.
I did a song, a show with
the Hogan family.
Yeah, sure.
And I wrote a song that Roberta Flack sang for me.
Right.
Yeah.
That's a good one.
I'll tell you a song I love is the one from The Other Side of the Mountain.
Richard's Window.
Richard's Window.
Beautiful.
Thank you.
We were nominated for this.
Beautiful piece of music.
Yeah.
And a good film.
It was a very good film.
Well, again, Larry Pierce directed it.
And my good friend Ed Feldman was the producer.
People should see it.
I'll tell you a couple of things, if I may, if you want to know about that.
Please do.
Yes.
So I did one of the most, I do a lot of varied things, as you know.
One of the things I did that was very exciting to me recently,
I started off my career in Latin music, you may know that.
I played my-
You're Carlos Zorro.
I will call it
i want to really honestly i want to get accepted by the land we got a kick out of that
so i i found out they thought i was okay anyway i didn't have to take the spanish name but i did go by that for a while i but i played the tito puente yes rey barretto and people like that
so last year i decided after 50 years of not playing Latin music,
I want to make another Latin record.
Fantastic.
So I was going to record some of the great musicians in New York and L.A.
and maybe Puerto Rico and Cuba.
And a friend of mine who's Edesio Alejandro is a great Cuban composer.
And I told him about that.
He mentioned it to the Minister of Culture of Cuba.
And I was invited,
the Cuban Minister of Culture invited me to come over
to Havana to do concerts.
So last summer, I did two concerts
at the Opera House
with all the fantastic Cuban
musicians. Omar Portanto,
you know from the Buena Vista Sarsour Cup.
Yeah, I love that movie. She sang with me
in my concert.
And we had 2,000 people each night,
and I was back in my happy place
just playing Latin music, all my songs.
And actually, it's being made into a film.
It's being cut into a motion picture,
a documentary film, this trip to Cuba.
Wow, you've got a lot going on.
It's something I'm really happy about and proud about.
What else do you want to plug?
The Fulfillment Fund and Songs of Our Lives?
Are you still involved with that?
Fulfillment Fund is a fantastic organization,
mostly in California.
A good friend of mine, Gary Gittnick,
started about 33, 34 years ago.
And it's an organization that helps about
2,500 young students a year
from the most disadvantaged
parts of Los Angeles
and some other places too.
It gives them an opportunity
to help them through high school
into colleges with
all kinds of support, scholarships.
So about 10 years ago,
Gary asked me if,
oh, I know what, my wife Joan became a co-president
of the Friends of the Fulfillment Fund,
a sub-auxiliary group, ancillary group.
And she asked me if I would do a concert in someone's house
when I just play some of my songs
and maybe they'd raise some money.
So we did, where it's quite a bit of money, right?
$100,000 something in someone's house,
people promising money.
And Gary Gittnick was not a musician,
but he didn't waste a beat and say,
what can we do next year?
So I started doing concerts of friends who were songwriters.
It's an impressive list.
We had everyone.
I'm telling you.
What I wouldn't have given to see some of those concerts.
I'll tell you, here's where we had the very first year.
First of all, Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil.
We had Libra and Stoller.
Oh, man.
Melissa Manchester, Bill Withers, Steve Terrell singing.
Sadaka did it, didn't he?
Hal David singing.
Yeah.
And Alan Bergman.
This is only the first concert.
Amazing.
So we've done 10 years
where I had back rack
and I'll speak.
I saw the list today.
Staggering.
Yeah, we did.
And of course,
we raised a lot of money
for this group.
So Charles Fox,
give us the website too
so people can go there
and look at your stuff.
Well, it's Charles Fox Music.
Charlesfoxmusic.com.
You've got this HBO thing happening.
You won't see yet, but a show that I've just completed,
we're working on now with Norman Steinberg, your friend.
We love Norman.
Yeah, I do too.
We did a musical based on an 18th century place called School for Scandal.
And we're just now taking meetings.
We've completed it with Arthur Hamilton,
who was my collaborator, who wrote Cry Me a River.
And we're here to begin getting to theaters.
We hope to move it to Broadway.
That's great.
You're busy.
I'm busy, yeah.
And we want to thank, I just want to thank two people too.
Chris DeRose, who helped with the research, and our friend Jared O'Connell, who set up this wonderful keyboard.
Well, thank you.
It was fun to play, and I see all your notes.
It was very impressive.
This is your whole career
in about 12 cards.
And believe me,
I'll never forget
you singing my songs.
That was a touch of me.
And you're not off the hook yet.
Not yet?
Because this is
the end of the show.
Yeah.
Why don't we let Charles
do one by himself?
Oh!
Song?
Yeah!
Yes!
Yes!
Yeah, surprise us. Amen. Gjørens fjell Thank you. Beautiful.
Thank you.
What a special treat this episode was.
This was amazing.
This may be my new favorite episode out of 250, Charles.
This was amazing.
Look at your grateful audience here.
Well, first of all, thank you guys.
You know too much about me.
It's just that simple.
Well, listen.
But I appreciate it.
You guys are great.
I had a good time myself.
There's plenty.
We didn't even get to.
We didn't get to Marcel Marceau and Fred Astaire.
You have to come back.
You'll have to come back.
We'll come back.
Invite me back again.
I'll come back.
Come back with Norman.
And I got to put you on the spot again.
Yeah.
At the end of Zach
they have
a song
ready to get what you got
don't ask me to play that
I can't remember that for the life of me
you can fake it
I know it's sorts of
bum bum bum
bum bum bum
someone's playing
tricks on me
where is that
quiet
kid
I used to
be
not long
ago
you could cut this
Gilbert
one I used to
know
you are amazing
isn't he something else
I don't remember that
I honestly don't remember that
you know it's funny
one night we were in the theater
years ago
and there was an
Albert Brooks movie
I think it was Albert Brooks
and he was with the girl
and he went back to her house
or she went back to his house
and they find that
they're both into theme songs
and he said
really I love theme songs
and he said
what's your favorite
and he starts to play
The Bugaloos
it was a Sid and Marty
Kraft show
of course
I forgot that I wrote that honestly oh wow and I starts to play the bugaloos. It was a Sid and Marty Croft show. Of course. I forgot that I
wrote that, honestly.
And I turned to my wife
and they're singing the bugaloos on the air
and everywhere. And I turned to my
wife and I said, I think I wrote that.
That's great. And then on the
screen credit I saw.
Oh my God.
I've written a lot of stuff.
Usually I don't forget it.
We got somebody else we got to get on the show,
so we're going to bid Charles a fond farewell.
Here I am.
Take a look at me.
I'm Isaac Heisner.
I'm twice as free like a dream.
That was meant to be.
This time, I'm fine, and I'm ready to get what you got
if you're ready or not.
Ready to get what
you got if you're ready or not.
You're gonna
come back. You're gonna memorize
that song. And you're gonna learn
that song.
Thanks for reviving it anyway.
Gilbert, you gotta go straight to the
Philippines with that. Yes, yes.
Guys, I had a lot of fun.
Thank you, Charles.
This was a real treat for us.
This has been terrific.
Terrific.
And, okay, this has been Gilbert Gottfried's amazing, colossal podcast
with my co-host, Frank Santopadre,
and a guy who composed pretty much everything.
Pretty much.
Charlie Fox.
Thank you, guys.
A great pleasure.
Thanks for inviting me back again.
I had a great time.
Oh, we will.
We will.
You bet.
And I carry it with me like my daddy did
But I'm living the dream that he kept here.
Moving me down the highway.
Rolling me down the highway.
Moving ahead so light won't pass me by.
Like a north wind whistling down the sky.
I've got a song. I've got a song.
Like a whirlpool and the beavers cry, I've got a me and I sing it loud
If it gets me nowhere, I go there proud
Moving me down the highway
Rolling me down the highway
Moving the hell so I won't pass the by It's a lot more past the five guitar solo And I'm gonna go there free
Like a fool I am and I'll always be
I've got a dream
I've got a dream
They can change their minds but they can't change me I've got a dream They can change their minds but they can't change me
I've got a dream
I've got a dream
I know I could share it if you want me to
If you're going my way
I'll go with you
Bend me down the highway I'll go with you. on the highway moving ahead so life won't pass me by
Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast is produced by Dara Gottfried and Frank Santopadre Thank you. by John Beach. Special thanks to John Fodiatis, John Murray, and Paul Rayburn.