Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - GGACP Classic: Art Metrano
Episode Date: September 21, 2023GGACP celebrates the birthday (September 22) of late comedian and actor (and "magician"!) Art Metrano by revisiting this interview from 2017. In this episode, Art looks back on his 50+ year career in ...film and television, his friendships with performers like Cornel Wilde, Elliott Gould and Robert Mitchum and his miraculous (and inspirational) recovery from a life-threatening injury. Also, Johnny Carson cracks up, Huntz Hall measures up, Buddy Hackett lays even money and Art parties with Lenny Bruce (and Clint Eastwood). PLUS: Jim Brown! "Night of the Hunter"! Raymond Burr goes it alone! The suavity of Dean Martin! The strangeness of Merv Griffin! And Art remembers the late, great Marvin Kaplan! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Colossal classic hi this is gilbert gottfried and this is gilbert gott's amazing, colossal podcast with my co-host,
Frank Santopadre, and we're once again recording at Nutmeg with our engineer, Frank Verderosa.
Our guest this week is a stand-up comedian and actor, and one of the most visible and popular performers on television and in films throughout
the 60s, 70s, 80s, and 90s. You know his work from dozens of TV shows, including
Rowan and Martin's Laughin', Bewitched, The Tim Conway Comedy Hour, Ironside, Charlie's Angels, Barney Miller,
The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson, L.A. Law, The Golden Girls, Chicago Hope, and most
notably, well, to us anyway, the short-lived Chicago Teddy Bears,
in which he co-starred with former podcast guests Jamie Farr and Marvin Kaplan.
Feature films include Breathless, Mel Brooks' History of the World,
Mel Brooks' History of the World, Toys, Teachers, How Stella Got Her Crew Back, and Police Academy 2 and Police Academy 3, in which he played the ruthless and conniving Lieutenant Mouser. In a career spanning seven decades, he's worked with showbiz legends such as Dean Martin, James Garner, Sammy Davis Jr Ron Liebman, Jessica Walter, and Barry Levinson.
Please welcome a man whose name has come up on this show more than a few times,
the amazing Matrano, also known.
It's like turning on the light in a refrigerator.
You know, you want to do five.
Since you said the amazing Matrano, I had to go.
It's a sickness.
It's an automatic.
This, of course, is Art Matrano.
And now that bit that you did, to describe it to the audience,
you were like a magician without any magic tricks, really.
Oh, I had great tricks.
If you think those tricks were not difficult, Mr. Gilbert,
I mean, that's why the world was doing them.
People could do them.
I mean, I'll never forget when we started this whole thing.
We were on the Loman and Barclay show with Barry Levinson and Amos,
Rudy DeLuca, McLean Stevenson, Joni Gerber.
I mean, Craig T. Nelson.
We all get to Craig T. Nelson.
Oh, I love Craig.
He's a good man.
And we all got together at Rudy DeLuca's house,
and we were all getting pretty smashed, smoking, drinking.
Before you know it, all those guys got up and started to do an improv.
And all of a sudden, I was motivated.
I got up.
I picked up
a napkin I went down and I stuck it in my right hand and I hit it and you couldn't see it I made
a big display and then I pulled it out from the bottom like what a big fucking deal that was
and I shifted over and I did my card trick and I did all these stupid funny tricks that people
at the party loved and Rudy called me up the next day.
He says, you really got to develop that
and bring it to the producers of Lohman and Barclay.
So the next day I went in with Rudy
and I told him what it was.
I showed him.
They want to put me on right away.
I said, no, let me just give me a week.
And a week later I went on
and that particular show was so crazy.
We were at NBC in Burbank, and the audience went wild.
And my career, the next day, the Del Arish show called.
I did her show with Sandy Barron.
Oh, Sandy Barron.
He lived in my guest house, and he owed me money.
Sorry to hear that.
Funny man.
Very funny.
But I'll tell you something.
Wait.
When he died, he owed me $7,000.
And all of a sudden, some woman calls me and identifies herself and said,
Sandy left you the money that he had.
I said, where did he get it?
He always said he was poor.
He said, oh, he made hundreds of thousands of dollars just on his comedy records and it was
always getting checks wow it was never paying anybody wow jewish guy when they die they want
to hold on to everything so he paid off his debt sandy baron shock it was the shock of all sharks
i love sandy but he you know he was just he just got all messed up with drugs and
stuff the last time i saw him he was it was an emphysema you know sucking up air from a tank
too bad modern audiences would know him as clumpus from uh from seinfeld yeah right but he had a long
career he's in broadway dan rose, of course. It was tremendous.
And I remember in your magic act, you would do things like you'd have your finger up in your right hand,
slap your hands together, and then your finger would be up in your left hand.
Right.
And all the time, you just tell me, da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da.
Well, when I was a kid, I used to go up to the Catskill Mountains,
and they always had the opening acts.
And the opening acts always doing, you know, Fine and Dandy
or Getting to Know You, Getting to Know All of You.
All those bullshit introduction kind of songs
that the main act wanted to come perform.
And that tune, Fine and Dandy, stayed with me.
And as soon as I got up that night, it was there.
And it was just all these stupid things.
I would move a chair.
I go, da-da-da-da-da.
I got on top of the chair, made a big deal of, da-da-da-da-da-da-da.
I'd reach up, and I make believe I was turning off a light bulb.
I'd take off the light bulb and then I'd stick my finger up into the sock
and it went...
My whole body was like I was being electrified.
Whatever I did, people laughed.
You appeared on everything back then doing that.
I did, I did.
Including Carson.
Yeah, but Johnny was the best because when i got on that show in new york i was backstage getting ready and you know how you like
it you're talking to yourself you know it's not an easy job to go out there and like they're gonna
like me you know all this bullshit that goes on in your head and i kept saying i'm gonna kill him i'm gonna kill him i'm gonna kill him and i got a knock
on the door from the stage manager he says mr metrano we're running late so when you do your
act take a bow and get right off i says thanks very nice very nice i'll do that and he left and
sure enough brought me on stage. Johnny introduced me.
And I heard Doc Severtson play me on with his great fine and dandy orchestration.
And then I broke out into this da-da-da-da routine.
And right from the get-go, the audience got it.
And they're laughing.
And I'm doing it.
And I'm rolling up my pants to show I can make one leg disappear.
He took his leg out of the shoe.
Leg out of the shoe.
All these stupid things.
And all of a sudden, I hear even a bigger laugh.
Well, I found out later that bigger laugh came from Johnny,
who was sitting on that chair with the rollers on it.
He laughed so hard, he fell backwards off his chair.
Now, I didn't see this, but Wally Amos, who was my manager,
the famous Amos Chalk, he was my manager,
the first black manager at William Morris,
who told me after the show when it happened,
I said, geez, I thought I was really killing him.
He says, no, you were killing them.
But when Johnny fell, it was like, what's going on here?
So now my act ends.
I take a bow.
I turn to leave, and Johnny waves me to the couch.
Oh, nice.
And as I'm walking over, under my breath, I said, fuck you, stage manager.
Fuck you.
I remember all the years doing stand-up, it's like we would watch other comics on Carson.
stand-up, it's like we would watch other comics on Carson.
And it was like, you know, a big deal.
You go, ooh, Carson kind of wiped his eye there, or he gave a grin.
You made Carson hit the ground.
I did.
Yeah.
I did.
You know, I didn't realize how much he liked the routine until I found out he wanted to be.
He was an amateur magician.
Yeah.
Carsoni.
And I.
Oh, is that why he does that?
Yeah.
Yeah.
He will.
He wasn't.
He was a magician.
Well, I didn't know that.
So that's why he took to my act right away.
And he kept bringing me back.
And we had to think of new ideas.
One of them that we came up with.
Wally was was really funny. He said,
since you're just going dot, dot, dot, dot, dot, he said, let's go into a room and record you for 10 minutes, just going dot, dot, dot, and we'll take that tape and we'll put it in a box
and on it, we'll have your face. And at the end of the bit, and we'll put that in your pocket.
And then you'll come out.
And all you'd hear is da, da, da, da.
And I wasn't doing anything because I was lip syncing.
And while I was lip syncing, I said, what are the funny things I could do?
So I took out a bowling ball and I rolled it down the stage.
And you hear it because we recorded a bowling ball.
And then you hear it crash.
The pins break.
Like, wow, look at that.
I got the ball, and I throw the ball up, and I swing at it like I was going to hit a baseball out of the park.
And then all of a sudden you hear a window break.
I kept just emphasizing all these stupid things I was doing.
And it just killed.
It was just, you know, the people that followed me,
I kept thinking about like Albert Brooks and Steve Maughan,
two of the greatest, especially Steve.
Oh, the fly media.
Like everything he did.
Steve was just a genius.
He has a play on Broadway, Media Showers.
Don't miss it.
Oh, okay.
Amy Schumer
and that guy
Key from Key and Peele.
Oh, yeah. Keegan-Michael Key.
Don't miss that show.
You know what I love? Go ahead, Art.
Don't go, Frank. I was going to ask you, did
it evolve over the years? I mean,
now I was watching them. They're all over YouTube.
There's one where you're lighting a marshmallow
with a cigarette lighter, which I also love.
Were you constantly thinking, I got to refresh this?
Was it pretty sad from the beginning or were you always throwing new stuff into it?
Every time I smoked a joint, I would come up with some new stuff.
I swear to God.
I came up with some stuff that was so crazy.
I had a whole bunch of
penis jokes.
It went with da-da-da-da.
It's the piece of music that makes it work.
What was your
penis jokes with da-da-da-da?
Well,
I'd
be there naked with my penis and I'd
take my penis and I'd
wrap it around my index finger.
Da-da, look, jewelry, jewelry, jewelry.
Da-da-da.
And then I'd take it, and I'd tuck my dick between my balls,
and now you couldn't see it.
It was like a vagina.
I would turn around, and you'd see my dick from my asshole.
I'd look, a flying duck.
I mean, I did crazy stuff, man.
It was just, nobody would listen to this.
It was good for parties.
And did you ever do this on the Merv Griffin show or anything?
Yeah, right.
Merv Griffin was a strange guy.
Yeah.
You know, of all the shows I've done, he was, you know,
I did the David Frost with John Denver.
And David Frost was so much smarter, calmer than,
Merv was like so uptight about everything.
I never understood him.
You know, we're talking about the precision of comedy
and the choices made.
That song is so perfect.
You know what I'm saying, Gil?
Oh, absolutely. If it was a different piece of music art that you chose, it might not be as funny. of comedy and the choices made that song is so perfect you know what i'm saying gil oh absolutely
if it was a different piece of music art that you chose it might not be as funny but the song the
piece of music is so ridiculous and what what the woman and and the woman that wrote it her name was
k swift k swift and i had and i mad lunch with her at the Palm Restaurant in the plaza many years ago.
And she thanked me for doing that song because, obviously, her royalty started coming in.
That's great.
She just loved the show.
She owes you.
And she told me the story that she wrote that song after breaking her arm and leg.
And she was doing a show on Broadway.
And the lyrics are,
and she was doing a show on Broadway, and the lyrics are,
gee, it's all fine and dandy, sugar candy when I'm with you.
It was all about being happy and up,
and there she's lying in the bed with a broken arm and a broken leg.
I thought that's a great story because I never knew.
I just thought Fine and Dandy was such an upbeat, you know, high, you know,
it's just like, you're right, it's a perfect.
But now it's so associated with you that I don't think anybody could ever hear it and take it seriously.
It's the Art Matrano song.
You can't believe it was ever a song before you started doing it.
Didn't Mel Brooks jump out at you once, like jump out of a bush or something
and start doing this?
Yes.
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Happy holidays, everybody. It's Mario Cantone and you're listening to Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast.
I just hit a pod on a bike past.
Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha.
Podcast.
Silly little podcast.
Starring Frank and Gilbert.
Searing through my bones.
Searing through my bones.
Podcast.
Nothing more than podcast.
All right, already back to the show.
Tell us about growing up in Bensonhurst because you told me something funny on the phone.
And Gilbert was thrilled when he found out you were Sephardic Jew and not Italian.
Yes. I thought when I heard when I was looking at the name all these years, Art Matrano.
And in a vowel.
Yeah. And I thought, oh, Frank, I'm the fucking guinea on this show.
But no.
I always say, I'm a Spanish Jew.
Como estas, Ned?
Baruch atah Adonai.
Spanish Jew.
Tell Gil what you told me on the phone about the Italian kids in the neighborhood, though.
That was funny.
Well, let me, first of all, we're Sephardic Jews.
You have to know we're the first Jews to come to America.
We built the very first temple.
And it was a famous guy named Dr. David Solopool.
I can't think of his, I'm not sure of his name.
But they came here and we're a very proud group because growing up in Brooklyn, my real name was Arthur Messistrano.
But when my father went to work in the garment center,
nobody could pronounce it.
So we got rid of the SIS, and we became Metrano.
And it was interesting because on my block,
there were mostly Italians and Jews.
And there were some very orthodox Jews who thought I was Italian.
And the old Jew, he would wear a yarmulke and a talus and a this and a that.
And he would call me and he'd come, come, come, come with me, come with me.
I want to show you something, maybe.
And he'd open the door to his apartment.
I'd climb up all his staircase.
Hey, see the light?
Turn the light on for me.
Uh-huh. Yeah, and over by the oven.
Can you turn on the oven?
Sure. Thank you very much.
I was the Shabbos Goy.
And he didn't realize I was a Jew.
What do you think? It was so terrible.
Anyway, so... Go ahead. Oh, Frank Anyway.
Go ahead. Oh, Frank asked me to ask you a story you have about another name that's popped up on this show a bunch of times.
And that's from the Bowery Boys.
You worked with Hunts Hall.
Oh, you're going right in for it, huh?
Yeah.
At the 20-minute mark.
My God, he was my hero.
I swear to God, I couldn't believe I was working with the dead-end kids,
the East End, whatever, and he told me stories about Gorsy.
What a brilliant mind.
He made all the contracts.
Yeah.
He never wrote anything down.
And, of course, Hunch had one of the biggest dicks at Warner Brothers.
There you go.
Hunch Hall.
Wait, wait, wait.
Hunts Hall had one of the biggest dicks?
I knew it was going to make him happy.
Oh, this is great.
So Hunts told me about all the fucking he was doing with all the young actresses.
And then, because I lived on the other side of the hill near the Beverly Hills area,
the Friars, who was running with Buddy Haggin, Milton Berle, Norm Crosby, all those guys,
Buddy got into a feud with all the Goyim actors,
Ward Bond, John Wayne, Forrest Tucker, that all lived in Burbank,
claiming that Forrest Tucker had the biggest dick.
And Buddy said, well,
so Buddy
says, listen, I'll tell you something.
I have a feeling that
Milton Berle's got a bigger
cock than Forrest.
So betting pursued, and it
got him to like $30,000, $40,000
was being waged.
Milton Berle
hears this story,
runs to the fry,
sees Buddy,
and says,
Buddy,
what the fuck are you doing?
I have a contract,
a moral clause
with NBC.
What are you nuts?
I get $150,000
a year clear
and if they find out
about this,
I'm going to lose it all.
Buddy says,
just do me a favor,
Milton.
Take out enough
to win.
Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, do me a favor, Milton. Take out enough to win. So that's the origin of that story.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Now, when Hunch Hall pulled
his stick out, did he go
ooh, ooh?
Hunch Hall was
the best. He was so good,
this kid.
Could you imagine, you grow up as a youngster in Brooklyn,
and, you know, all you see is the Bowery boys.
You know, it was just amazing to be in his presence.
And he told me some great stories.
And, of course, again, his dick always surpassed.
Was the center of conversation tell us a little bit more about chicago teddy bear since we brought it up all right and you
worked with john banner you were telling me on the phone you loved yeah i fell in love with john
seemed to remind me of my father except my father was a mean tough turk now nowanner, that's Schultz. Sergeant Schultz. Yeah.
I know nothing.
Yes, exactly.
He was so beautiful.
I loved talking to him.
He was into opera. I grew up with him on those 13 weeks.
Sure.
Yeah.
How about Mike Mazurky?
Mike was such a warm guy.
You know, he looked like an animal that can bite off your head.
Yes, indeed.
And, you know, when you talk with him and think of all the movies he did with the Bogarts and, you know, it just was amazing.
And then I ended up doing a number of Dr. Pepper commercials with him.
And we were dressed in these frog outfits.
We looked ridiculous.
He was just great.
I mean, the whole cast was great.
And the director, High Averbach, was fabulous.
High Averbach, sure.
Oh, he had a great sense of timing.
F-Troop guy.
Whatever.
He was just great.
And all of a sudden, he gets in a fight with Warner Brothers.
They fire him, and they hire Jerry Thorpe.
Why?
Because he directed The Untouchables.
I said, oh, that's really good.
He'll bring a lot of humor to our show.
And John Banner, actually, he and his family were in the concentration camps.
They were, exactly.
He had a bunch of numbers he once showed me.
And I said, oh, my God.
He says, yeah, I played these last year and won $10 million.
I said, really?
He says, yeah, what'd you do with the money?
He said, I gave it to the Nazis.
How about our pal Marvin Kaplan?
Art, we had him on this show.
Yeah, Marvin's very cool.
He is what he is.
Marvin, you know, he's just, you know, he's a nerd.
He really is.
Yeah, he was a nerd.
I don't understand.
We loved him.
We had him here.
Such a sweet man.
I mean, did they get any sweeter than Marvin Kaplan?
No.
He was exactly what you'd imagine him to be.
Exactly.
Do you think he was playing a role in a TV show?
That's Marvin.
Yeah.
It was wonderful.
Well,
I'd like to,
I want to get back to the,
that Brooklyn stuff because yeah,
you know,
that's,
that's where everything really got started for me,
you know?
And I lived in this place.
It was really strange for me because between a lot of Italians
and a lot of Jews, but the Italians on my block
happened to be very tough.
And I do a joke in my play.
I said, yeah, they had their own church called
A Lady of Lucky Luciano.
This is in Bensonhurst, huh?
In Bensonhurst.
It was the only church where the body and the blood of Christ was referred to as the evidence.
Half the people that lived in my neighborhood wanted to move to the suburbs.
The other half were on the witness protection program.
for on the Witness Protection Program.
During the summer, the Italian kids went to Camp Cosa Nostra where they played hide and go testify.
Camp Cosa Nostra.
There was one Italian guy who lived on my block.
He was so big.
He looked like he wore a crucifix with a real guy on it.
He used to yell at me, Hey, Jew boy, hey, kite, come over here.
I said, I'm not a kite.
I'm not Jewish.
I'm Italian.
He said, you're Italian?
I said, yeah, I'm Italian.
He said, say something in Italian.
I said, get in the fucking trunk.
You went to high school with Sandy Koufax lafayette did indeed yeah yeah yeah and peter max and some other people peter mac fred wilpon who won wilpon sure fred wilpon was a starting
pitcher for us because sandy koufax couldn't get the ball over the plate yeah and one day
when i was trying out he was a senior i was a sophomore
and he and i had his catcher's glove on he said would you catch me said sure i went on we went
he didn't have a mound over there he was on flat dirt and i got behind i didn't wear a mask or
i said there's no batter in the box i said all right sandy let me see what you got
and that ball came at me so fast
it looked like it was dancing
and I said my god this
motherfucker's gonna kill me
and then I asked him I said alright
throw it it'd be a curve ball
and the curve ball would come from the sky
I mean I'd never seen anything like it
the trouble was in high school
he couldn't
get it over the plate incredible so he played first base and got a basketball scholarship to
cincinnati he's one of the few six foot two jewish guys who could dunk and he had a huge pair of
hands and that's when he got to college started to pitch again and then the dodgers who had a team was montreal was their
oh yeah right the farm team it was the farm team in those days and he went up to montreal
came back down to bench harris and started playing for the dodgers but he couldn't get the ball over
the plate they thought he was going to kill somebody. And so comes back to Bensonhurst, and there was a guy whose father drove the Journal American truck,
and he was very much into baseball, especially pitches and catches.
So he grabbed ahold of Sandy, and he said,
Sandy, come to my backyard.
And he had on a tree a tire with a regular truck tire.
And he said, we're going gonna mark off to 60 feet and all i want you to do is throw the tooth a hole so of course sandy with all his speed
and power kept hitting the outside of the rubber and the story goes laurie larry laurie said slow
it down just get it through the hole and then he started getting it through the hole.
And then the rest was fucking history.
Yeah, great history.
Yeah.
There you go, Gilbert, a Jewish athlete.
Maybe arguably the best pitcher of all time.
Because his career was shortened.
Well, you know, back in those days, they didn't have that Job.
Yeah, the Tommy John surgery.
Tommy John surgery.
Yeah.
So you're growing up in Brooklyn art and how the hell do you have your family is not in show business at all.
How the hell how the hell did you find yourself performing?
Well, my mother was a singer and we'd go up to the Catskill Mountains and when we were really poor we stayed
in cooker lanes. They were bungalows that had one big kitchen and there were a lane of spots where
the women would cook their dinner for their family. That was the cooker lanes and then we
eventually my father started making more money in the garment center, and we started going to some really nice hotels.
And one of my favorite was the Browns,
where Jerry Lewis would appear every once in a while playing softball.
On Tuesday nights, there was a guest night where my mother would go and sing her favorite song,
Besame Mucho.
And while she was singing with her sequined gown
and the way the
audience loved her and the conductor would take this big, wide, long handkerchief out of his
pocket and put it by my mother's torso and swing with it. And the clarinet player would be playing
and she'd be singing, Besame, Besame Mucho, Como si fuera esta noche lejos de mi. And I'm looking at my mother.
I said, oh, my God, that's beautiful, Ma.
And she always made me laugh, and she always made me do these little ditties.
Every time I'd get in trouble with my father,
she loved me when I did this little kid thing I used to do.
I got a dear little dolly, and her eyes are bright blue.
She can open and shut them, and she stares at me too.
In the morning I dress her and I look up and replay.
It's because it's a tip-in and I forgot the rest.
And that was what went on between me and my mother.
So watching your mother, even though she was an amateur performer,
she wasn't a professional, but watching your mother do that
and you got the bug? Well, you her and like i said all the comics that i saw in those days
on the comics you see martin and lewis live no i never saw martin okay no no just jerry i saw
jerry live and i saw dean many times yeah and you know what's funny? This is something that always struck me that's popped up on the show a few times.
Like Jackie Gleason, Gene Wilder, and Jan Murray all used to entertain their mothers.
Right.
They'd go out and see a show, and they'd go back and act it out for their mothers.
Where'd you hear that story?
I just heard it separately, each one talking about it in interviews.
Well, that's, you know, my mother, one, she never pushed me,
but she always thought I was funny, and she'd always comment on that.
And she always had a thing in her heart for me that was very special.
And,
um,
I remember I couldn't have been more than 10 or 12 years old.
My mother had this feeling of service to help the poor.
My father didn't like her for doing that.
So we were always pretty quiet about it.
But she had this black family that lived in Stuyvesant, and we used to pack up boxes with toiletries and canned foods and all kinds of things and we'd get on a bus and we'd travel, I don't know, 20 minutes to one spot,
take another bus and then all of a sudden we're in Bedford-Stuyvesant and you can see these
young black kids doing these girls jumping rope like I've never seen before and then we'd ring
this bell and it's inside the apartment which was just like like the peel was painting off the wall.
And Miss Williams would answer, and my mother would say,
it's Becky.
Oh, and we'd run up there, and he'd climb up, you know,
whatever, four or five flights, and my mother would have to stop.
And I'd say, you okay, Ma?
She said, I had six children.
Wait till you have six children.
And then we'd continue, and Mrs. Williams would open the door,
and she'd be, like, grateful.
Like, my mother was a god.
She kissed her hand, and it was crazy.
And I got that from my mother.
That's nice.
Yeah, and I have a poem I want to share.
I live my life by her.
I think I do.
There is a destiny that makes us brothers no one goes too far alone and all that you put into the lives of others
comes right back into your own very nice wow profound so she was kind of your hero art it
sounds like ah the biggest. Yeah. Very special.
You studied with Stella Adler?
Is that how you got into the show business for the most part?
No, actually, while in college, when I graduated high school,
I did my only play because the football coach wouldn't let you do anything
except play football uh-huh
and i was in a play with paul savino called stage door oh wow and when that and when that play was
over the high school teacher said when you get to college take some fine arts courses so i took her
advice and i immediately signed up for some fine arts you know know, drama classes. I also signed up because I knew all the great pussy was there.
That's why Gilbert went into the business, right?
So, you know, I went in there and I started doing all these plays
and I had this wonderful teacher who was directing them
and cut to all of a sudden i'm in uh i'm in the far east
entertaining the people in jakarta along with deanne warwick jonathan winters uh uh i can't
even think uh peter graves and uh i'm i'm there and all of a sudden I get a call from Rodney saying,
they want you in a play in London.
I said, I'm here.
Well, I got my shorts and T-shirts.
He said, I have to get home, go to L.A., pack my bags,
and head back to London.
He said, fine, I'll tell them you're coming.
They'll have a script waiting for you when you get home.
I get home. i see my wife my
kids the next day repack i'm off to london i get off i take a cab to the stage door of the globe
theater i get out i'm wearing a cape and a and a black hat that i stole from bonanza
and i'm um you know feeling feeling really English, you know,
and, you know, being in this place and it was raining,
it was just perfect.
And the stage door guy brings me back to the stage
where this director, Elijah Moschinsky,
is directing these famous cast of English actors, you know,
Keith Baxter, Kate O'Mara, John Quayle, Paul Maxwell,
on and on and on. And he begins to introduce me to all the other actors who have been rehearsing
for two weeks. I play the part of a producer named Sidney Black. And he's introduced me,
Art Mitrano, this is your wife, Kate O'Mara. This over here is
Keith Baxter. He plays the director. This is Maxine Audley. She plays her mother-in-law.
And this is Maxim Popovich. He plays, excuse me, and this is Paul Maxwell, and he plays the
director. So I'm shaking hands with everybody.
I get up to Paul Maxwell and I look at him.
I said,
you're not Paul Maxwell.
Your real name is Maxim Popovich
and you were my drama coach
at the College of Pacific
in Stockton, California.
And there's a long pause.
All the actors on the stage thinks this fucking guy is nuts
and after a long pause paul maxwell says yes my real name is maxim popovich
and the next next that night i got a call at my hotel from his wife saying,
what you did for Paul was amazing.
Because all those years he spent as a professor at that college,
he thought was a waste of his time until you showed up playing the lead role in this play.
That's nice.
I outed him.
Yeah, that was really some moment in my life. And how did you get involved in the Police Academy pictures, which were monster hits back then? Monster. God,
they made so much money. I got a call from my agent to go read for this part, Lieutenant Mouser,
and I showed up and there was so many guys that could have played the role.
I recognized quite a few of them. I had worked very hard on the sides. They send you sides that
you're going to read for the audition. And I brought in a fellow actor of mine, my friend
Bob Dunlap to read with me. And I had a way of learning all my lines. I wanted to know them
so that when I went there, even though I held the pages in my hand, I didn't really want to
look at the pages. I wanted to try to give the best I can in an audition. You don't get too
many shots. And I really nailed it. And the producer, Paul Meslansky, said the same thing.
Everyone says, who did you study with?
It's all the bullshit.
And then I got hired.
And it was, I love working with Jerry Paris.
Oh, Jerry Paris, right.
Yeah.
Yeah, the legendary Jerry Paris.
God, he did, he was in Marty.
Yeah.
He was, you know, he did all the Dick in marty he yeah he was uh you know he did yeah he
did all the dick van dyke shows jerry helper the dentist yeah yeah right exactly but he had a big
career just for our listeners he had a bigger career as a director working for gary marshall
happy days correct oh those are good times yeah i did that one show for Gary Marshall called Johnny Loves Chachi. Oh, yes.
Yeah.
I thought we were going to make a lot of money.
I was so happy until Scott Baio's father demanded more money for Scott.
And Gary Nardino, who ran the company, and Gary Marshall said, fuck him.
He said, I'm going to go.
I'm going to do movies, Gary said.
The show ended.
So I'm going to go, I'm going to do movies, Gary said.
The show ended.
And we got to get to a rough point in your life and that you did a one-man show about.
And that's when you decided, well, you were repairing your roof, I think.
I was, every time I made a great deal of money in movies and television,
I didn't know what to do with it.
You know, in the bank, it didn't mean anything.
So I got involved with this general contractor,
and I like working with my hands.
And so I teamed up with him.
I'd put up the money, and we'd find a house,
so we'd rehab it, and then sell it for a profit.
And I was very successful at it, because as an actor,
you're not working unless you're in a series.
You know, you're waiting every, you work a month,
you're off a month, whatever it was.
And I was working pretty steady.
So I'd buy these houses, and the last house I bought,
I was away in Spain making a movie,
and I expected to come home to see that the pool would be finished.
They had four months.
They had two months to do it by bond on the contract.
I come home, and the house is beautiful.
I look out the window.
There's a lot.
There's like garbage.
They've had some gun ice spray in the window. The fucking, there's a lot, there's like garbage. All the, they had some gun ice spray in the pool.
That's a soft cement before you actually plaster and tile and whatever.
And I went down to this, there was garbage everywhere.
Beer cans, ladders.
I was so pissed.
So I was supposed to meet my wife at Roxbury Park.
And I called and I said, look, I got to deal with some of this stuff before I go, and I'll see you a little later.
So I picked up this extension ladder, and I leaned it against the side of the balcony.
I had one of those hoses that you can turn off the water by the front of the hose line,
and I climbed up the ladder to wash off the thing.
I turned on the hose and I'm washing off this wooden balcony.
And all of a sudden I hear like a weird noise
and I'm falling backwards.
I'm about 12, 14 feet in the air.
I'm flying backwards.
I land on the top of my head.
I hear like a crack,
like almost like a snap of your finger.
And all of a sudden I watched my right hand just curl up in front of me.
My tongue rolls to the back of my mouth. My eyes had blinked. I opened up.
I said, I couldn't, I couldn't imagine what was going on in my life.
I couldn't imagine what was going on in my life.
And all of a sudden, I screamed for help.
And my tongue is caught in the back of my throat.
What the fuck is happening?
And that's how I begin to tell the story of this play that I did.
When I'm lying on the ground, I said, what a schmuck you are.
You know Jews don't belong on ladders.
Which is the name of the show, we should point out.
Which is the name of the show.
And who tried to do it? Oh, and you said that next thing you knew,
they were drilling through your skull?
Well, first you had the paramedics show up.
They looked like they came from Hollywood casting.
They were really good-looking guys.
And they asked me a bunch of dumb questions.
And then finally, they put sort of like a brace around your neck so you won't move it.
They realized that I had broken my neck.
And they were asking me all these silly questions.
What's your name?
What are you weigh?
Blah, blah, blah, you know.
And then finally
they take you I lived on the side of a hill and these guys put me on this stretcher I was scared
to death and they climbed me up to the top of the hill put me in a in this ambulance and off we went
to see the Sinai and all of a sudden I know that I'm lying up and I'm looking and this surgeon or whoever he was, was an orthotech, was drilling holes, one over my left and right eye and in the back of my head.
And they began to put on this halo on my head made of titanium.
They would screw it in, and I woke up.
I went, this is amazing.
And that was probably one of the most frightening days of my life.
Well, tell us about the break, Art.
Was it what they call the hangman's break?
It was.
I broke my neck in six places, C2, 4, 5, C6, C7, and T1.
And 1 and 2 is the hangman's break.
And I do a thing in the beginning, which I have right here,
which is a little heavy.
Should I do it?
Yeah, sure.
The house lights dim.
A light comes up on Art's face.
They used to execute people in this country by hanging them.
They still have public hangings in other parts of the world. They put a rope around a man's neck.
The platform he stands on is then pulled out from under him, and then the force of his weight
against the rope breaks his neck. The first and second vertebrae snap.
When that happens,
air can't get into the lungs of the brain.
The body dangles on a rope fighting for breath.
The tongue rolls to the back of the mouth.
And after a brief struggle,
the man dies.
Doctors call it the hangman's break.
That's how they killed John john brown who was a good guy
and adolf eichmann who was a nazi and that's the beginning of my comedy show
yes yes who gave you the title by the way uh jews don't belong on ladders it came out from
actually from when i was writing it when i said you schmuck you fell
on your own property you know jews and joe belong you said that's what you should call it
it was uh yeah it's it's amazing how you find things the more you do it you know it's like uh
william goldman wrote it's not what you write, it's what you rewrite. And I was constantly rewriting.
When you were there, and a lot of people thought you'd never be able to stand up again,
were there any points in your life where you thought, you know,
let me just go to sleep and not wake up?
Oh, my God, yeah, of course.
Suicidal thoughts.
I used to collect.
I'd refuse taking my sleeping pills sometimes.
And I had a way of having, because there's always shifts of different nurses.
And they don't know what the next nurse really did.
Even though they always look at the chart, they don't know how to read.
So I would ask these nurses just,
would you put this in my,
and they would put these little cups or whatever.
And I was constantly putting those pills in,
thinking that one day I'd have a way out
by dropping them down my throat.
But my niece, who was a nurse,
happened to look in the drawer and said,
what are you doing?
I said, well, I can't with my arms.
I mean, I'm dead from the neck down.
You know, I'm going to have to have some help from somebody.
No, no, no.
So, yeah, you get crazy.
You know, Freud said you can't control what thoughts that come into your mind.
And I think everyone's had that.
I mean, you certainly thought you feared that you wouldn't walk again that that's very clear in the book you you
obviously you thought your career was over it was over it was over nobody wanted to hire me in a
wheelchair my arms weren't functioning correct uh the nice people were paul witt and uh tony thomas
because i had worked for them on a lot
of shows. And they put me in the Golden
Girl and a bunch of shows that they
knew I could sit down, play a judge or whatever.
They were very kind. But
most people, most producers,
next, you know, who's
next, you know. And that's the way it is.
But I had a good 20-year run
until I fell.
Gee, I turned your comedy show right into the into a
ditch but so go ahead it took years but you went through a lot of painful and he went through rehab
he went through rehab yes he went through uh. Yes. He went through a lot.
I did.
Yeah.
Well, once they get you in the hospital and they start playing with your body, you know,
you're like a puppet.
And I had most of the people that were in therapy were women, Japanese, Filipinos.
And it's amazing how they can handle your body.
Because at the time, I must have weighed at least 215,
maybe more with the Halo, and the way they would work you.
And I would always say, how do you know how to do that?
Like I was being transferred from the bed onto a gurney,
and these two tiny little Filipinos, I mean,
I took a shit that weighed more than both of them.
And there they are moving me off this gurney.
I said, wait, there's some guys out there.
I can see them.
No, it's not a matter of strength.
It's a matter of technique.
Sure enough, they would just pick me up and put me on that gurney.
It was a pretty amazing therapy.
When they finally put a TENS unit all over my body.
You know what a TENS unit is?
No.
They put a bunch of pads all over you that stick to your arms, legs, chest, hands, fingers, and they turn on this little machine,
and it sends electrical volts through to all these pads.
And as I'm lying there, all of a sudden I'm dancing.
I said, what is going on here?
How is this going to help me?
My legs were jumping.
I was like, I said, no, this idea of TENS unit is to try to teach your brain where everything is.
Oh yeah.
To remind it.
And you know,
after I don't know how many treatments I finally can move my thumb.
I noticed my toe moving.
That's a big deal.
You were constantly reminded that there were people in even worse situations
than yours.
Oh yeah.
What's the name of that?
What's the name? What's his name of that uh what's the name what's his
name uh jamie the one uh the most handsomest guy he had a why can't i think of his name
what no not robert mitchum no no i can't think of his name and he had uh he was just fading so bad oh cornell wild oh no but that's good i'm
glad no cornell wild i met up in hefner's mansion i met so many great people but cornell and i hit
it off of course i knew all those dueling movies sure like chopin i mean i was so he did the thing
about where where uh uh afric African tribe chased him through the jungle.
What is the name of that?
Naked Prey?
Naked Prey.
Very good.
And so we had this constant talking about these films that he made and how he made them and who we made them with.
And when I was in the hospital, someone mentioned Cornel Wiles here also.
And so I went up to a friend of mine came by harvey and i got me in
my wheelchair and wheeled me all the way over to where cornell was and you knew a guy that had a
little tv show in la called skippy low sure oh yeah skippy low skip skip e period low Oh, yeah. Skippy Lowe. Yes. Skip E. Lowe. Was that the guy that Martin Short does?
No.
Oh, you mean Glick?
Oh, yeah.
I think he's doing a different guy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
No, no.
Skippy Lowe had a local L.A. TV show for years.
Yeah, very gay.
You know, hi, nice to see you.
You know, what's going on?
Everything's fine.
And I'm going down the hall.
And I'm going down the hall with harvey and skippy sees me and i said how's cornell doing i said oh my god he's so close to death you know oh i don't know what's
i said all right so my guy wheels me in the room and there's a lot of people there including
cornell's beautiful wife and they're all gathered around him like
it's his deathbed. And I can hear a sound of his voice, the lungs breathing. And I knew there was
something wrong. And I'm looking at the bed, the head was not adjusted correctly. And I know it
because it happened to me. So I said to the person next to the remote there,
straighten out his head.
Oh, no, we can't just lift him up.
Will you a little bit?
They lift him up and you watch.
And all of a sudden he went from,
and he began to breathe normal.
And I said loud, because he was on his back.
His skin was like, like filo dough, all blue and red.
It was hard to imagine.
He had leukemia.
And I'm there, and I look at him, and I yell,
Hey, Cornell, it's me, Metrano.
And all of a sudden, picks up his left hand with his thumb in his leg with pure recognition.
I felt so good because everyone was saying, don't talk.
They were like lying there, standing there, waiting for him to die.
And all of a sudden, I'm having a conversation with this guy.
And it's just, people are afraid.
It's really interesting.
Boy, I'm really morbid tonight.
Oh, and the two people who are hiring you,
well, Tony Thomas with Golden Girls.
Right.
And who's the other one?
Paul Witt.
Paul Witt.
Paul Witt.
Paul Witt's wife wrote all of Soap.
Oh, okay.
All of the Golden Girls.
She's just a genius.
But she turned up in a lot of stuff.
You're in the Larraket show.
You're in Party of Five.
Yeah, right.
You're the Haute Delicata Groove back.
You're working again.
Yeah, yeah.
It was good.
I have a lucky career considering what I've been through,
and I'm enjoying it, you know?
Tell us.
Go ahead, Art.
I was just thinking about, I had told a friend of mine that was going to be on Gilbert's show.
He said, oh, please mention my name because he was on Ralphie Sutton's podcast, and his mother is Leah Sutton.
Leah Sutton, sure.
We know Ralph, and we know Leah.
Right. She said, please say hello to them. Leah Sutton, sure. We know Ralph and we know Leah. Right.
She said, please say hello to them.
I said, I will.
Anything you want me to mention?
She said, no, just tell them I love Gilbert.
And there we are.
We all do.
Tell us about Robert Mitchum
since your wife just shouted his name out.
You made Matilda,
the movie about a boxing kangaroo,
which I think has come up on the show
with your friend your friend elliot gould right but prior to that making that movie with mitchum
i had known this guy named george fargo who was very friendly with clint and uh and bob mitchum
and i was into making a building old 35 36 for Ford hatchback, you know, three window coupes.
And I was getting a lot of good information from George Fargo.
And he also had this great pot.
And so we became real friendly.
And I used to go to his house.
And it was really he would adopt all these sick cats.
And he would feed them and care for them.
And so the place had a certain stench to it.
And I would go in there and he'd be rolling joints and he'd be writing scripts.
And one day all of a sudden Clint Eastwood walks in.
Hi, how are you doing?
Fargo, hi.
And we'd all be sitting around smoking pot.
And there was Clint Eastwood. At that time he was not a big star, but he had that little Western rawhide. Oh, Fargo High. And we'd all sit around smoking pot. I'm there with Clint Eastwood.
At that time, he was not a big star, but he had that little Western,
Raw High at Universal.
And then Robert Mission would come in often, and he never called him Robert.
He always called him the goose.
I said, George, why do you call him the goose?
He says, watch how he walks.
And sure enough, I used to watch him.
You see, he would go from left to right every time he'd take a step like a goose.
And we became sort of friendly because, you know, we liked certain things.
And one night I was at my house on Doheny.
No, I was up at, what street was that?
Sunset Plaza.
And I had a nice little pad up there.
And I got a call from Fargo saying,
Mitchum is looking for some smoke.
Do you have anything?
I said, sure.
Send him to my house.
So he said, he'll be there in like 30 minutes.
I said, cool.
So I didn't tell my wife at the time that he was coming over.
And we were sitting there just, you know, drinking some wine, smoking a joint.
And the doorbell rings.
I said, Becky, do me a favor.
Go get the doorbell.
And, you know, we lived on a slope.
So there was one door that you had to buzz in from the top where you would park your car in a circular driveway.
And when that would open up, you'd have to walk down a bunch of steps down a ramp to
another door that's slid open so my wife buses uh mitchum in and he comes walking down she slides
open the door and sees robert mitchum and she fucking screams so loud she couldn't believe
she just fucking freaked she remembered that movie where he had
painted tattoos help and hate the night of the hunter night of the hunter and finally mitchum
came down and we smoked and we talked and he told me great stories about his getting arrested with
marijuana and going to jail and He was famous for that.
Oh, man.
It was just something.
He was, when we went on location, we started off in L.A.
And then every lunch in L.A., his two assistants would bring lunch for all the actors.
Never paid a dime.
Then we'd go to Reno, and it was just me and him.
We'd hang out.
And again, he would never let me pick up at the age.
He was really a movie star that was the most generous guy in the world.
And that's where also Elliot was hanging out.
And we just, what a time.
I mean, there's a, you know, you get lucky in your life when you work with movie stars that you really admire and want so easily.
Well, there's another pinch-me moment for you
because you got to work with a Bowery boy,
but now you're the kid from Brooklyn
and you're working with Robert Mitchum.
It was incredible.
And of course, Elliot is one of my dearest friends
going back from our early days as kids
when I used to go up to the Catskills
and there was a kid there named Elliot Gould,
very tall, very thin, tap dancing on the stage i said oh i know that guy
from bensonhurst and we began to talk and sure enough his mother pushed him into this business
and he was a great tap dancer we will return to gilbert gottfried's amazing colossal podcast Godfrey's Amazing Colossal Podcast after this.
We just want to throw some names out at you, Art.
Like Dean Martin.
Oh, boy.
Dean Martin was the smoothest man I've ever met.
And I love the way he would tuck his handkerchief in his pocket up there.
And he was so sweet to everybody.
And he was just, you know, if I was going to become gay i want to be gay with dean martin i love that and and i and i ended up dating dean's
martin dina martin for a long time oh you dated dean's daughter that's right yes in the book
yeah how about another name we can throw at you, Raymond Burr?
Because you did a bunch of episodes of Ironside,
and then you and Jessica spun off into Amy Prentiss.
Exactly.
But Raymond Burr was a strange guy because you never got to see him.
He did all his work without any other guest actor in a single all the time,
and he read it off a chart.
I remember one day I went in. but he never worked with the actor.
He did all his stuff and knew how to get up with some contract player
who would read his lines, and then you'd act that way when he was in the scene.
Wow.
He had the cushiest job because I heard the whole reason they wrote in a wheelchair
was because he didn't want to stand.
He wanted to sit.
So they made it a character in a wheelchair.
Right.
He got very heavy.
He was on the critical list at Jenny Craig.
And giant cue cards.
And, yeah, that was a cushy job for him.
He seemed like a strange character.
And made a lot of money.
He was, but you know, the best part, I really admired him in that real window.
Oh, yes.
James Stewart.
Yes.
Playing the killer.
Yeah.
Oh, and Gig Young.
Oh, you did the, they shoot horses, don't they?
They'd shoot horses.
I met most of them.
I have so many friends from that show
that stayed with me from the time i did it including the appreciation i got from sydney
pollack who directed the movie and uh oh boy that was some movie to watch because it was uh
you were a young actor i didn't well i not only that i didn't know much about making movies, but when I heard, when I got the script,
this was the first movie that started on page one
and went to the end of the book, the end of the screenplay.
You didn't do all your set pieces in one place
and then go to another place.
You did it from the beginning to the middle to the end.
It never varied.
It was... And to be on that set
for... I was on that set 10 weeks
and I was wearing Jack
Carson's clothes. Jack Carson.
Wow. That's cool.
Jack Carson, yes.
And what was Gig Young
like? Do you have any dealings with him?
I did, but I
felt bad for him because i really admired him
as an actor because i used to see him in so many movies and then you know he was just uh he couldn't
deal with his alcohol yeah he had a lot of problems with that oh my god the poor guy was
always wasted but wow and he won an academy award yes yes. Yes, he did. Oh, and Lenny Bruce.
Lenny Bruce was the first guy to show me how to roll a joint with one hand.
That's good.
And when I was in the hospital and I broke my neck,
Sally Marr, his mother, along with some Italian guy who ran the Pomodoro restaurant across the street from Cedars,
came almost every day and brought me my lunch from the Pomodoro restaurant. Oh, that's lovely.
Sally Marr was just fabulous. One of the great bras of all time.
How about James Garner? You made a movie called They Only Kill Their Masters.
How about James Garner?
You made a movie called They Only Kill Their Masters.
Yeah, I love James.
James and I, I met, actually, I had met James way before I did that movie.
I met him at Elliot Gould's house.
And Elliot always had some great people over, like James Garner, like Harry Nilsson.
Wow, you hung with Harry Nilsson.
Oh, yeah.
What a character he was.
Also, he had his drinking problem. Demons, yes. What a character he was. Also, he has drinking problems.
Demons, yes.
What a talent.
How about your pal?
I'm trying to get rid of my cat.
We see the cat.
We're looking at art on Skype here.
What about your pal, John Cassavetes?
Now, there's a beautiful story.
So I quit playing football in my third year.
I come back to New York.
I pick up a magazine called Backstage.
They're auditioning for the Cassavetes Lane Theater Workshop on 46th Street.
I go over there.
A lot of actors are auditioning.
I'm finally called and I get on
stage and the only thing I
know is a piece of prose
by Walter Benton called
This Is My Beloved. It was a piece that
I, anytime I wanted
to get laid, I would just
recite this poem.
And, you know, it was
pussy galore with that poem.
It was one of the best.
And here I am, 5'11", 250 pounds,
on the stage doing this very, I don't know,
not a piece you would expect to come from a big guy
that looked like me at the time.
I mean, my neck was 22 inches.
So when I took a shower, my ass never got wet.
But
so sick.
Anyway, I do this piece
and Burt Lane gets up and says,
that was really good.
Cassavetes says,
are you gay?
I said, no, John.
That piece was
pretty good.
So they gave me a scholarship, and I studied there,
and I did a bunch of plays.
And a woman there named Colleen Farrington that everyone had a heart on for
eventually married Burt Lane.
And eventually I did a play with her called Desire Under the Elms.
And I did a bunch of plays of the end.
And Burt and Colleen, after they got married, had their first child.
And a lot of the actors who wanted to get some money towards their,
towards the drama school would babysit.
And I babysat a lot.
And that little girl was named Diane.
Diane Lane.
Yep.
I knew where you were going.
How about that?
And you were.
I couldn't.
Sensational actress, too.
You worked with famous gangster star George Raft.
George Raft, he wanted to know about.
Yes, yes.
And by the way, you're breaking up, of you both on screen and in and in voice
oh okay how about now any better yeah much better okay you work with george raft on on
chicago teddy bears right i played the al capone character in that show and uh there wasn't much
to say about ge. He was a
guest star. He did his lines.
Basically, I didn't think he really wanted
to be there. But
the one who played Apple Annie,
what was her name? Do you know?
She was great. On Chicago
Teddy Bears? Yes.
Famous blonde.
Stunning in her youth.
What a great lady.
We'll look it up.
Yeah.
But George just came, read his lines.
We were sitting in one of those fancy cars with Dean,
and he just stuck his head in.
But, you know, when you see these guys in person
and you realize the amount of work they did back
in the 30s.
Oh,
absolutely.
With,
you know,
Edward G and Cagney and,
Oh yeah.
And just everybody.
These guys are making two movies,
two,
three movies a month.
Exactly.
In those days,
television shows.
Yeah.
It was a breakneck pace.
And sometimes I,
I heard like actors would be shooting more than one movie in a day.
Sure.
They'd shoot a scene and then run over to the other set and shoot the other scene and just run back and forth.
Right, exactly.
It was quite amazing, I must tell you, especially working on Warner Brothers,
because that studio did all those movies.
And here they were, and I had my picture, this large picture of myself on the outside wall
on Warner Boulevard with Banner and Hunt.
And I can't think of what's his name.
Dean Jones was a star of that show?
Dean Jones was a big star.
What a sweet guy he was.
Yeah.
It's another guy.
And, you know, it's amazing just to be on that lot,
to drive in, to see in that big water tower
that says Warner Brothers with the label.
Oh, sure.
Oh, it's always fun.
When you drive on a lot, Gil, you still kind of get that rush, don't you?
Yes.
Even today?
I do.
Yeah.
You think of like the ghosts.
Yeah, of course.
Walking around there.
Can I ask you a question from one of our listeners, Art?
This is, we do a little thing called Grill the Guest.
This is from a guy named Frank Salerno, a listener.
And he said, you made a movie, do i have the title of this right trouble at jamaica reef with rosie
greek with rosie greer and darby hinton darby hinton and and uh the famous english actor what
was his name the uh oh he played in Julius Caesar.
Very handsome.
Stephen.
Oh, Stephen Boyd?
Help me, guys.
Not Stephen Boyd.
No, Stephen Boyd, exactly.
Yeah, Stephen Boyd.
Yeah, Stephen Boyd.
And he was in that also.
He wants to know what Rosie Greer was like.
I love Rosie.
Rosie was a big black man
who always trying to...
Still is.
He thought he could
outrun me.
We were on this
waterfront dock
and he said, come on, I'll race you. I said, how far?
He said, 50 yards.
I said, all right.
So the guy counts us off, and I just killed him in the race.
Halfway through it, he pulled his hamstring.
He went down like a fucking whale.
And then they had to put him in an ambulance.
But he was great.
He was my partner in that moving on.
Moving on, yeah.
With Frank Converse.
Remember that show? Oh, yeah.
Claude Akins, right? Claude
Akins, right. Shot up in North
Carolina. And you were in
a black
exploitation movie. With Ed
McMahon. Yeah.
With Ed McMahon.
Yeah, a movie called Slaughter's
Big Ripoff. Yeah, he was a gangster in that, Ed McMahon.
And Jim Brown.
Oh, no, but that was Jim Brown.
What a motherfucker he is.
Jesus Christ.
Was he tough.
He didn't care, but, you know, he admired, you know,
we became very friendly.
And we, you know, I know he's one of the greatest athletes
that ever played any
sure and i get invited up to a little basketball game uh me and elliot and uh jim and another guy
and we're up there we're just rapping uh for a long time and then jim says come on let's shoot
some hoops so we went up there and of course ell Elliot's a good shooter. I'm a fairly decent player.
Jim is good, but Jim's partner's not so good,
and we're really beating them.
And finally, I say to Elliot,
are you sure we want to win this game?
And Elliot's just, no.
I say, he thought Jim would respect us if we actually beat him,
and we did beat him.
Nice. But it was a bit scary up there.
And before I—
Those were the days when he was throwing women off the balconies.
Oh, my gosh.
Yeah, he had a reputation.
Now, before I forget, and not like I was going to forget,
the most important part is when a guest is a fan of mine.
Oh, yeah, big time.
I tell you, your sense of humor.
I mean, one of the first jokes that I really love, and I'm not sure what, I know it's about
chopped liver and pate.
Oh, yes.
I don't think I know this one.
Let me hear.
Oh, that's
I went into a delicatessen
I said I'm looking for a meat pate
that you could spread on crackers
and serve at parties
and just then a container of chopped liver
looked up at me and said
so what am I
Robert Redford
what a fucking stupid joke What am I, Robert Redford?
What a fucking stupid joke.
That is so funny.
Oh, my God.
Is that funny or what?
He's always been a surrealist.
What was your joke?
You've been saving a joke for us.
Well, first I want to tell you about Nicky Arnold because he's been on my mind.
Oh, God.
That's okay.
So, yeah, but it's for me.
Well, we'll wait if you want to answer it.
No, no, no. So, Nicky Arnold had terrible cerebral palsy.
And he was always trying to work out his comedy routine at Bud Friedman's Improv on Broadway
and actually 8th Avenue in the 40s.
Yeah.
And there were a lot of comics up there always going out doing material.
And a lot of Broadway stars, after they finished their show, would show up 11, 30, 12 o'clock.
And so it was a very hip Broadway show of an audience.
And one night, Joey Bishop was in the audience,
and Nicky was on the show,
and he was doing his cerebral palsy jokes.
And he had, you know, he thought,
I want to go join the army.
And the guy, the sergeant said, no.
And he stamped my book, 8F.
I said, 8F?
So how come I'm not 4F?
He said, in your condition, you're 8F.
He said, before they would take me in the army,
the enemy would have to be on the Triborough Bridge.
So that night, he kills with his humor.
And Joey Bishop says, here's a $500 check.
Write me something.
About a month goes by, and Nicky says, I got a call from Joey Bishop.
I said, what happened?
Joey said, I gave him $500, and you sent me one joke.
I wanted to do a little more time.
And Nicky said, well, Joey, that joke takes me three and a half minutes.
Did you ever hear of this guy, Gil Nicky Arnold?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, they used to talk about him at the improv all the time.
Oh, he produced the Welcome Back Carter show.
Yeah.
Oh, really?
Same guy.
Oh, yeah.
In fact, I heard a story.
I forget who he was standing with, Nicky Arnold.
And they were standing outside the improv which was the worst
area in the world and and these two big black guys uh go up to them and they go give us your money
and and nicky arnold turns to the guys with and goes, I think we could take them.
That's great.
Speaking of Joey Bishop, Art, did you do a play with Joey Bishop where you played Fatty Arbuckle?
I played Fatty Arbuckle in a fatty suit.
Joey Bishop was the worst motherfucker to ever work with.
Wow.
He just wanted to up work with. Wow!
He just wanted to upstage you.
He was just not a mean.
He had a nice bone in his body. He was just
fuck him where he breathes.
I couldn't...
He was just...
That's a beautiful wrap up.
You are not the first person on this
show who's told us that.
We haven't heard any kind words about Joey
Bishop. Lots of kind
words about Jack Benny though.
Jack Benny was great. I first
met him when he was standing in line
with Deep Throat waiting to go
into the Pussycat Theater on Santa Monica
Boulevard.
Incredible.
I stopped and said, excuse me, I don't want to bother you Jack Benny
he goes shh don't tell anybody
he was there to see the deep throat
it was wonderful
so did
did you guys hear about
David Copperfield recently when he got
married no
oh yeah on his honeymoon
he fucked his wife in half.
Is that the joke you were saving?
No, this joke I'm saving is a very nice story about this young girl named Gloria and her boyfriend Brian are dating a year.
And they haven't had sex, but they've had a relationship that she couldn't get over. She
was treated like a queen. He like a king. He pulled out a chair for her. He opened doors.
He bought her flowers. He wrote the most beautiful poetry. They were madly in love,
but she was afraid to have sex. And she called her mother and says, Ma, I don't know what to do.
I love this man so much.
He does so much for me. But I'm afraid to have sex because my pussy is so big.
She says, Gloria, you come from a family of big pussies. I have a very big pussy. Your Aunt Matilda has the biggest pussy. I mean, don't worry about it. We all had children. We all
had sex. Don't be afraid.
Tomorrow, when you get up, go to the butcher.
Pick up about a pound, pound and a half of liver.
And when you're about to have sex, just put it up your vagina.
Well, the next morning, she picks up this liver from the butcher.
She goes out on a date.
They go to a beautiful five-star restaurant.
They're drinking wine.
They're eating food.
He takes out from his chest pocket a jewelry box, opens it up.
It's a gorgeous necklace.
He puts it on.
Oh, my God.
I love you so much, she says.
And I love you, Gloria.
Come on.
Let's go back to my apartment, she says.
And they go back to her apartment, she says. And they go back to her
apartment and they start drinking a little more, smoking another joint. Before you know it,
they're kissing and she walks them into the bedroom. They rip each other's clothes off and
they start to fuck. And they're fucking like crazy. And finally, he falls asleep right on.
About two, three in the morning, he realizes he's got to get to work.
He gets up, takes a piece of paper, and writes her a note and goes to work.
She wakes up the morning, sees the note, and it says,
Dear Gloria, with my love for you, it's gone beyond anything I could imagine.
You are everything I want in a woman.
I can't wait to marry you and have your children. I love you more than life itself.
Please feel the same way about me. P.S. I love you. P.S.S. Gloria, I left your cunt in the sink.
Big finish, Art. Big finish.
Well, I don't think we're going to top that one.
So, if you could tell us, what are you working on now?
Yeah, you're doing the show again, right?
Well, I'm rewriting from the outline of my play with a young woman named Renee Rocco,
and we're writing my memoir.
And so far, I've gotten very good reaction.
I'm still in the hunt for an agent uh to read what I've written
so far I've got about almost 100 pages I believe the book will probably run 220 maybe a little less
it's really I'm getting such great reviews from so many people good and your other book is your
other book is still available on Amazon yes it is one's going to kill, I'm telling you.
I wrote it when I started writing
it, I realized
when I sent it to Jessica Walter's
brother, Richard Walter. Yeah,
professor. Professor
at UCLA Screenwriting.
Love my one-man show.
And I said to him, you know, Richard,
I have this thing I'm writing and
this screenplay about my life and all that, you know, Richard, I have this thing I'm writing and this screenplay about my life and all that.
You know, for a guy like Seth Rogen or Mark Ruffalo
or one of those good actors can play, he said, wow,
that's very strong material, but be smart.
He said, I saw Warner Brothers' screenplay five years ago.
They paid me $200,000, and then they gave it
back to me. I realized they're not buying spec scripts, but I advise you to write it as a memoir,
an autobiography, and then we'll get it published. I said, really? He said, yeah, that's what they're
buying. He says, let me tell
you what I did with mine. When I got my screenplay back, I wrote a book and it was all about the
screenplay. It got published. Warner Brothers read it and they bought my book. Two or three months
later, they said, can you write a screenplay about this book? He said, well, give me about three to
five months and I'll get you one. And three to
five months later, he came back. The script
he wrote five years before.
Hello? Anybody home?
Give me a break. It's amazing.
Yeah. And you're doing
a lot of charity
work for people
with crippling injuries.
Spinal cord injury.
I raved close to 300,000.
Good for you.
First one I...
Yeah.
You're doing good work, Art.
Keep it up.
Thank you, guys.
I appreciate it.
You're a survivor and a raconteur,
and this was fun for us.
And a partridge in the pantry.
Your name's come up 100 times on the show.
We're glad we got you.
You've got a few businesses, right?
Yes.
Right now it's called Yogurt Your Way.
It's on Las Olas Boulevard in Fort Lauderdale.
It's a self-serve frozen yogurt.
I've had it for six and a half years.
Very successful.
I'm very happy.
My wife does most of the work and I sit home and I jerk off.
Is everybody home?
Art, God bless you.
Okay, thank you, Art
Matrano. Thank you, guys.
The amazing Matrano.
Art, you're the best.
I'll leave you with this.
Thank you, guys. Thank you, guys.
Thank you, Art.
We love you.
Bye-bye.
Bye-bye. Sugar candy I get so done I get so blue
When your handy
It's fine and dandy
Fine and dandy
Sugar candy
When your handy
It's so fine and dandy
But when you're gone
What can I do? The Russell Podcast is produced by Dara Gottfried and Frank Santapadre, with audio production by Frank Verderosa.
Web and social media is handled by Mike McPadden, Greg Pair, and John Bradley-Seals.
Special audio contributions by John Beach.
Special thanks to Paul Rayburn, John Murray, and John Fodiovis.
Especially Sam Giovanko and Daniel Farrell for their assistance.