Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - GGACP Classic: Barbara Feldon
Episode Date: March 14, 2024GGACP celebrates the birthday of “Agent 99” herself, the funny and charming Barbara Feldon (b. March 12) by revisiting this interview from way back in 2014. In this episode, Barbara shares warm me...mories of “Get Smart” co-stars Don Adams, Ed Platt and Bernie Kopell and offers her take on the Steve Carell-Anne Hathaway feature film version. Also, Barbara reminisces about working with everyone from Dean Martin to Bruce Dern and reveals how she managed to win $64,000 on a quiz show. PLUS: Gilbert channels John McGiver! A live rendition of the “99” song! Barbara auditions to be a stripper! And the worst TV movie ever made! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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TV comics, movie stars, hit singles and some toys.
Trivia and dirty jokes, an evening with the boys.
Once is never good enough for something so fantastic.
So here's another Gilbert and Franks.
Here's another Gilbert and Franks.
Here's another Gilbert and Franks. Here's another Gilbert and Franks. Here's another Gilbert and Franks.
Colossal Classic.
Hi, this is Gilbert Gottfried, and this is Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast. You know, when I was a kid, one of my favorite TV shows was a takeoff on all the James Bond movies.
It was called Get Smart, and it was created by Mel Brooks and Buck Henry.
And today, wouldn't you believe, my co-host Frank Santopadre and I visited still sexier than any Bond girl,
ladies and gentlemen, Agent 99 herself, Barbara Felden.
Oh, Max.
Max.
Boy, that still gives me a chill up my spine.
Yeah, that still does it for me.
Oh, how about, look out, Max!
Flashbacks.
Yeah, right.
That was probably, those were the two things that I...
Now, how many O-Maxes were there?
There was the scared O-Max, the seductive O-Max.
There were probably about 4,327 O-Maxes.
Can you show?
Mostly the O-Max was, it was half between affection and like embarrassment.
Oh.
and embarrassment.
Oh, nice.
Now, if you remember,
the first time we met... I do.
How could I forget?
Oh, my God.
Buddy said...
We have a mutual friend, Buddy.
And Buddy said,
I want you to meet Gilly.
He's very, very fond of you.
Yes.
And so...
Don't act surprised.
We went to Beth Israel Hospital
to the intensive care unit,
and there you were.
That's where I meet all my dates.
Yes.
It was auspicious.
You were splayed in the intensive care and not looking too good.
No.
What did I look like there?
Because I couldn't see myself.
Honest to God, you looked, I mean, first of all, you looked very young.
But you were very young.
This was about 19, no, yeah, 1992, I think.
Right?
Oh, I think, yes, yes, yes. Because it was right around the time when Aladdin was coming out. think, right? Oh, I think yes, yes, yes,
because it was right around the time when Aladdin was coming out.
Oh, really?
Yes, yes.
Oh, okay.
I had a burst appendix.
Yeah, yeah.
And then there were complications?
Yeah, yeah, there was peritonitis.
Oh, my God.
Yeah.
And you were really out of it. You had this faraway look in your eye, and I thought, oh, my God, is. And you were really out of it.
You had this faraway look in your eye, and I thought, oh, my God, is he going to make it?
And you were adorable.
You were like in your 30s, I think.
Oh, yeah.
You just looked like a boy who was in big trouble.
I liked you immediately.
Not because you were in trouble.
I mean, I don't go looking for that.
It's not some perverted thing that you're into dying guys.
No, I haunt the hospital.
It's not some kind of sick stuff we're finding out about Barbara Feldenkrais.
No, hanging out in the intensive care unit just in case some attractive young thing would be in real trouble.
Because I remember I was there in intensive care and it was like dark in there.
And there's all these machines pumping.
And I was attached with a thousand wires to me.
And I was attached with a thousand wires to me.
And I was on a million drugs.
And I was like fading in and out of consciousness.
And everything was in a dream state. Like people walking around looked blurry.
And I could just vaguely hear voices.
And I felt horrible.
And then out of the darkness, I see Agent 99.
Did you think you were hallucinating?
Yeah, yeah.
I thought, if I survive this, I want to know what drugs they have me on,
because I want to continue these.
Well, you took one today.
Here I am.
Oh, yes.
Well, you took one today.
Here I am.
Oh, yes. Yes.
Now, tell us about how you...
Well, you actually, and I remember these commercials,
before Get Smart,
you were the girl rolling around on the tiger skin rug.
You're right.
A crooning to all you tigers.
To use top brass and sic'em.
Yes.
It was a very easy job, as you can imagine.
Yeah, no, I still remember that,
because that, to me, was porn.
That was porn back then.
Yeah, in those days, yeah.
It was very sort of tongue-in-cheek,
but yeah, it was definitely a come-on.
It was a dandruff shampoo, wasn't it? Top brass?
See that?
Nobody knew what the product was.
Top brass.
They thought it was me.
Yeah, it was top brass hairdressing for men.
I should tell our listeners, I think you can find that commercial online on YouTube. It's still out there. Yeah. And that was the thing that they got to,
Buck Henry supposedly saw it and decided that, was it Buck Henry that decided you were the person?
No, actually that commercial in truth ran for two years and nobody, first of all, they didn't think
it was me delivering it. They thought I was a
model and they'd had an actor kind of say the words so I would look believable. But in two years
of it running constantly, nobody thought I would be capable of acting in anything. So that was not what led to Get Smart.
I mean, what led to Get Smart was an interesting story
because it was right time, right place.
But that was two years after.
Now say the two guys who created Get Smart.
Well, Buck Henry and Mel Brooks.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
They were just, it was brilliant.
I mean, it was,
that kind of talent comes out,
you know,
maybe once in a generation
or a few times in a generation.
And it was just at the right time.
It was,
well, Dan Melnick,
who was with Talent Associates,
the producer,
had the idea to do an extreme version of James Bond
and take it as far as you could into a comic strip.
And then they hired Mel and Buck to write it.
And when they...
It was the right time, the right place.
It was the right time in history.
It was... Everything was
spy something at that time.
Yeah, because there was
James Bond. There was
Man From U.N.C.L.E.
It followed Man From U.N.C.L.E.
Our Man Flint. And Matt Helm.
Oh, yeah. Matt Helm.
There were already Bond parodies floating around.
And so it just took it to the furthest step.
Do I have more bad information,
or were they trying to find some kind of combination of Bond and the Panther films?
Because that's what I read online.
Oh, that could be.
I don't know everything.
I know very little.
But I may be full of disinformation
as far as I know.
Well, that wraps up our interview today.
There we go.
Yes, you've gone totally senile.
That may be true.
Now, I remember hearing an interview
that
Don Adams,
they said you're going to have
a sexy sidekick named Agent 99.
Yeah.
And they showed him a bunch of photos,
and when it got to you, he said something like,
well, you're kidding, aren't you?
You know, like this was, why is there even a competition?
Oh, I didn't know that story, but I'm happy to hear it, because the
story that Don always told me...
Uh-oh. More
misinformation.
They hired me because Talent Associates
had done another
series called Mr. Broadway.
With Craig Stevens.
Craig Stevens, who is
6'4", and
I played an industrial spy, a kind of sexy industrial spy.
So when they got the script for Get Smart and they read the 99 character,
they said, that's the character.
That's her.
So they offered me the role.
And Don did not know who I was.
And they showed me, they showed him the episode of Mr. Broadway,
and he said he was walking out of the room watching enough of it. He saw enough of it and
said, oh my god, she's the one, this is just perfect, and as he got to the door, he turned around
just as Craig Stevens got up, and I was standing, and we were the same height.
I mean, I'm not 6'4", but...
And he went, wait a minute.
So we had a long history of my working in stocking feet
and having little holes dug for me in the sand to stand in.
And I've always said that I'm the only actress in Hollywood
who had calluses on her ankles.
Now, you said you were like your back was hurting doing those
because you had to scrunch down.
Slumping, yeah.
No, I would slouch.
I hate to watch those early ones
because all I'm doing is trying to look short.
Forget the acting.
Just make me look short.
And yeah, I would slouch,
and then I would stick my hip out,
and then I would turn my foot over,
and then I could look up at him.
And you said, too, that there are certain, if you watch any episode, there are your height changes.
Yeah.
We walk in with shoes on me.
Yes.
And do the close-ups in bare feet, in my bare feet.
How tall were you and how tall was Don?
I was 5'9".
He said he was 5'9".
I see.
Now, what about all the guest stars you had on that show?
Oh, they were fabulous.
I mean, all of the comedians, because they were all pals of his.
And I rarely worked with any of them,
because those were scenes that he did with them.
And that was always a big treat on the set.
Rickles, Johnny Carson, Larry Storch.
Everybody came over there.
And a very young James Caan.
That's right.
As the prince.
That's right.
Yes, yes.
Don loved to do those takeoffs on movies.
Yeah, I remember there were, he used to, he did one, or more than one, where he would do a Ronald Coleman imitation.
Oh, yeah.
And then others, one where it was a whole takeoff on the treasure of Sierra Madre.
Sure.
He was doing his Bogart.
Yeah, yeah.
And Earl Flynn.
Oh, yes, yes.
And then there was one where, because this was another hit show at the same time,
they did a whole takeoff on The Fugitive.
Oh, yeah?
Yeah.
Where they said, you know, and they had an announcer at the beginning go,
and now Maxwell Smart is a fugitive.
Well, he was a great mimic.
He did a wonderful Ronald Coleman.
Yes.
And they did a parody of The List of Adrian Messenger.
Do you remember that movie?
Oh, yes.
I love that movie.
The film where everybody is in makeup, with Sinatra and all the people are in makeup.
I mean, it was very sophisticated writing.
My favorite episode was the one, and it's one of the few episodes I really remember very clearly,
is the one where we both play Charlie Chaplins.
So we're in mustaches and the whole thing, and it's when Max finally proposes to Agent 99 in her mustache.
That was fun.
Is it true that the series was originally written for Tom Poston and wound up with Don because it went to another network?
Yeah.
I mean, I don't know why that happened, but I do know that...
My understanding, it was his ABC, and Tom Poston was under contract, and when it went to NBC, they had Don under contract.
And that's how...
And now you can't imagine anyone else having done that role.
He was a joy to work with.
It was his energy.
It was like adrenaline.
It was like having 16 cups of coffee the minute they said action
because you just hook into that energy.
You don't even have to do anything.
You just lift it off.
And I heard, too, he said that his whole character, energy. You don't even have to do anything. You just lift it off.
And I heard, too, he said that
his whole character
of Maxwell
Smart was like
an imitation of William Powell.
Yeah. Like an exaggerated
type. Because he had that kind
of way of talking.
And it was a totally exaggerated
caricature. Yeah. No, no question. And it was a totally exaggerated caricature.
Yeah, no, no question.
But he had done that character as Sammy Glick.
Oh, Byron Glick.
Byron Glick.
And was he on the Bill Dana show?
Yeah, he was the hotel detective.
Yes, yes.
So Maxwell Smart was really an extension of that character.
He was doing that voice.
Yeah, he was.
Because I remember the Bill Dana show.
Yeah.
Bill Dana was on our show, too.
Oh, yeah.
In fact, the only episode that Don was not in, as far as I know, Bill Dana played the
role that Don would have played in that with me.
Oh, wow.
It was kind of neat.
Eskimo suits in the middle of summer.
It was great.
He glued everything.
Now, I think you said,
and he was also terrific on the show.
Oh, he was fabulous.
Yes.
But Ed Platt.
Oh, Ed.
Ed Platt, who was the chief.
Oh, he was a marvel.
You know, it's interesting that,
although Ed wasn't out front as starring in the show, his anchoring of everything in reality, because he was such an honest actor and he brought such gravitas to it, and yet he had the comedy timing as well, He was invaluable.
Invaluable to the show.
He's a great straight man.
That's what people forget about.
I think so many straight men are like that.
They're ignored.
Ed Platt was great at that.
And they're reactors a lot.
They feed and then they react.
And to be able to play off someone who's as clownish as Don Adams was on that.
Yeah.
And bring it down to reality.
Yeah.
But you said that he was, it would drive him crazy.
Like the kind of comedy on there, like I guess maybe maybe don would ad lib or fool around on the set
drive ed crazy yes oh ed had the worst dialogue to say all of these you know the supersonic
you know and he had to just spill it out and Don would make bets
that he wouldn't be able to get through it
and of course Ed was a nervous wreck
any actor is because the last thing you want to do
is to hold up production because that's what it's all about
is getting it done fast, forget the acting
get the words out and let's move on.
And Ed would have these long, complicated, technical things to wrap his tongue around.
And then Don would say, okay, bet's going out.
And of course, Ed would get flustered.
And it was a little would, he would get flustered. And it was, it was a little mean.
But yeah.
Now, Don Adams at that point too, he got very famous.
And that was a major hit show.
And I think he then came down with like a textbook midlife crisis. Oh yeah. Yes. You know,
Don wrote an autobiography that I believe his daughter was going to have published. I read it.
He sent it to me a number of years ago and I was so impressed with the writing. It was so beautifully written.
He was really a good writer, not just a good comedy writer.
In it, he talks about that.
I feel that I can say what I read there.
He wanted to publish it.
Yeah, that he kind of hit 50 and put on bell-bottom jeans and leather jacket and began writing poetry and went off with Lady.
And yeah, it was complicated.
I remember you said in an interview that he went to Europe with his wife trying to get their marriage a little back together.
And then in the middle of the trip,
he made up some story to his wife
that, oh, they just called me from L.A.,
I have to shoot a commercial.
And he just flew to another part,
to like Greece or something,
where he flew his girlfriend out.
Oh, I don't remember that.
Yeah.
But it would be in the book, I'm sure.
He had an interesting life.
I mean, things people don't know about him.
He was a drill instructor.
Oh, in the Army?
Yeah, he was a drill instructor in the Army.
He was in the Pacific, and he almost died.
Almost died.
Yeah, from a blackwater fever.
Right, and he says in the book, I don't know if it's an exaggeration, but I would guess from the tone of the book, he's being fairly honest about everything.
He said they put him over where the dying people were because they were just going to leave him alone because they were sure that he was gone.
And he survived, obviously. Yeah.
We will return to Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal podcast after this.
Now, I have to hit this part of the story.
When you were a young, struggling actress slash model,
you applied for a very odd job.
Yes. I grew up in a family that my father was very determined
that I would become an independent young woman.
And I was doing fine for about a year in New York
and then suddenly I couldn't even get a temp job.
I don't know why and I needed $33.
So I called my dad and he said,
you know, I think it's time you grow up
and figure a way to support yourself
and actually I thank him for that now.
But the next day I looked in backstage,
which are backstage, right?
Yes, still around.
And there was an ad for a stripper.
And I thought, well, I can dance.
So I showed up. It was someplace way over on 11th Avenue or something in the 40s,
seedy area. And I got all dressed up. I had a blue A-line dress on and high heels. And it had
a white Peter Pan collar and a little red tie
that streamers went all the way down the front
and I wore a little hat
and I wore white gloves
and I
found the address
and it was like an old
tacky, the backstage
of this place, this stage door
and it was like an old garage or something it was
just all grimy and there were two guys standing by the stage door and one was very short and he
had a stubby little cigar in his mouth and the other looked pretty much the same. And so I thought, okay.
So I walked up, and I had backstage with me,
and I had it all outlined.
And I showed them the ad, and I said,
I've come to apply for this job.
And the guy looked at me. He looked from my shoes to my hat,
and he said, get out of here.
Probably thought you were working undercover to bust a place or something.
What kind of hat?
Oh, probably at that time it was a little clip-on thing with a little veil probably just over the eyes.
Maybe you were a tad overdressed.
I think so.
Like you were dressed for...
A secretarial position for sure.
Like you were going to tell them how many words you could type.
When were you a contestant on the $64,000 question, Barbara?
When did this happen?
That happened in the late 50s and I was working
as a showgirl. See, I did have some
experience. Do you have a
pole in this apartment?
Yes, it's hidden in the
closet, but I take it out secretly.
We should say that we're in Barbara's
beautiful townhouse.
So,
what was the question? About the
$64,000 question, which I don't think a lot of people know about you.
I was working as a showgirl in revival of the Ziegfeld Follies.
And one day they gave us a test to see, just a PR thing, you know, to see if a girl, a showgirl can have, wear feathers and have a brain.
And they asked us the stupidest questions
like, which is smarter,
a mouse or a chicken? And we were all
cheating there about
copying from each other.
Which do you think? And then it was
published in the New York Times Magazine section
with our leggy photographs.
And somehow, it was decided that I got
a hundred percent which did not make me popular in the dressing room and I and and before you knew
it the $64,000 question had called and said we'd like her to come in. And so I just brushed it off.
I mean, I knew I wasn't an expert on anything,
and I wouldn't do it.
But I had recently met someone who I fell in love with,
and he said, but you've got to do it.
You have to.
I mean, it's good publicity.
You're an actor.
Do it.
And so I thought, okay, well, I'll go talk to them.
And before I went in, I thought, you know, one thing I could do probably,
because I always had these kind of projects of, like,
going all the way through James Joyce's Ulysses,
page by page over a period of 18 years or something.
And at that time, I was reading
King Lear, and I thought, I'm going to read straight through all of Shakespeare,
which I didn't do and still haven't done. And so I thought, if I got a complete works of
William Shakespeare, I could probably memorize enough useless information that maybe I could
get through one of the first rounds or something.
So I went in and I said, you know, if you give me three months to study, I'll just cram all this
trivia. And they said, that was a really neat idea. And they would give me a test and then
they'd see. I mean, make sure that I didn't just totally embarrass everyone and so that's what happened and then i went on the show and i yeah eventually won it
how much did you win 64 000 wow wow on the subject of shakespeare yeah and this was in the show when
the show was very popular yes at that time yes, before I forget, and this goes back to something we was talking about before
with Don Adams' height,
just for people in the audience,
when we were setting up at Barbara's table
and I was sitting down in the chair,
Barbara gave me a cushion.
Extra cushion. Yes, an extra cushion on the seat as a cushion. Extra cushion.
An extra cushion on the seat as a booster seat so she could see me over the table.
I feel like Billy Barney.
Billy Barney, who was on Get Smart, by the way.
It was a very high table, though.
In all fairness, it's an extremely high table.
It is.
Now, what was I?
Oh, you, when you were on Get Smart and around and afterwards, it was like the height of variety shows.
Yeah.
And you did every one of them.
Yeah, I did a lot of them.
That was the most fun of anything I've ever done in my life.
Because you rehearse three days, and you get to do silly sketch comedy.
And then you go on, and you have fun, and it's over.
I remember you on Laugh-In in those days.
Yeah, yeah.
I did the first five Laugh-Ins.
With George Slaughter. Yep.
Was that fun? Oh, it was wonderful.
Yeah, I loved it. So it was you
and Goldie and Lily Tomlin and
Artie Johnson. Yeah, the whole first wave.
Yeah, yeah. What other variety
shows did you do back then? Oh, gosh.
I did Dean Martin several
times. Now, you worked with both
Martin and Lewis, because you did Jerry Lewis.
Yeah, a special, a Jerry Lewis special.
Who was on then?
Yeah, I did all of them.
The Smothers Brothers.
Oh, Carol Burnett was on then.
Carol Burnett and Cesar did a special.
And, oh, gosh, Glenn Campbell.
Wow.
Well, there are a lot of those summer replacement series.
They used to do those summer variety series, the short runs.
Marty Feldman.
Sure.
I did that series.
I remember that show.
Do you remember any of them in particular to work with?
particular to work with? I mean, Dean Martin was just a dear experience, because you didn't rehearse with him. You rehearsed with a surrogate, and then he just came on and sat down just before
you were going to shoot it. You didn't even do a dress rehearsal with him. And then he came in and he read cue
cards. And I don't know if he'd ever read them before or not. And then your chore, it was hardly
a chore, your pleasure, was just to come on and try to break him up or, you just have fun he was just like this doll that you were just going to play
with and uh and i loved that and he he had even though i never had a conversation with him there
was a spirit he had there was such a sweetness about him and such a warmth and i just remember
that i remember how lovely it felt to be out there with him.
And you're not aware of the camera at all.
It's just you and him.
And just having fun.
What did you do?
Did you do sketches?
Or did you do a little singing?
Sketches.
And yeah, I sang and did a little dance numbers.
Yeah, I remember with Dean Martin,
it was always like the charm of the show.
Well, he always pretended he was drunk
out of his skull.
And the charm of that show is that
he didn't know,
like, you could see he was reading.
He made no...
And that was the fun of it.
Yeah, you're right.
Oh, he was a dear.
Now, on the opposite end,
now Jerry Lewis you worked with. Yeah. I just did a dear. Yeah. Now, on the opposite end, now Jerry Lewis you worked with.
Yeah.
I just did a sketch with him.
You know, I didn't really have any, you know, interchange with him.
He was, he's kind of a loose cannon in front of the camera.
I remember that.
I remember being nervous before going on because the director came back and said, you know what, you rehearsed with him? And I said, yes. And he said, none of that is going to happen.
Something else will. He didn't tell me what. So it was an adventure.
And what were some of the other shows you did? Oh, wow. You were on The Man From Uncle.
Man From Uncle. And Flipper.
Oh, Flipper. Oh, my God. You did do your
homework.
And 12 O'Clock High.
Flipper, yeah.
With Robert Lansing.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. And Profiles in Courage.
Oh, well.
It's all in the past.
Let's talk about now.
Let's talk about you, Gilly.
You were also in a really interesting dark comedy called Smile.
Oh, that was so nice, yeah.
Michael Ritchie, who had, he did
several films all
on his own. Downhill
Racer. Yeah, The Candidate.
Gilbert and I are fans. Bad News Bears later.
But he made some dark
comedies in the 70s. He did.
He really made social
satire. And there
was the combination, certainly
in Smile, which is about a beauty pageant,
that he actually had been one of the judges of a year before we did the movie in Santa Rosa,
where he shot the movie. And he saw all the possibilities of it. He saw the absurdity of
of it. He saw the absurdity of beauty pageants, but he also saw the kind of
with sort of a nostalgic eye, the
American thing of it.
So he, with another writer, wrote the script and we went up there and
it was quite a sharp satire of these people
in Santa Rosa.
And I was very uncomfortable when we were making it
because I thought we were making fun of them
and they're all excited that we're here,
but they don't realize that they're going to come out looking foolish.
And actually, I was wrong.
They did not look foolish.
It was endearing.
And that's what made him an artist,
because he could work with ambivalence
and work with layers.
And it was a very rounded picture.
And yet, you know, a parody.
And you played a very cold, calculating...
Oh, God, yes.
You were Brenda, the pageant director.
Brenda with the stiff hair.
Right, right.
Wind would blow me away before the hair would move.
And it was so easy to play.
It just scared me how easy it was to be evil.
It just came so naturally i've been holding it back my whole life a very hateful character you know just manipulating
everyone she and very mean to her husband but when i was playing her i was totally on her side i mean
her husband was alcoholic and
kind of, you know, she was annoyed
with him. Now, was your husband Bruce Stern?
No, Bruce Stern was the car dealer.
Bruce Stern was the car dealer.
I can't remember who played my husband.
Our crack research
team here will look it up.
Oh, thank you very much. Nicholas someone, I think.
Oh, Nick, yeah. Nicholas,
what was his name? He was in that, oh, he's a funny character actor.
It'll come to me.
He was a wonderful actor.
We should say that Jerry Belson was that other writer from the Dick Van Dyke show.
Oh, that's right, of course.
And the Odd Couple.
And he wrote a movie that Gilbert and I like called The End, the Burt Reynolds picture.
Oh, yes.
Tom Delouise.
Yeah, you're such a movie buff, though.
Yeah.
Both of you, obviously.
Yeah, you're such a movie buff, though.
Yeah.
Both of you, obviously.
Dara is showing us Nicholas Pryor played Andy, who was the husband.
Nick, please forgive me.
But it was a long time ago. And what was Bruce Dern like to work with?
He was amazing.
Bruce Dern, how do I even describe this?
You've never met him?
No.
He has a gift of words and an ability to put the syntax together in a kind of startling ways
that just keeps you thinking that you're listening to literature when he talks.
And I don't mean in any pretentious way.
It's just a creative way that he had expressing himself.
So what I remember mostly,
I mean, I only had a couple of scenes with him,
what I remember mostly about Bruce,
I liked him tremendously as a person,
was just the enjoyment of hearing him speak and the originality with which he expressed himself. And the other thing
was that I think he was about 42 at that time, I'm not sure exactly, and he was, I think, training for the Senior Olympics, running.
Or maybe, you know, forget that age thing.
I think his pulse was 42 because he'd been running so long.
Literally, it lowers your pulse.
And that he had this very, very low pulse because he was such an assiduous runner.
You know, it's funny because he's funny in that film.
And you don't think of Bruce Dern with comedies.
You think of him in westerns
and the Hitchcock movie, Family Plot,
things like that. He was very funny
and smile. Everybody was.
People get a niche.
The movie was,
I think, a very, very
charming and special
movie.
And you worked with Dick Van Dyke.
Yeah. I love that film.
Fitzwillie. Fitzwillie. Yeah, you want to talk about it a little
bit?
I,
it was
the first movie I did. I remember
I was very nervous in the opening
scene. And
he was very, very cordial
and very, very nice person
to work with.
It was done in a very kind of professional way.
It wasn't like nobody hung out together or anything.
Not that I've ever had that experience
in anything I've done.
But
yeah, it was...
Oh, I know what was really fun.
We were working with Dame Edith
Evans and
we were all so impressed
the first day that she came
on the set, we didn't know
how to address
her.
She's a very famous Shakespearean actress.
Yeah. Oh, God.
We were in awe of her.
We were just doing these comedies
and there was Dame Edith
Evans.
So the director then went to her and said,
how would you like to be addressed?
And she said, oh, she said, just be casual.
Just address me as Dame Edith.
It's a really strange plot, that film.
Gilbert, do you know Fitzwillie?
I haven't seen that in years.
Dick Van Dyke is a butler who's running scams
and schemes
to basically, this woman has no money.
The woman that he's working for, she hasn't really
inherited anything.
And he's pulling off heists so that she
can continue to live in the
style she's accustomed to.
And Barbara plays the secretary who shows up to help her with this very bizarre dictionary for people who can't spell.
Yes, and then tries to blow the whole thing.
It's a real screwball comedy plot.
The kind of thing you'd see in the 40s.
Yes, you're right.
It does have that kind of quality.
And MacGyver was in it.
John MacGyver.
Yes, that's who I was just about to ask you about
because he's one of my favorite character actors.
Chuck MacGyver.
Oh, yeah.
Someone else for listeners to look up now.
Yes.
He's probably most famous for Midnight Cowboy.
Oh, yes. Yes. He's probably most famous for Midnight Cowboy. Oh, yes.
Yes.
Because of these boys, there's a strong back.
That's perfect.
That's great.
There's all these, there's prey.
Pray with me, Joe.
And Norman Fell's in that one, too.
Oh, my God, yes.
Another Gilbert Gottfried favorite.
Yes, another one of my gods.
Yeah.
Because they don't have those great character actors
like they used to.
No, you know, that's true.
Is it because, why is that?
Films are independent films now?
They're not studios putting these people in many films.
Maybe.
Well, it's funny.
Just a few days ago, we interviewed Adam West.
Yeah.
And he said he was in the studio system,
and he loved being in the studio system.
A lot of them complained.
But back then, it was like you had them and you go,
okay, you, you'll be the cop, you'll be the gangster in this scene. And they worked all the
time. Yeah. So he had a job. So there was no downtime. They just. He worked constantly. I mean,
he was telling us he must've made 10, 11 failed pilots before Batman showed up,
and then plenty afterward.
But under the studio system, he worked constantly.
You also made a TV movie with another one of Gilbert's favorite actors.
This actor comes up on almost every one of our podcasts, and that's Burgess Meredith.
Yes.
Oh, my God.
You did a movie called Getting Away From It All.
Oh, my God. That thing wasn movie called Getting Away From It All. Oh, my God.
That thing wasn't even written when we were shooting it.
Oh, that was one of the worst television movies ever.
Now I want to see it.
What a wonderful cast.
And I have never...
You asked what was my favorite thing.
I forgot.
Filming that terrible movie was my favorite thing I ever did
because Larry Hagman was starring in it.
And Larry showed up.
We were shooting at some mansion in Los Angeles.
So the first morning we show up for work
and in comes his, he had this just big van,
I mean a van, like a moving van,
that was all decorated inside like a pasha's.
His wife is a marvelous artist.
And she would create these amazing environments
for Larry to be happy in.
So we show up and he's got tents on the front yard
and front lawn of this house
and they have big cushions in them
for everybody to kind of lounge on
and there's champagne constantly
and I mean I don't happen to drink but there was
and Larry was the most delicious human being to be around.
He was just endlessly
funny and playful.
He was like just this
kid. He just played.
Yeah,
like you.
Last week you were compared
to the Penguin and this week you were compared
to Larry Hagman.
Yeah, I had a great honor.
Adam West told me I would have made a great penguin.
That, to me, was the biggest thrill of my career.
Do you have an imitation of a penguin?
Other than...
That's pretty good.
Yeah, because I love Burgess Meredith as the penguin,
and also of Mice and Men.
Oh, I didn't see that.
Oh, well, we can't talk.
No, we can't talk about that.
We're over.
That's it.
I'm sorry.
Before we move past, Vivian Vance was in this TV movie with you and Jim Backus and Burgess Meredith.
Yeah, it was a neat cast.
We had a lovely time.
Yeah, we went on location on the Pacific Ocean
and yeah, it was nice.
And it's funny because Larry Hagman,
another one,
who became famous
later on as J.R.,
like this totally hateful
character,
and he was a complete opposite.
Oh, my God, yes.
He was the most generous soul in the world.
And just, you know, you just, you love him.
There was just no way around it.
I did a couple of projects with him and just enjoyed him.
But, boy, could he talk fast. I remember doing some television movie with him and just enjoyed him. But boy, could he talk fast. And I remember doing
some television movie with him or something. And I came out on the set. And of course,
you don't rehearse. You just learn your lines and then they say action and you start.
And then this speed thing came toward me and these words, the velocity of them just about
blew me over. And then I speak like this.
And I remember when I was a kid
watching TV, because they used to show it
a lot then,
I started to know
Larry Hagman
as the son of Peter Pan.
Oh, yes.
Yeah.
Right. He was great in comedies, As the son of Peter Pan. Oh, yes. Yeah. Martin's son. Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Right.
He was great in comedies, Larry Hagman.
Really had a gift.
I Dream of Jeannie.
Yeah.
He did a short-lived series called The Good Life with Donna Mills, where they played domestics, that he was very funny.
Do you remember that one, buddy?
Nope.
I'm stumping everybody. But he was very funny. And he's remember that one, buddy. Nope. I'm stumping
everybody, but he was very good in light comedy. Yeah. He was, he was exquisite in everything he
did. He was so competent that it just, it was over the moon. We will return to Gilbert Gottfried's
amazing colossal podcast, but first a word from our sponsor and you worked with another actor that gilbert and i like
to talk about ted bessel ah yes oh yeah why why why is that oh i used to do a whole bit
of like some movie starring ted bessel georgie Jessel, Jacqueline Bissett.
And Whit Bissell.
And Whit Bissell.
Whit Bissell.
Dr. Frankenstein.
And I was a teenage Frankenstein.
Do you do an impression of Ted Bissell?
No, I wish I could.
Yeah.
No, I spent all my energy on my MacGyver.
It was worth it.
I wasn't able to master it.
I heard Ted Bessel was a beloved person.
Yeah, he seemed like a nice guy.
I didn't know him well.
And Lee Grant was in that movie called What Are Best Friends For?
We're going back through your whole career, Barbara. Oh, my God, Ed, you're bringing these up.
Those cards are dangerous to me.
I'm not being.
This is like, this is your life.
I'm Ralph Edwards.
That's right.
This is your life.
Am I going to remember this person?
Yeah, I do.
Oh, I loved working with her.
She's very nice.
I met her several times.
Oh, she's special.
And she's very nice.
I worked on an award show with her, and she was incredibly sweet.
She couldn't be nicer, you know, really.
We have to put her on the interview list.
Yeah, she'd be good.
And you stayed very close to Don Adams toward the end.
Yes.
Strangely, when we were doing the show, Don and I only met on our marks.
When they said action, I looked at Don and he looked at me, and that's mostly what our rapport was, was as the characters.
characters. There was a very, very sweet companionly thing on the set, but he was totally preoccupied with the show, and I really stayed out of the way. And then when the show
went off the air, we never had a closing party or anything because we got the news over the
telephone from CBS, individual calls, and that was it. So I didn't see Don again for 19 years
until we did a television movie, Get Smart Again, I think it was called. And we met then. And it's
so funny. It was like planting a seed and then the seed has flowered. You didn't know the seed
was there under the ground. And then you see each other and then there's this blossom there.
It was like, oh my God, it's you.
It was like we were never close during the series
and suddenly we were like long lost lovers.
And we had a nice time doing that.
And then later on, Don and I had an opportunity
to make a couple of appearances
together commercially, like in Las Vegas, promoting something or other. And then there
was really a bond, you know, a very, very satisfying, sweet bond. And I felt very complimented when he called me one day
and said, I've written this book.
I want you to read it and tell me what you think.
And I know his daughter, Stacy,
and his first wife is a lovely, lovely woman.
He stayed close to her always.
That was really the great love of his life.
And I think he had a daughter who died.
Cecily Adams.
Yeah.
Yeah, she was a casting agent.
Oh, that's right.
She died of breast cancer.
I worked with her in Los Angeles on a sitcom.
She was a lovely lady.
Yeah, how unfortunate.
That's a shame.
Yeah.
Let me ask you a couple of things
about Dawn's catchphrases
that I think people would want to know.
You know, it's so funny.
Yeah.
At that time period,
those catchphrases from Get Smart,
everybody would say,
and other shows would say them as a gag.
Oh, yeah. It would be on T-shirts and everything.
Yeah, sorry about that.
And loving it, which you put in your book title.
Yes, Living Alone and Loving It.
Where did they come from?
I mean, were they from his act?
Were they things that he came up with specifically for the character?
I am trying to remember.
I don't
know that I ever knew that. I know
that some of them did come from the
outside, but
I don't know if they came from Buck
or from things Don
had done before.
There were about five of them,
right? Sorry about that,
Chief. Missed it by that much.
But you know, you should have Buck Henry on
he was a life forget
and he knows
all this history that I
didn't know I mean
everyone's always asking if 99 had a
name and
finally I went to Buck I was sure
she did not and he said no
she didn't.
And he said, and her number, at first they thought they would name her 100,
because she's perfect.
But then he said he didn't feel that was a girl's number,
and so he named her 99.
But I would imagine they came up with 99 because of the rhythm of it, 99.
To say, look out, 100, is not as easy as look out, 99.
And Don Adams also had that thing where he'd have like a big tough guy in front of him in a scene.
And he'd go, okay, you know, you big gorilla.
And he'd punch him and the guy wouldn't move.
And then he'd go, I
hope I wasn't on the line.
Put his arm around him.
It was also
the ridiculous when something,
when they trot out some really absurd
device or gadget.
Oh, the old inflatable hand in the couch
trick. It's the third time
I've fallen for it this month.
So smart.
It's the silliness, really,
that makes it so much fun.
And they would have, like, something
also ridiculous like that,
like, say, a giant
pistol. And they'd go,
that's the
largest pistol
I've ever seen.
Second largest.
Yeah, there was a,
I know, in the first year, there was
something on an Indian reservation
and there was this huge
arrow. I mean,
and he said,
second biggest arrow
I've ever seen.
It's really funny.
I was doing the research today.
I never knew the actor who played Larrabee, Robert Carvalho,
am I saying his name right, who was very funny, was Don's cousin.
His cousin, yeah.
Which I never knew.
Oh, he was the guy hiding in the garbage can?
No, that was it.
Who was the guy hiding in the garbage can?
It was Dave Ketchum.
Dave Ketchum, yes.
Right. Larrabee was the goofy guy who the garbage can? It was Dave Ketchum. Dave Ketchum, yes.
Right.
Larrabee was the goofy guy who worked for the chief.
Yes.
Who could never do anything right.
He was Don Adams' cousin, which I found out in doing research.
Yeah.
Great stuff.
And Jane Dulo was very funny as your mother.
Oh, she was, yeah, she was very good.
Everybody in the cast, Dick Godier, Gilbert and I are fans of as well.
He played Jaime the Robot.
It was brilliant the way he did it.
Absolutely brilliant.
And, well,
Bernie Capel.
And Bernie Capel,
who we love.
Siegfried.
Siegfried.
Siegfried.
Siegfried.
Yeah.
Smart.
Yeah, he was like
this Nazi
working for chaos.
Oh, I asked Bernie recently what his favorite role in his whole career was,
and he said Siegfried.
He said it was the best role he ever had.
I remember as a kid, I always loved when he popped up in an episode.
Yeah, yeah, he was a great favorite.
And Don Adams won three Emmys for playing Maxwell Smart.
And Larry Storch was telling us, and I know they were old friends,
and Gilbert and I interviewed Larry.
Do you remember this?
He was saying how he lost, how Agarn lost the Emmy to Maxwell Smart,
to Don Adams.
But he was just happy that it stayed in the neighborhood
because they both grew up on the Upper West Side together.
And you were nominated as well for that part.
Yeah, a couple of times.
It was a very, very smart show.
I have to ask you, what did you think of the...
Did you see the Steve Carell, Anne Hathaway movie?
Could you bring yourself to watch it?
Yeah, I did.
I went late one night
because I didn't want people stopping me in the theater saying, oh, wait a minute.
I am a great, great admirer of both of those actors, and I think they did a beautiful job.
I think that the piece itself, I think, worked as an action-adventure piece, and I enjoyed the movie tremendously.
I was completely engrossed, and I enjoyed the movie tremendously. I was completely engrossed and I think
they were marvelous. But I don't
think you can take it out of its time frame
with the innocence of
those characters and put it
in, I mean it said get smart
but that was about all you
could really associate with it, in my mind.
But I thought it was a very good movie, and I thought they were terrific.
When I was watching it, you go through, as a fan of Get Smart, I was going, well, these
aren't the people, though.
No.
I love Alan Arkin.
I think Alan Arkin's a brilliant actor.
Oh, me too.
But there was something about Ed Platt not being there as the chief.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And also the rapport between the characters of Max and 99 could not be the same.
Because women, when I did 99, it was before the women's movement,
but the women's movement was already beginning to creep, it was beginning to move,
and Betty Friedan's book came out just about that time, but we were just sort of fascinated by it,
but there hadn't been any great action, and so women were still very much in the in the 50s mode of being the supporter of her guy
you know being the woman behind the man and yet and this was the brilliance of the of
Buck Henry and Mel Brooks being artists their antenna was out there they already sensed
that women were becoming more powerful and more capable.
So they incorporated in 99 a capability that I didn't even own at that time.
I was much more retro and yet kept that respect for your man thing and affectionate tone with your guy in it.
But to do that today,
you can't get away with that.
Men and women don't relate
that way anymore.
So they had to make 99's
character, I think, more forthright,
stronger, more acerbic.
And that just wasn't
what 99
was.
And I think
Maxwell Samar was 99 was and i think a uh you know maxwell smart was 86
and i think that was from the term hey well 86 yeah it was yeah it was yeah did you when you're
watching the film this the steve carell and hathaway version did you did you the first thing
i thought it was not that funny yeah and i wondered if that was a conscious choice on their
part it's more of an action film.
I wonder if the director said, look, there's no way we can't recreate
Don Adams and Barbara Felden.
That chemistry, what are we going to do?
I think I heard somewhere, maybe an interview with Steve Carell,
that he deliberately did not want to imitate Don.
And I think that's true.
But he's not even very bumbling.
I mean, they play it pretty disappointingly straight.
Yeah, he seems very competent.
He's way too competent, Maxwell Smart.
Oh, yeah, I don't remember the movie that well.
Now, you dodged a bullet not being in Get Smart, the Nude Bomb.
Yes.
Thank God.
Yes.
We should explain.
This was the feature, the first feature film that was made about the original.
Yeah, about a year after we went off the air, a couple of years after we went off the air.
Late 70s.
I saw it in the movies.
They jettisoned 99.
I did not turn down anything.
So they didn't ask you to be in the movie?
No, they didn't ask me to be in the movie.
Wow, that's an insult.
I was surprised
until I heard about the movie
I never actually saw it
but then I saw what they were doing
because at that time
I think they wanted the character
of Maxwell Smart
to be available to
nubile beauties
and so I think they
had some shorter
women and more filled out beauties. And so I think they had some shorter women
and more filled out.
Going more commercial rude
with the sexuality.
I totally understood that.
I remember seeing it and thinking, where the hell is Barbara Felden
and Ed Platt? Ed Platt was
gone, obviously.
And the idea that they
sold it on using the word nude but there was no nudity
oh there wasn't it was a bomb that was supposed to yeah it destroys people's clothes yeah it was
it was that kind of weird thing because it was out around that time when nudity was big and sex
was big in the movies we're was starting to get really big.
And now you've got this movie called The Nude Bomb,
which you didn't see anyone naked in.
No, and Vittorio Gossman was a very strange heavy.
Oh, yes.
But you did send up your character on an episode of Mad About You.
Oh, yes, yes.
You played a character, Spy Girl.
Spy Girl, yes. You played a character, Spy Girl. Spy Girl, yeah.
Yeah.
You know, I was uncomfortable doing that.
I didn't see the script before I did it.
I mean, now, I mean, it was fun,
and people like the episode, and it's fine.
But 99 was just such an innocent,
and Spy Girl was such a... 99 was just such an innocent inspired girl was such a she was just
sleeping around i don't know it just seemed uh if they hadn't put me in those go-go boots i
probably would have felt better now now you, they also tried to reprise Get Smart.
Oh, yeah, that was a mistake.
Oh, my God.
Oh, Fox did it, yeah.
Yeah, with Andy Dick as your son.
Yeah, as our twins.
Yes.
We're going to be the new spies, and we were going to be the new spies,
and we were going to run the agency.
And we knew after the first day shooting this was a mistake.
And I remember Don saying to me,
we were both very uncomfortable.
He could see this was not going to work.
And he said to me,
look around the studio.
This is maybe the second one we did or something.
He said, look around the studio.
He said, do you see any network people here?
And I said, no.
And he said, this isn't going to even get on the air.
You know, this isn't going anywhere even get on the air. This isn't going anywhere, so don't worry.
It's going to be okay.
Because he said if there were any excitement behind this,
the network people would be right here on the set being part of it.
But he said already they've abandoned it.
It was notable in the sense, though, that Get Smart was a show that was developed by ABC,
done by NBC, moved to CBS.
CBS, that's right.
And then this one was on Fox.
So you covered every major network.
Yeah, that's right.
The show got around.
Yeah.
Have you ever been on a quiz show?
You're fantastic.
Wow, I am so intimidated.
I mean, and I'm depending on you to come up with these names.
The minute I hear another obscure TV movie I did,
I'm thinking, oh, shoot.
I'm not going to remember anyone in the cast.
Tell us about the book you wrote, too,
that had the little get smart pun in the title.
Oh, yeah.
Well, a few years ago, I've always written, and I'm just because I love to write.
But a few years ago, a friend asked me to do a seminar at a seminar center,
and I couldn't.
I was trying to think of a topic as a favor.
I couldn't, I was trying to think of a topic as a favor.
And then I thought, you know, I've been meeting so many women who are without a partner,
and they think they're leading second-rate lives, and they're miserable.
And I, at this point, had been through this long psychoanalysis, and I was just happy happy and I was on my own and had been living
alone for quite a number of years. So I decided to do a lecture on how to live alone and enjoy it,
you know. And then when I got done with the lecture, I thought, oh, this is a book. And I
gave it to an agent who had been sort of pursuing me for something. She said, if you ever write
anything, let me know. And she said, I can sell this. And she did to Simon & Schuster.
And so it ended up as a series of essays called Living Alone and Loving It.
It's a guide to relishing the solo life and
I loved writing it
it's really my philosophy about living
it's not just about living alone
it's about your interests
and the broadness of your interests
and the
inner search to
know who you are, reaching in
and then also reaching out
to other people and the value
of friendship and the value of curiosity and enthusiasm and education. I mean, I think
that actors should be the most educated sort of class of people because they are out of
work so much of the time. They could be studying history or, you know, doing something interesting.
Interesting theory.
Yeah.
But, yeah, I loved writing it, and it got published, and it's still around.
I'd like to read it.
I'll give you copies if you want.
I just got married two months ago.
Oh, no, no, no.
Stay away from this book.
Stay away from this book.
Now, with Frank and myself, one of our favorite songs of all time.
Oh, you're not kidding.
Yes.
Oh, no way.
Yes.
Are you going to sing it?
You know it better than I.
The 99th song.
Oh, my God.
Putting her on the spot.
Okay.
Do you know the lyrics?
No, no.
I've heard it a couple of times. It should be buried, you know?
Too bad.
We're not letting you off this one.
Fire a hitman.
Sing in your sexiest
99 voice.
You really want me to sing that song?
Yes, absolutely.
I don't know if I can remember the lyrics.
Can we maybe
take a break?
I'll try to remember.
I will try to remember.
Maybe Buddy can cue me.
Buddy, can you cue her?
Okay.
Okay.
This is the hardest interview I ever did in my life.
That was the idea.
Okay.
I'm exhausted.
Okay.
Here we go.
Okay.
So you think you see a pussycat you'd like to catch
You start to come on strong to see how far you'll get
You feed the pussycat some
I'm a tiger line
You don't know that you're messing with 99
Yes!
That's it!
Thank you.
I will spare you the five other stanzas.
Did you sing that in a one-woman show?
Or did I get more bad information?
I did. I did that as a joke at the beginning of the show,
a show called Love for Better and Verse
that had lots of poetry
in it. So I started with that song
and I said that was just as
popular as it deserved to be.
It was never released as a single?
Actually, it was, but it didn't,
you know. Well, take
that, Miley Cyrus. Yes.
Well,
okay. Okay. I'm sorry. We haven Cyrus. Yes. Well, okay.
Okay.
I'm sorry.
We haven't talked about your performance, but when you and I performed together.
We, yes, yes.
We did sort of work together.
Not sort of.
We had a scene together.
We did have a scene together.
Yes.
Wait, wait, yes.
Let's start with.. Forget it. Because I was thinking the first time we worked together was a sort of work together.
What was that? An ASPCA public service announcement.
Oh, my God. We work separately together. Yes. I was I was a dog.
You were a dog wanting to be adopted, going, me, me, me.
Can you do it in my voice?
No, I don't think so.
No, try a Gilbert Gottfried voice.
Okay.
No, no.
I'm too shy.
Okay.
Me, me, me, me.
I'm too shy.
Okay.
Me, me, me, me.
In this commercial.
I probably did some very ladylike ASPCA.
Yes, yes.
A kind-hearted organization or something like that.
Me, me.
Because I remember they had it, you know, like a point of view of the dog like just with the bars in front of it and i like ad-libbed and the dog was hitting its head on the ceiling it was
yeah and and then uh a real kick in the ass is that commercial got an award for best writing.
The two writers got awards for it.
And then the ASPCA, someone from that called me up and said,
we want to present you with an award for that commercial.
And I felt honored.
And I said,
oh, I'm going to be out of town that day,
but I'm honored to get that award.
And they said to me,
well, no, only if you can show up at the event,
you get the award.
Oh.
Yeah, yeah.
Oh.
It was like my payment for showing up.
It was probably a doggy dish or something.
Yes.
And then we worked together again with someone we just interviewed, Danny Aiello.
Yeah.
And the last...
The last request.
The last request where we were sitting together in a diner.
You were a homeless person.
Eating off of my plate because they ran out of plates in the diner.
We were sharing a plate, sharing a fork.
We shared a fork.
Yes, we shared a fork.
We were intimate.
Yes, yes.
How many people have you shared a fork with?
See, now I can honestly say that Barbara Felton and I exchange bodily fluids.
We did.
It's true, but I was a little miffed when you wiped yours on a napkin every time I used it.
Oh, yeah.
We had fried eggs.
Oh, yes.
We shared a fried egg.
Yes, we did.
Yeah. He's eaten out of many people's plates.
That was not a first.
We shot it in scenic New Jersey.
Yes, scenic New Jersey.
And it was never, that movie was never released.
Or even arrested.
Yeah.
Well, we've been talking to the lovely Barbara Felden,
lovely and talented Barbara Felden, who's also,
you can, oh, before I end it totally,
you became like the queen of voiceovers.
Oh, no, not nearly, but I did a lot of voiceovers.
Yeah, I did lots, but during a certain period,
which actors love to do because they're over so fast
and you can get them right.
As you know, you can play around with it just within a few minutes
and it's not like doing a whole performance
where you miss a lot of the targets you're aiming at.
Yeah, I think actors love it.
You don't have to have your hair done or put your makeup on.
I'd like to add before we go that Barbara's the first guest
that we've had that ever fed us and put food out.
Yes!
She served us lemonade and nuts and grapes and cookies.
And that's never happened before.
Oh, well, it was a pleasure to have you here.
Thank you.
Well, you should be treated better, and I hope I've set the standard.
And I'm totally impressed with both of you, although I'm exhausted with your knowledge.
Yeah, Danny Aiello didn't give a shit.
Did you get water?
No, he didn't come in
with a bag of potato chips for us.
Oh, he came to you.
Yes.
Well, you didn't offer him anything, right?
No, no, that's true too.
But we've been talking
to the lovely, beautiful,
and talented Barbara Felton,
Agent 99 from Get Smart.
Thank you, Barbara Felton. It was from Get Smart. Thank you, Barbara Felton.
It was a dear pleasure.
Thank you, both of you, Frank.
That was great.
Wonderful, thanks.