Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - 3. Larry Storch
Episode Date: June 15, 2014Gilbert visits the Upper West Side neighborhood of of 91-year-old comedy legend Larry Storch, to talk about his days in nightclubs and burlesque, his gift for accents and dialects, his decades-long fr...iendships with Tony Curtis and Don ("Get Smart") Adams and his memories of everyone from Lucille Ball to Orson Welles. Also, Larry shares some of his all-time favorite jokes and joins Gilbert and Frank for an impromptu (and practically on-key) rendition of the "F-Troop" theme. Support Storch's Star at GoFundMe.com: http://www.gofundme.com/storchsstar Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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How many of you are fans of Ghostbusters?
Oh, I don't mean the movie.
I mean the TV show.
You see, years ago, there was a TV show called Ghostbusters way before Bill Murray and Dan Aykroyd
put on their ghost protection backpacks.
He was also on a wildly successful TV show called Ectro.
He also would appear on all the variety shows at the time, doing imitations and wild accent, he would appear in movies, millions of movies, doing the most eccentric,
crazy characters. And ladies and gentlemen, we have him here today, a man who also appeared in
a movie that's a favorite of mine, The Aristocrats So, ladies and gentlemen, the great Larry Storch.
So here, with the star of F Troop, and more importantly, the star of Ghostbusters.
The original Ghostbusters. The original Ghostbusters. The original Ghostbusters.
Way before
Bill Murray or
Dan Aykroyd, the original
Ghostbusters, and
my co-star in The Aristocrats.
This man
was in The Aristocrats.
Ladies and gentlemen,
please welcome my good
friend, Larry Storch.
Thank you so much. I'm very glad to be with all of you.
Fire away anything I can help you with. Why? Fire away.
Now, you were, I think, discovered by a comic actress, a great comic actress.
Oh, Lucille Ball?
Yes.
Oh, Lucille Ball is my fairy godmother.
Right after the war was over,
I was hitchhiking home to New York in my uniform,
and in those days, you had no trouble at all
if you were in uniform with that thumb up in the air
wanting a lift.
And so happened that Phil Harris picked me up,
and he was driving to Palm Springs,
and he said, what do you do, kid?
I said, I'm going to try to get back into show business.
What do you do?
Voices.
Oh, yeah?
Who do you do? Well, I Oh, yeah? Who do you do?
Well, I did Frank Morgan, who was very popular in those days.
And old Jimmy Cagney, you dirty rat.
I'm going to give it to you just like you know.
And the Cary Grants and all that stuff.
Well, he turned the car around, and he came back.
And I said, no, no, no, I want to go to New York.
No, no, kid, you're coming back to Hollywood with me. And he took me to Cyril's nightclub and Lucille Ball was sitting
in the corner, an empty nightclub, and her husband, Desi Arnaz, was going to open the next night.
And Phil Harris said, do a couple of voices for Lucille. I did. She said, get out of the sailor suit.
Be here tomorrow night at 8 o'clock.
Get yourself a blue suit.
And the show starts at 8.
And that was the beginning of a new start after the war.
And Lucille Ball did it all.
And Phil Harris.
Oh, boy, I loved him.
He was a regular in the Jack Benny show.
Of course.
And he sang Bear Necessities.
In Jungle Book.
In Jungle.
That's right.
In Jungle Book.
And he was a great entertainer.
And now, speaking of World War II, you were on a submarine with who?
Tony, submarine tender.
That's a ship that can repair submarines in the middle of the ocean.
And it was called the Proteus.
And I told him that I'd been in show business.
And he said to me, I'm going to be a great star someday.
I'm going to be a great actor someday. I'm going to be a great actor someday.
And I said, now listen, kid, do you like starving?
Do you think you'd like that?
Did you get used to it?
And why?
He said, listen, it's a tough record.
And if you need any help at the end of this war,
you can always find me in Variety.
If you need any help at all, call me.
Well, don't you know,
two years later, I'm on the phone.
Hey, Tony, it's me. It's
Larry. Have you got anything out there
for me? Yeah.
And
sure enough, he did.
It was a play that I was
in called Who Was That Lady?
I do the Russian character in this play.
Once he need Russian for the motion picture,
so he give me a job in Hollywood.
Just by, well, here I am advising him,
get out of the record.
If you need any help, call me.
You made how many movies with Tony Curtis?
40 Pounds of Trouble, Who Was That Lady, The Great Race.
Several.
I mean, he gave you more than one leg up.
Oh, yeah.
I didn't need an agent when Tony Curtis was looking out for me.
I love that boy, really.
We should say, too, that Gilbert and I are sitting in Larry's apartment,
a block from where he grew up,
and he's showing us some art that Tony did,
a caricature that Tony did, or a portrait that Tony did
from the set of The Great Race in 1964.
Yeah, a great drawing of Larry Storch by Tony Curtis.
Yeah, and I guess not a lot of people know that Tony was an artist.
Oh, indeed he was.
Indeed he was.
And when
he wasn't fighting a war,
he was doing his artwork.
Now,
you also,
Larry gave me
a tour of his apartment,
and you showed me a towel
by the wall. Okay, first of all, and you showed me a towel by the wall.
Okay, first of all, would you mind telling the audience your age?
I'm 91.
You're 91.
I'm 91.
And what is that towel for, you told me, that is on the floor by the wall that you do every
day?
Oh, that's for a yoga that's i uh about that i i stand on my
head every day for uh for 10 minutes and uh the doctor said to me well don't quit then if you're
i mean if you it's a blessing to be in the 90s. He said, watch it very carefully.
To be over 90 is a blessing.
And I guess it must be.
And I'm very happy to still be around.
How long have you been standing on your head, Larry?
Oh, it's got to be when I first started.
I was about 20, in my early 20s, and I've been doing it ever since.
Every day for 70-plus years, you've been standing on your head on a towel.
Incredible.
Wow.
I could barely walk into your apartment.
Gilbert needed four people to carry him into the dining room.
Yes, I needed help getting on the elevator.
Now, also, you were friends with Buddy Hackett.
Yes, sir.
And you once told Buddy Hackett
that you were thinking of going to drama school.
Well, Buddy Hackett said, drama school?
Listen, that's like trying to learn to drive a car
in your garage.
Buddy Hackett, he was one of the... I love that boy.
And he used to call you.
Buddy Hackett, he would call any time, day or night.
Three o'clock in the morning, my phone rings.
He says, hey, Sarorch, you can't sleep
later, huh? Storch, you know who this is? I said, yeah, it's Hackett. He said, how can
you guess? How could you miss it? How could you miss him? And you grew up with Don Adams, Maxwell Smart from Get Smart.
Right.
You were like little kids playing together.
That's right.
We lived practically on the same block.
And so we did.
We grew up together.
One block from here, from where we're speaking from now.
That's right.
77th Street.
77th Street.
That's great.
And later you worked with Don Adams many times.
Yes, on Get Smart.
And in Tennessee Tuxedo, where you were the voice of Mr. Whoopi.
That's right, yeah.
Oh, Frank Morgan was Mr. Whoopi.
And I remember doing a show with Frank Morgan on the
West Coast, and over
the loudspeaker just before
we started action, someone
over the loudspeaker said, Mr. Morgan,
your fly is open.
What was that?
Your fly is open,
Mr. Morgan. And Frank Morgan
said, oh, well, my
fly's, well, as the great Russian
Khan once said in the
House of the Dead, let all
the windows be open.
When I was a kid,
I used to watch Tennessee
Tuxedo. And what
was his sidekick, the walrus,
his name? Chumlee.
Chumlee.
That's right.
Wow.
That may have been the first time I was exposed to Larry Storch, before F Troop, probably Tennessee Tuxedo.
Or get smart, speaking of Don Adams, when you played a villain on the show, you played the groovy guru.
Yeah.
And we talked about it. I took a little primal and I did him for the guru, the groovy guru.
And finally, at the end of the whole thing, Don answered,
I know you're doing Louis Primo.
I said, yeah, don't let it get around, you know.
Keep the lid on it.
you know, keep people in honor.
And
yeah, Louis Prima, that was
decades
before David Lee Roth
sang Just a Gigolo.
That was his big hit. Just a Gigolo, everywhere
I go, people know the part I'm playing.
Prayed for every dance,
selling each romance, every
night a hard victory. Yeah,
Louis, Louis made that song
famous.
And now,
F Troop,
and,
and,
we,
both,
me and Frank
grew up watching
F Troop.
In fact,
we were singing
the theme song
on your balcony,
Larry,
full disclosure.
Yeah.
The end of the Civil War
was near when quite
accidentally
a hero who sneezed
abruptly sneezed
retreat and reversed into victory.
Do you remember this?
Sure, of course.
Where Indian fights are colorful sights.
And nobody takes a licking.
Pale face and red skin both turn chicken.
Good.
That's great.
Wow.
To think I'd be hearing you sing that.
I know I ought to charge for that.
Now, on that you worked with Forrest Tucker.
Yes.
Now, if I can get into some more lascivious...
Watch it, Larry.
Forrest Tucker, I heard, was famous for something Milton Berle was famous for.
They both stole jokes?
No.
Am I close?
No, but that was a great answer.
I heard they were supposed to...
Both.
Milton Berle was known to be
quite well endowed.
And? Yeah. And?
Yeah.
And I heard Forrest Tucker was the other one.
No, I was never allowed in the room.
So, I mean, I believe you.
I believe you.
I believe you.
Now, did you know Forrest Tucker before?
No.
When I auditioned,
Tucker took some producer aside and said, I want Larry to be in my partner,
in F Troop.
And they said, all right, if that's what you want.
And it worked out.
Because on F Troop, watching the two of you,
you worked like an old-time comedy team.
Yeah.
And to look at the two of you,
you looked like you had been doing this for years on the road.
Yeah, the timing was great.
It was like an Abbott and Costello
the way you end.
After you work with somebody like that
for quite a while,
you really, it's
almost like a marriage
of actors,
you know. And we got along
great and I could never have made it without him.
Yeah, he was like, it was a classic comedy team
because Forrest Tucker was classic straight man,
and you were like this silly, goofy Agorn.
And F Troop had a great cast.
We sure did.
The Indian chief was a fellow named Frank DeCovo.
Now, Frank DeCovo was Italian.
Yes.
He played Wild Eagle.
Yes.
And he liked to, he could rehearse his lines in Italian, which was wonderful.
Could you demonstrate him doing his lines in Italian?
No, I really can't.
Just to digress a little bit.
My favorite actor was always, one of them, I thought Marlon Brando was the greatest.
And when I heard Marlon Brando doing Down, Corleone, the head of the mafia,
I thought, boy, that sounds like some of the guys, some of the bosses
that I've worked for in nightclubs all over the country.
Wow.
When I first opened up at the Copacabana, I was on the bill with Frank Sinatra.
And I remember when I first came in to rehearse, somebody met me at the door,
and I said, I'm here to rehearse some jokes.
And he said, this guy said to me, Nick Kelly.
He called himself Nick Kelly.
Nick Kelly.
He said, listen, kid, the jokes will take care of themselves.
Can you drive a car?
I said, yeah.
You know, New Jersey?
I said, no, but if someone is sitting on the right-hand side,
it says take a left, take a right, take a, yeah, I know New Jersey.
All right, you just been ready to drive.
You know, that kind of stuff.
In those days, the mob ran the Copacabana.
And I heard the mob was actually,
all performers around that time
said the mob was really nice to them.
Oh, they were.
You know, everybody thinks
if your jokes don't go,
they sit in the front going,
da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da.
You know?
But no, these guys were the nicest bosses
I ever worked for in my life.
Yeah, I heard that.
Like throughout Vegas and everything, they, like Martin and Lewis, loved working for the mobsters.
And so did I.
I worked for them regularly in Vegas and at the Copacabana.
So I really am, I'm in their debt.
cabana so i really i'm uh i'm in their debt did you ever hear weird stories about the mobsters stuff that they kept out of the press no i can't say that i did i wish i could but i didn't yeah
well you can't say it now because they're all dead so you can safely say larry did you start
in in burlesque houses is that that where it sort of all began?
I was going, I was in high school.
And there was an act in downtown called the Radio Rogues.
Hell's a-poppin' at the Winter Garden Theater.
Someone took me backstage and said to these three guys,
Jimmy Hollywood, Ed Bartel...
Jimmy Hollywood.
Jimmy Hollywood.
I love it.
And Sidney Chattin.
They said, listen,
this kid can do all kinds of important...
Anyway, they were at the Paramount Theater
and I'm in high school at Dewitt Clinton.
One of them gets there at the Paramount Theater.
Can you fill in for him?
I'm going to high school.
Never mind high school.
They'll get along without you.
Can you fill in at the Paramount Theater?
Well, I took three days off.
I don't think I even told my mother.
I would go down every day to the Paramount Theater
and fill in for Sidney Chattin, it was.
And finally, the principal called my mother and me to high school. Why hasn't he been to school? And my mother said, he's been at the Paramount
Theater. And that was my first job in front of people, not in a little mighty club, but the Paramount Theater.
Well, I couldn't get over it.
I thought I'd gone to heaven.
And I said to my mother,
oh, by the way, the principal said his record is lousy.
You know, let him go.
Let him go if he wants to get out, and he'll learn his craft.
And that's what I did.
I quit high school, and I went to work in show business.
So the principal basically encouraged you.
Yeah, he said, let him go.
His record is lousy.
So he told you to drop out.
Yeah, he encouraged it.
And go into show business.
And my mother was so tearful.
Oh, he can't, he can't, he can't do that.
Lady, it's going to be helpful to him.
And so I did.
I dropped out of high school and I went right to work.
Getting back to Heftroop, you and Forrest Tucker became friends after that.
Yeah, yes.
Oh, the closest of friends.
He would drive into a nightclub where I was working
and sit in the front row and laugh as though he'd never heard those jokes before, you know.
And so, yes, we were the very best of friends.
And I heard a story that a director tried directing the two of you and something Forrest Tucker said to them.
He said that, he goes,
don't direct us, I'm too old,
and Larry's too stupid.
That's the nicest thing he could have said.
In those days, it was probably true.
Well, Agarn's catchphrase on the show,
if there was one, was,
Who says I'm dumb?
Who says I'm dumb?
This is after 30 minutes.
Who says I'm dumb?
And everybody was on F-Troop, Larry.
I mean, Milton Berle, Harvey Korman, Phil Harris we talked about,
Edward Everett Horton, Don Rickles played bald eagle.
Any memories, specific memories of any of these guys?
Who was it? Oh, who was it?
Oh, my word.
Edward Everett Horton.
He said, oh, my word.
Larry, promise me something.
I said, anything.
Promise me you'll never grow old.
You know?
And one day, Edward Everett Horton, he was ill,
and I did his voice.
I did his voice, that's all I can tell you.
Now, there was an actor on F Troop, and one of my favorite movies was Of Mice and Men.
Was it Joe Brooks who played Vanderbilt?
The nearsighted?
No, no, no. Oh, I know who you're talking about, the old western actor
Yes, yes
He played Duffy
Yes, is there any way anyone can look that up?
Was it Bob Steele?
Bob Steele?
Bob Steele was in the original of Mice and Men with Lon Chaney Jr.
I just have to tell you just this one
Do we have time for a fast one?
Absolutely.
Plenty of time.
All right.
It's a wedding, a Mormon wedding
in a little town called Dribble Creek, Utah.
And Leroy Hotchkiss was going to marry nine women that morning
that he'd had his eye on.
And the preacher started the wedding,
and he said, do you, Leroy Hotchkiss, take these nine women to be your lawful wedded wives?
And he said, I do. And he said, and do you girls, do you girls take Leroy Hotchkiss to be your
lawful wedded husband? And they said, we do.
And the preacher said, some of you girls in back better talk up if you want to get in on this.
That's a great one.
I love that. Now, you told a version of the aristocrat with an English accent.
Do you know about the family who goes into the talent agent's office?
Well, I did quite a few English dialects.
I mean, I like doing Cockney myself.
You know, I mean, it's got more color,
and I could have got more work if I'd let him own out in Arkansas, you know.
And I thought, who was it?
Did Humpty Dumpty fall off the wall?
Or was he pushed?
So I love doing English dialects.
Where did all the dialects and the accents come from, Larry?
Because I've heard you say you wouldn't have worked so much
if it hadn't been for that skill.
My mother ran a rooming house on
77th, right up the block,
for starving actors.
She didn't plan it that way,
but in those days, you could starve,
which a lot of them did.
And anyway, the phone
was on the very main floor,
and these actors from
Germany, from France, from from England and I could hear
them hear those dialects every day over the phone and I would come into my mother and say mom does
he sound like this and I'd do the dialect whatever whoever it was and so I learned doing dialects
with all these starring actors in my house, you know.
And that's how I got most of my jobs, because I could do the dialects.
I mean, I remember you on TV in those days.
You were a great impressionist.
I loved doing impressions, impersonations, you know.
Claude Rains and all those fellows.
And so, yes, I did. Can you do a Claude Rains and all those fellows. And so, yes, I did.
Can you do a Claude Rains from Invisible Man?
Well, Claude Rains has spoken, you know, more or less on that style, Claude Rains, you know.
And I don't hit them right on the head anymore, you know.
But the English dialect always entranced me.
But the English dialect always entranced me.
Now, back then, it seemed like everybody on TV would do a Cary Grant imitation.
And everybody, it seemed like it was already accepted that Cary Grant would always go, Judy, Judy, Judy.
One night, I was working at the Trocadero nightclub.
And while I was on the floor, a waiter came up on the floor.
And he whispered in my ear, Judy Garland has just walked in.
And I didn't know what to say.
And I was doing Cary Grant.
And I just, Judy, Judy, Judy. You know know I didn't know what else to say so I just
said Judy and somehow or other it caught on and the rest is history I guess it's just believed
it's Hollywood legend now that somehow Cary Grant said Judy Judy Judy and it's Larry Storch that said Judy, Judy, Judy.
Yes, right.
Now, and you said that Cary Grant once said,
admitted that he never said Judy, Judy, Judy.
He said, I did say you dirty rat.
He said that I never said Judy, Judy, Judy.
Of course, you dirty rat was what everybody who did a Cagney imitation said.
You dirty rat.
I'm going to give it to you just like you gave it to my brother.
You know, that sort of thing.
And so, yeah, I got away with that.
Yeah, because everyone who did James Cagney would say, you dirty rat.
And he never said it.
I remember John Biner doing a great Jimmy Cagney.
Remember John Biner?
Oh, yes, yes.
I worked with John Biner once.
And, um...
A lot of the TV that you did in the 60s, Larry,
a lot of stuff.
I mean, you were in the 50s.
I mean, you were Charlie the Drunk on Car 54, Where Are You?
I mean, I saw you when I was a kid on I Dream of Jeannie.
I remember you played a chimpanzee.
Oh.
Could you talk about it?
Yeah, well, keep the lid on that.
Anyway, I did.
I played the chimpanzee.
I spent three days up in the top of a tree played the chimpanzee.
I spent three days up in the top of a tree with a chimpanzee.
And they said, do everything that the chimp does.
Imitate the chimpanzee.
And the night before I did the chimpanzee,
the director put his arm around me and he said, I want you to go home tonight and find the inner chimpanzee in you.
We should explain.
It was a chimp that was working in the NASA program.
And as I recall, Genie brought the chimp to life.
And you were the human persona, the human personification of the chimpanzee.
It was a very intelligent script.
Well, I sat on that tree for three days with the chimpanzee.
And I said, do it just like the chimp.
Was he at least a nice chimp?
Oh, yeah, we got along really well.
We will return to Gilbert Gottfried's amazing, colossal podcast.
But first, a word from our sponsor.
Now, then, like I said before,
way before anyone knew who Bill Murray or Dan Aykroyd was,
you starred in Ghostbusters.
Well, yes.
Well, we only did two episodes of Ghostbusters,
if I remember right.
And you know, the gorilla was Bob Burns.
Yes.
Now, I didn't know him at all.
And I didn't recognize him when he took his gorilla suit off.
I didn't know who I was talking to.
It was only when he climbed into his gorilla suit that I knew who I was talking to. It was only when he climbed into his gorilla suit
that I knew who I was
talking to. It was you and
Forrest Tucker, right? Yes.
And you and Forrest Tucker
sang the theme song
to Ghostbusters.
It was a pretty
horrible theme song.
But to hear you and Forrest Tucker sing.
Now, do you remember what the name of your organization was?
Spencer Tracy and Kong.
That's right.
Spencer Tracy and Kong.
That's great.
Yeah, I know.
Bob Burns is like a massive he he specializes in gorilla suits
he always and he's a massive collector of old horror before rick baker became the master
i see i didn't realize that.
Larry, you did a lot of variety shows, too.
You did Sonny and Cher and Laugh-In and Hollywood Squares and Playboy After Dark and Hollywood Palace and The Tonight Show and The Sullivan Show and The Steve Allen Show.
Any particular memories about Steve Allen or Sullivan or Jackie Gleason?
Jackie Gleason? Jackie Gleason gave me the show in 1950,
and he said, Larry, I'm going to leave Art Carney with you.
He said, we're on live.
Thousands of people are watching, not millions.
In those days, we couldn't get used to the idea that millions,
well, thousands of people are watching.
We're on live.
So just don't say, you know, we're on live.
And anyway, he said, you know, they asked me what did I think was good in bed.
I don't know what's good in bed.
To me, when the three of us don't fight, that's good in bed.
What was Gleason like, Larry? Because we've heard conflicting stories from different people
who've worked for him.
Well, he was very nice to me. He was, and he had a, you know, he had a great memory,
but someone told me that he rehearsed by himself his lines all by himself
so that he would really get the reputation of having a very sharp memory.
But that's the way he did it.
Now, was Jackie Gleason a good boss to have?
I only met him just that one or two days.
But yes, he was very nice to me, yes.
Now, with speaking, getting back to Bob Burns,
Larry Storch and Bob Burns will be doing
Son of Monsterpalooza in September in the rubber
room.
We've been handed a plug.
Yes. You're working with Bob
Burns again. A plug that you don't
know about.
A plug that's news to Larry.
Yes. The only person
who doesn't know about this is Larry
who's coming.
So you're going to have to pick out
a shirt to wear.
Okay.
It was just
happened to me.
Okay.
Now you had a great
John Barrymore story.
John Barrymore was in court.
And they said, hand on the Bible, your name, occupation.
And John Barrymore said, my name is John Barrymore.
My occupation, I'm the world's greatest actor.
After the trial was over, he went out, he left the courtroom, My occupation? I'm the world's greatest actor.
After the trial was over, he went out, he left the courtroom,
and his sister and brother, Ethel and Lionel, jumped on him,
and they said to him, how dare you say a thing like that, that I'm the world.
How could you say a thing like that?
And John Barrymore said, remember, Ethel? I was under oath.
That was great.
Now, you must do an Ed
Sullivan imitation.
On our show,
on our show tonight,
let's really hear it out there
for Will Jordan,
who is going to do a great impersonation of me.
And anyway, I was doing this in a show,
and I completely forgot that I was in the show.
I was breaking the fourth wall.
The audience started to laugh,
and I thought I was in a nightclub again.
But here I was on stage,
and the audience was laughing, and I kind of turned in a nightclub again but here I was on stage and the audience was laughing
and I kind of turned away
and broke the fourth wall
you know you're not supposed to look like
you're in a nightclub
on stage and
Annie Mira, God bless her, she gave
me hell for it.
I deserved it too and I never
did it again. Do you remember the name of the show?
It was called Afterplay.
Afterplay.
Yeah, and it was in New Brunswick in New Jersey.
You did a lot of theater.
You did Sly Fox with Richard Dreyfuss.
Yes.
You did, and you were, Gilbert and I are fans of Arsenic and Old Lace,
and of course Karloff was in the original Arsenic and Old Lace.
And you, did you play
Professor Einstein, Dr. Einstein?
I was Einstein in that one, yes
To Abe Vigoda's
Abe Vigoda
Was he your sidekick?
Oh
Was he Jonathan, the Karloff character?
No, who was
I can't remember
but no
Gene Stapleton was in the show Gene Stapleton was in the show, quite right No, who was D-Dem? Oh, I can't remember. But no.
Gene Stapleton was in the show.
Gene Stapleton was in the show, quite right.
And I had a wonderful time on that one.
What was the name of it again?
Arsenic and Olays. Arsenic and Olays.
I just got inside information that it was Jonathan Frid.
Jonathan Frid.
From Dark Shadows.
Who just passed away. Yeah, Barnid. From Dark Shadows. Who just passed away.
Yeah, Barnabas in Dark Shadows.
Another favorite of mine when I was a kid.
Because it was a soap opera with monsters.
So you played the Peter Lorre part.
Peter Lorre played the part in the film with Cary Grant.
Right, right.
That Frank Capra directed, and you were in the stage version.
Right.
You played Dr. Einstein.
Did you do a special voice for that?
Do you remember?
It was German, but I don't remember the exact voice tone.
But it was a German accent that I used.
And can I tell you a fast joke?
Of course.
Oh, sure.
Tell us a slow joke. Yeah, okay Oh, sure. Tell us a slow joke.
Yeah, okay.
I don't have to tell a joke.
Did you hear those laughs?
Yeah, let's hear it.
Yes, please.
Oh, it was a director in Hollywood, a very famous director, a very wealthy director, but
he had one bad habit. He was a
kleptomaniac, and as
wealthy as he was, he couldn't
refrain from, he was
a victim of it.
And so they brought a
professor from Dr.
Egelhoff from Berlin
to help cure
this director of kleptomania.
And after two weeks of intense treatment of kleptomania, this German doctor Egelhoff says,
you are absolutely cured of kleptomania.
You can be sure that you will never again fall victim to kleptomania, you can be sure that you will never again fall victim to kleptomania.
Oh, by the way, if you feel a relapse coming on, pick up a toaster for me.
That's a great joke.
What are some of your favorite jokes? Do you remember some?
Oh, that might be too long to tell.
There's a great one I saw, Larry,
recently. We should say that a mutual friend of Gilbert's and mine is Drew Friedman,
who did the wonderful portrait
of you at the Society of Illustrators.
And we saw you there,
and you told a joke, if
I can get you to tell it again,
it was the joke about the Arab and the Israeli
guy on the plane. All right.
Can we do this?
Sure.
All right.
It's a transatlantic flight to the troubled Middle East, to the explosive Middle East,
and seated on the plane next to each other, an Arab and an Israeli.
It's very cold, very cold.
And they wrap blankets around themselves.
They take their shoes
off and they're flying.
And at one point, the Arab
turns to the Israeli and he said,
Would you, my friend,
from Israel, find the
goodness in your heart to go
to the back of the plane and
bring for me back, please,
an orange juice,
since you are seated on the aisle.
The Jewish guy says, my Arab friend, it will be by me my pleasure.
I shall be back into shakes of a lamb's tail.
Goes to the back of the plane, comes back with the juice.
The Arab drinks down all the juice.
And then he says to the Jewish guy,
while you are gone,
I spit in
your shoe. The Jewish
guy says,
spit in the shoe,
piss in the juice.
When will it end?
It's a wonderful joke.
Larry, you do all kinds of dialects and all kinds of accents.
If we threw some at you, just generally,
if we said, you know, Indian,
like the character you did in SOB.
Oh, Indian, like the character you did in SOB. Oh, Indian.
Well, I do it to Indians all night.
General George Armstrong Custer
at the banks of the Little Bighorn River
the night before the great Indian battle.
And on the other side of the little Bighorn River
was a hundred
thousands of Indians
and the great chiefs,
Spitting Bull, Geronimo,
Crazy Horse,
and of course the
Indian drums.
You boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom.
And George Armstrong Custer said, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom. And George Armstrong Custer said, drums, drums.
I don't like the sound of those drums.
And from across the river, an Indian hollered back, he ain't our regular drummer. a drama.
Terrific.
Any joke with an Italian accent?
An Italian accent?
No, I was always afraid
to tell an Italian joke
because when I worked for the
mafia, you never know
you know
if I think of one
along the way I'll pop it in
how about Swedish
you do a Swedish accent
or a
Swiss
I was doing Swedish I can do that
but I don't have any
that wasn't a very popular dialogue with Americans, you know.
Right, right.
Did I do a Spanish joke for you?
No, no, please.
This was...
This was a...
It was...
A young person.
This is in Spanish Harlem.
A young person on Monday morning takes his two fingers and he puts them in his eyes and he says,
Mama, I don't want to go to school today, Mama.
I don't like the kids and I don't like the teachers. I don't want to go to school today, mama.
And his mama says, Jesus, don't you give me that crap. You're going to school today. You're 31 years old, and you're the principal.
Now, any other jokes with a Jewish accent?
With a Jewish accent?
One time at a very elegant party,
at a very elegant party on the east side while the party is going on.
Mozart is
being played in the background.
And as the party ends
and Mozart dies,
this one woman says, Mozart!
I know that boy!
I know that boy. I see him every
morning. He takes the number
five bus to the beach.
As they're driving
home that night, the husband
can contain himself no longer.
And he says,
you had to open up your
damn frest.
That means mouth.
You had to open your damn frest.
Let everybody know how
stupid you are.
You know the number five bus doesn't go to the beach
beautiful
do you have any with a French accent
not offhand Do you have any with a French accent?
Not offhand.
If I think of something in French, I will.
And any other with a Jewish accent?
No, I'll probably think of something along the way, but just keep going.
Larry, let me ask you about music.
You've been playing the saxophone for years.
I love to blow saxophone, yes.
And you still play?
I go down to the park with the sax every morning when the weather is right,
and I blow for a couple of hours down in the park. So you just walk to, like, Riverside Drive?
Yes, quite right.
And you just take your sax and you sit on a park bench and blow.
You said that when you play the saxophone, then you're playing with the gods.
You're hobnobbing, they say.
You're hobnobbing with the gods.
When you, any kind of music at all, as long as you're in music, you're hobnobbing with the gods.
What do you remember about The Great Race, Tony,
which we talked about before?
Jack Lemmon.
Where you played Texas Jack.
We were talking about it.
It was one of the films that I've always been in love with.
It was Tony Curtis and Jack Lemmon and Keenan Wynn,
and you had this wonderful short scene as Texas Jack,
this tough guy that comes in and just turns the saloon upside down. Lemon and Keenan Wynn. And you, you had this wonderful short scene as Texas Jack,
this tough guy that comes in and just turns the saloon upside down.
Give me some fighting room.
Give me some fighting room.
And every time he says, give me some,
somebody clips him in the jaw and knocks him flat.
Right.
But I did that about eight or nine times.
Give me some fighting room.
They gave me fighting room. And I kept giving him.
This is a visual joke. You can getting... This is a visual joke.
You can't...
Dorothy Provine was your... If you guys
haven't seen The Great Race, we recommend
it. Blake Edwards directed it and it's
a wonderful comedy. It's an
homage to old movies.
I suppose so, yeah.
And that's one that Tony Curtis called you in for.
Tony was, he was like a brother.
We were like brothers.
He called me on every, someone said,
you don't need an agent as long as Tony Curtis is your friend.
And that's the way it was with Tony Curtis.
Can you do a Tony Curtis imitation?
No.
No, I'm afraid you got me there.
Okay.
Well, first, I mean, this amazes me because here's Larry, 91, and he said, can we do it this day because I have a plug?
And I thought that was great.
26th at 6 p.m., Larry's friends are throwing a comedy show fundraiser at Stand Up New York to pay for Larry's star on the Palm Springs Walk of Stars. or to donate, visit gofundme.com slash Storch Star.
Storch's Star.
Gofundme.com slash Storch's Star. So you're going to get a star on the Walk of Fame in Palm Springs.
Well, I'm very honored because I'll be in there with some great company.
So it is a great honor, and I appreciate it.
Didn't you receive another honor recently, Larry?
You were named the mayor of Fort Lee, honorary mayor of Fort Lee, New Jersey.
Yeah, I was the mayor.
And you know, while I was in office,
while I was in office, there was no crime.
No crime at all.
Nothing.
No crime.
And it opens up
a new door for me.
Is it possible
that politics,
I could be a great politician,
you know,
and I always think
of that,
of Mount Rushmore
with all of the great statesmen.
Who was it?
Lincoln, Jefferson, Woodrow Wilson.
But I also think, just remember, before these guys were great statesmen,
just remember, baby, they were all politicians.
You understand what I'm talking about? They were all politicians you understand what I'm joking about
they were all politicians
really
I never forgot that
do you have any
other jokes
I love
your jokes
keep talking and I'll come back to you
alright do the Moses one, coming down.
Moses coming down from the mountain with the commandments under his arm.
And a million Jewish people meet him.
Mo, Mo, you talk with him.
Mo, what was he like?
And Moses said to everybody, shut up, all of you.
He wanted 13.
I got him down to 10.
That's great.
Oh, yes.
Pussy Green.
Someone has yelled from the peanut gallery.
We got faith.
Yeah.
Her name was Pussy Green, do you hear?
Red hair, green eyes, the soul of a monkey, sex incarnate.
And she went through every town, destroying all of those.
And finally, one guy in church,
Father, forgive me, Father, it wasn't my fault.
It was Pussy Green, Father.
Pussy Green.
I'll burn in hell.
I'll burn in hell, I know I will, Father.
I'll burn in hell.
At that minute, the church doors opened up.
It can only be pussy green.
Lipstick, a cigarette dangling from her lips.
Red hair and green eyes.
A generous contribution into the poor box
and sashayed down the aisle to the very front row
where she sat down legs
akimbo
the old priest
was preaching and suddenly
he saw it
he stared
and stared and finally
he called the young priest over and he said
there
is that pussy green
and the young priest said
know your eminence
it's just a reflection from the stained
glass window
laughter
laughter
laughter
laughter
laughter
laughter
and what was the Jesus one
Mother Mary.
Why do showers look so upset?
Oh, Christ, Christ walking through the desert,
comes upon the mob,
about to stone Mary Magdalene to death.
Mary Magdalene, the Jezebel of the Bible.
And Christ raised one arm and said,
let him among you
who is without sin
cast the first stone.
And with that,
a little gray-haired old lady
in back of Christ
picked up rocks
and started throwing them
like a machine gun.
Christ turned around and saw her and hollered, Mom! Christ picked up rocks and started throwing them like a machine gun.
Christ turned around, saw and hollered, Mom!
This has been... I'm exhausted from laughing.
I am.
Oh, oh.
Two cannibals.
Two cannibals.
Two cannibals in the jungles of Bujumburu.
Two cannibals in the jungles of Bujumburu.
Both having lunch.
And one cannibal said to the other,
I hurt my mother-in-law.
A constant woman.
I hurt her mother-in-law.
She make me sick to my stomach.
And the other cannibal said,
well, screw her, just eat the noodles.
Do you remember any other of Larry's?
Because I love these.
We have the Larry Storch fan club here.
Sending jokes in from the gallery.
Well, okay.
This has been Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast with my co-host Frank Santopadre
with the great Larry Starch,
star of F Troop,
the original Ghostbusters,
and most importantly,
my co-star in the Aristocrats.
Thank you so much for having me.
Thank you again.
Thank you.
It was a treat, Larry.
Thanks for doing it.