Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - GGACP Classic: "Blazing Saddles" Tribute with Andrew Bergman and Norman Steinberg
Episode Date: February 17, 2022In this encore of an episode from 2019, Gilbert and Frank salute the iconic comedy "Blazing Saddles" (released in February, 1974) with an in-depth interview with the film's screenwriters, Andrew Be...rgman and Norman Steinberg. Also in this episode: Mel Brooks sends up Bogie, Cleavon Little replaces James Earl Jones, Richard Pryor puts on a maid’s uniform and Andrew and Norman recall deleted scenes and last-minute casting changes. PLUS: Gig Young bows out! Marlon Brando mumbles! Stanley Kubrick tortures Slim Pickens! John Carradine plays “John Carradine"! And the boys remember Madeline Kahn, Harvey Korman and Gene Wilder! 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
Colossal classic hi this is gilbert godford and this is gilbert godford amazing, colossal podcast with my co-host, Frank Santopadre.
We're joined by two guests this week,
both back for return visits.
Andrew Bergman is a novelist, playwright,
occasional movie producer,
and a celebrated screenwriter and director
whose work includes the films Soak Dish, Oh God, You Devil, and
the original Fletch, as well as the classic comedy that we've discussed previously on
this very podcast, 1979's The In-Laws. He also wrote and directed the features
Honeymoon in Vegas, So Fine, It Could Happen to You,
Isn't She Great, Striptease, and The Freshman.
Norman Steinberg is an Emmy-winning TV writer, screenwriter, and writing teacher
with numerous credits on situation comedies, variety shows, comedy albums,
and feature films such as Yes, Giorgio, Wise Guys, Funny About Love, Johnny Dangerously, and a'Toole, Peter Fult,
Madeline Codd, Alan Olda, Michael Keaton, Bette Midler, Gene Wilder, George Burns,
Burt Reynolds, Luciano Pavarotti,
and Marlon Brando.
Back in the early 1970s,
they joined forces with Mel Brooks and Richard Pryor
to write the screenplay based on Andrew's original story
for a movie currently celebrating its 45th anniversary,
the iconic Western spoof Blazing Saddles.
Please welcome back to the podcast
two nice Jewish boys from Queens and Brooklyn.
And two of the men responsible for arguably the funniest film comedy ever made.
Andrew Bergman and Norman Steinberg.
I'm speechless.
Are you?
He got some of that right. Yeah. That's the part I'm speechless about. you? He got some of that right.
That's the part I'm speechless about.
That was great.
Welcome back, boys.
Good to be here.
Andrew was here in March.
Norman, it's been a while.
Yes.
Yes.
You were in the old joint.
I know.
The old space.
In the old space.
Yeah.
But this sumptuous...
This is gorgeous. This isptuous. This is gorgeous.
This is unbelievably beautiful.
This is great.
The sarcasm has started.
And by the way, the brisket, fabulous.
Yeah, you're happy with the brisket?
They lay out a buffet here that's just fantastic.
Now, we probably asked you both before, but just a quick one of how you two got into show business in the first place
andrew you can go first that's a very good question i i got into show business i had a phd
in american history and i couldn't get a teaching job and i had written this story about a black
sheriff in the old west um and I got a job at United Artists
as a very inept PR guy for a year.
And during that period of time,
I somehow sold this story to Warner Brothers,
much to my amazement and delight.
And one thing led to another,
and eventually, as these things always do,
it became a hit movie.
Now your turn.
Norman.
I did something that probably
none of you have done.
I was in the army.
You're correct.
That's the same bet.
After law school. I went to law school,
passed the New York bar exam,
and I had a job as a lawyer
at 57th Street and 7th Avenue.
And I would go there every day.
I was making $100 a week.
That's good money.
Not bad.
In 1960s.
And every morning, I would go downstairs to Chalk Full of Nuts, and there was Mel Brooks.
And I started pulling on his jacket and saying, I want to be a writer.
I want to be a writer.
And he would put his hands on my shoulders and look deeply into my eyes and say, leave me alone.
But I didn't.
And I hope
Mel will be listening to this
because we both
came out of that
Mel Brooks universe.
He's the reason you both met.
Yeah.
Certainly the reason we met.
And one day
he just said
you're a real pain in the ass.
And here, call this guy who is a producer of Get Smart.
And I called him, and Mel indeed had called him and said, this kid wants to be a writer.
And he said, he tells me you want to be a writer so write something write an episode for
get smart which i did and i sent it to him a week later they called uh one of the writers on get
smart chris hayward chris hayward know that name great great guy and he said
if the show is picked up which it wasn't if the show is picked up, which it wasn't, if the show is picked up, we'll buy the script.
And so I went in the next day and quit being a lawyer.
That was it.
That was my start.
You were officially in show business.
Officially in show business.
That was pretty amazing that Mel Brooks did that.
pretty amazing that Mel Brooks did that.
Listen, he is, for all
his brashness, and he is
at base
a wonderful man.
He's a loyal guy.
And he loves,
he protects writers. He protected
us. And both
Andy and I
were in his face.
And he took it.
He said, we immediately became, because we didn't know what the hell we were doing.
That was the good news, that none of us knew what the hell we were doing.
I mean, he could have had me, you know, I'd written this script, like 140 pages.
Text X.
No margins, text X.
Right.
And the Warner Brothers had bought it,
and originally Alan Arkham was going to direct it,
and James Earl Jones was going to play the sheriff,
and that fell apart, and so they went to Mel.
And the first thing that Warner's executive said,
well, you'll lose the original writer.
You know, you dump Bergman, and you get some guys.
But he wouldn't do it.
He said, I want him to work with him.
And I was 27.
I was beyond nobody. I was sub work with him and i you know i was 27 i was beyond nobody
i was sub nobody you know and uh that's something i will never forget i heard him say that he was
trying his original impulse was to have you normalize the other guys in the room and then
he realized that i was you were the craziest one yeah no i i was down in acapulco with him.
I got a job on a special.
They called it, it was Aquacade in Acapulco.
That was a hell of a show.
I love that title.
What was Aquacade in Acapulco?
It was memorable.
We had Tony Randall, Ed McMahon, and Stiller and Meera.
Jan Pierce.
Jan Pierce.
And the Aquamaniacs, and special guest star Mel Brooks.
And so suddenly I'm working with him.
And we just, he would tell tales at dinner,
and it was the greatest.
And at the end of the 10 days in Acapulco,
he said, I got this script.
Read it and tell me if you think it's funny.
And it was Andy's script.
And I said, I think it's hilarious.
He said, great.
Meet, we'll meet down at this restaurant on Houston called Bellato's with him and Anne Bancroft,
who was pregnant at that point with Max.
Max, yeah.
And he's like, what, 42 now?
Something like that.
I found out in my research he was born during the movie.
Yes. He didn't know that.
He said, okay, come on.
You're going to do it.
The guy who wrote this is going to be there.
That's where Andy and I met.
In that restaurant or in the writer's room for the first time?
I wasn't allowed in that restaurant.
You weren't allowed.
It's a pretty high-class restaurant.
You guys have been friends ever since.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And that's amazing.
I mean, do you remember,
do you have a vivid memory
of the initial meeting?
I do.
I certainly remember
the first time we all gathered
in that room.
Uh-huh.
Yeah.
And it was, you know,
we were feeling each other out
for sure.
And I'd never written a thing except
for this this first uh draft um and i wasn't thinking myself as a comedy writer per se i was
a writer um but it mel mel made me feel i remember the first night after i met with me called me at
home i was my wife was at she when i came back, she said, Mel Brooks called.
I said, God, I wonder what he wants.
He said, so it wasn't so terrible with me, right?
I'm not such a monster.
That was great.
It was so brilliant.
It was so brilliant.
I mean, I was, you know, whatever, 27.
27.
You said it was like playing tennis with Borg and Lendl and McEnroe.
Well, Borg and Lendl, particularly when Richie Pryor came in.
Yeah.
And I've written a PhD dissertation,
and now I'm writing comedy with Mel and Richie and Norman.
And it was really like, you know, up with, you know,
Federer and those guys.
Incredible.
Let's hit with for a while.
What was it like working with Pryor in the register room?
It was great.
I mean, he was such a mishugana,
but such a lovely person.
I mean, he really was.
You never knew which Richie was going to show up,
but it was never like a really hostile Richie.
He was just, he was all over the place.
It certainly coked up and kovuasi-ed up.
But he would come up with some,
and one day he just disappeared and showed up like dressed as the maid.
I was just going to ask you about that.
And started dusting the room.
I'm never going to, the day that Mel called his agent to get him to work with us, would he work with us?
Mel phrased it in the following way.
Listen, we have four Jews sitting in a room.
We need someone to come in and do the windows.
That was tactical.
And he was in the room like three days later.
And didn't he disappear to like,
well, he disappeared a few times.
To Detroit.
Richard?
Yeah.
He didn't keep bankers' hours.
We didn't think that he would be a compulsive Jew writer.
He wouldn't be Babalu and, you know.
But he worked, and he showed up, and he was hilarious.
I was sort of his companion because I would go with him at night.
And one night we went to the Tonight Show,
and my friend Steve Landisberg was on the show that night.
Funny guy.
And he wanted to, Richie wanted to see Steve.
So we went there, and Richard was in the room, in the green room,
and talking the way he talks to this motherfucker.
And there's a guy, a guy comes over to him, kind of big guy,
and says, hey, pal, take it down a notch because there are women here.
He was from the Sierra Club.
And Richard said, I'm going to kick your ass.
And I said, take'm going to kick your ass.
I had to take him out of the room.
Out of the room.
I mean, that's, I would meet him at night, and we'd go somewhere, but I, in fact, the first day he came in, he was late.
I was sitting there.
Everybody's late.
Mel was late every day.
He had trouble shaving.
He needs to really get his face really wet before he can shave.
That's why he was 40 minutes late.
Mel?
Yeah, that's hilarious.
But didn't prior one time, he wasn't't at the meeting and he called up from Detroit.
Well, Michael Hertzberg tells that story in the documentary that he wound up calling in and he said he needed money to get home.
Does this ring a bell?
I think he was in Chicago.
He needed train fare.
Okay.
Train fare?
Trains.
He wasn't flying on the commentary Mel says when he hired him he said I'm coming by train
you'll have some Remy Martin for me
I thought he was a
he was a Kvassier
so Mel got it wrong
but he didn't want to fly
the first day he came in
we were
brought him up to speed
it was about noon.
And Mel was saying, here's what we're doing.
And Richie was going, uh-huh, uh-huh.
And doing up some Coke as he spoke.
Like a little kind of golden container.
Like a small thimble-sized thing.
I was, okay.
And I was, I didn't even know what it was.
No, we were so innocent.
It was 1972.
What was he doing?
You're a kid from Corona, right?
You don't know what's going on.
I knew Thunderbird.
I didn't know.
He slid it over to Mel
and he said,
offering him the Coke, and said, Brother Mel, and he said, never before lunch.
And when he ordered lunch, we all ordered, he ordered a roast beef sandwich and a bottle of Kuvvass.
Yeah, right.
Hilarious.
Yeah.
But you had a little history with him from the Flip Wilson show.
I had worked with him from the Flip Wilson show. I had worked with him on the Flip Wilson show
and the only thing
I'll disagree with, Mel said that
to the room.
We're four Jews
and we need a gentleman of
color.
I remember
the windows.
I can't get that
out of my head.
At the same time, we had a secretary who wanted to be an actress,
and she would show up every day dressed in a different outfit.
Yeah.
Like she was going to be the school mom.
It was a tough job.
I mean, floor lunatics
you know
you had to keep it all straight
you know
on legal pads
there's something sweet
that I think
that he wanted to create
the experience
from Show of Shows
he could have
come in
I don't know if it was sweet
or just figured
that's the way to attack
that's the way it was done
that's the way to attack
this thing
he says he was nostalgic
for it
he might well have been
but it served both
yeah
I mean the thing about Richie what Richie did for us He says he was nostalgic for them. He might well have been, but it served both purposes. Yeah, yeah.
I mean, the thing about Richie, what Richie did for us,
and that was behind We're Three Jews,
and we need someone to do the windows,
was he gave us permission.
Sure.
This movie could not have been, once Richie was in this,
it's like you rented a car and they told you,
you can run all the stop signs and the red lights.
That doesn't apply to this vehicle.
And that's how we wrote the movie.
And he said recently in an interview that blazing saddles could not be done nowadays.
Hello?
Yeah.
Nope.
I don't think there's two pages of it that could be done today.
Forget about it.
I'm not even sure somebody like Spike Lee could make it.
Well, Tarantino did a version of it.
Oh, Django.
In Django.
Yeah.
If you remember, I mean, there was one really funny thing
that they couldn't see out of their Ku Klux Klan masks.
Right.
But they were pretty out there, I thought.
And that came close.
I don't know.
Why not?
Why not?
I mean, times have changed.
And maybe in an aspect way, maybe Trump has opened things up.
Well, we're going to see. Maybe, in an aspect way, maybe Trump has opened things up by taking things down to the grossest level. I wonder.
Every time I think that we've reached that point where people say you can't do comedy anymore,
and then I watched the Comedy Central roast of Alec Baldwin the other night,
and it was entirely outrageous and over the top, and it was a breath of fresh air.
Just to see that that can still be done.
And maybe it's because it's that protected environment.
I always thought like Trump got, one of the reasons Trump got in office is because I think people are going, oh my God, he's a guy that says whatever he feels like.
And we're tired of being scared.
and we're tired of being scared.
But look what you did with planes after 9-11.
Yeah.
Uh-oh, they know your work, Gil.
That was outrageous.
Planes are stopping at the Empire State Building.
Come on.
That was, in that respect, it's the same thing. It's interesting in his case because he did that joke, and I would say it almost gave your career a boost.
Yeah, because I lost the entire crowd, and they were booing and hissing, and then I went into the aristocrats' joke.
And one of them, they're saying, oh, the father's fucking the son?
That's good.
That's not offensive.
Oh, the father's fucking the son?
That's good.
That's not offensive.
The flip side of that coin is when you did similar, shall I say, irreverent material about the tsunami, you got punished.
Yes.
So you were somewhat, you were rewarded and punished for similar bad taste.
Yeah.
Which I find strange.
Didn't Mel write a sign, please don't write a polite script?
No.
Okay, that's bullshit.
No. Because I saw that.
Can you say it's true?
Because that's a good line.
It is a good line.
But it wasn't true.
The stuff you find when you do research.
Oh, God.
I thought you were going to shoot down the prior came into the room dressed as the maid, for sure.
No, he did.
Refresh.
Yeah.
It's nice to know that actually happened.
And now, what I find so strange is like, years later, Pryor and Wilder would become this big movie comedy team.
Isn't that great?
And Mel wanted him for this movie.
He did.
He did.
Richard never believed him. No, it's true. He did. Richard never believed him.
No, it was true. He was just
radioactive at that point.
At that stage in his career.
But
Mel fought for him, and
that would have been
an interesting film.
It would have been outrageous.
Cleavon was fabulous.
He was the right person at the right time.
And we interviewed, I think, every black, mulatto, high yellow comedian.
Did Flip ever audition?
Who?
Flip?
No.
Because I know the studio had suggested him.
Okay.
Couldn't have done it.
Didn't have those chops. Didn't have those chops.
Lou Gossett is interesting
in the pilot, which is on the DVD. Yeah, he was.
And he's more of a prior.
He's more that way.
He's edgier. Absolutely.
Cleavon plays it like a sweetheart.
Well, he was a sweetheart. That was the thing.
He was not a person with a lot of edge.
He was just a wonderful guy.
And gorgeous, which also helped.
We've discussed this before with both of you when we brought up the movie.
Talk about a happy accident.
I mean, not only did Young fall out and Wilder come in, but the two of them would have that automatic chemistry like that.
What a miraculous surprise.
Who knows?
Who knows?
And what happened?
They did bring Gig Young in.
Yeah.
To be the Waco kid.
We had Dan Daly before him.
Was Carson asked, or is that also a female?
We went to the Tonight Show.
I think we went through those steps.
That was our first dream, that Johnny would play the Waco kid.
Right.
I went to the Tonight Show with Mel.
He was doing the Tonight Show.
And afterwards, I remember I was carrying his suit for him.
Oh, Mel's suit?
Yeah.
I didn't know your duties included that.
And we went into Johnny's dressing room.
He said, is this your valet?
And we went into Johnny's dressing room and he said, is this your valet?
And Mel had sent the script to him.
And Carson said, Mel, this is what I do.
This is what I do and I will not, I'm not up to it.
I'm not up to it. And he was right. I heard that Geek Young was supposed to be the voice of Charlie in the Charlie's Angels series.
Quite possibly.
The same thing.
When they called him, he was loaded.
On the floor, right.
Yeah.
So they went from Carson to Dan Daly.
And Mel says on the commentary that Dan Daly loved the script,
but then he called back and he said, I can't see.
I'm almost blind.
I'm wearing Coke bottle glasses.
Then Gig Young, who did have a little bit of a habit with the bottle,
which gave him maybe a leg up, but that was a bridge too far, as it turned out.
Yeah.
No, this was just a favor
you know
he just
Mel said
please
do this for me
to Gene Wilder
yeah
and now
yeah
in exchange for doing
Mel doing
Young Frankenstein
which was
Gene's script
so that was
a happy barter
happy for everybody
happy for everybody
it was
that was practically overnight
that Gene came in
yeah no
it happened like he just overnight that yeah no it happened
like it just showed up yeah yeah and just walked into the role and now you can't picture anybody
else no doing it oh well a movie like that you can't picture anybody else doing anything it's
true it's true i mean once it becomes that oh it's true we will return to g Gottfried's amazing, colossal podcast.
But first, a word from our sponsor.
And we always love talking about great old character actors.
And that movie is packed. It's full of them.
Yeah.
Every one of them is so good, no matter how small the part.
Slim.
Yes.
Slim is the greatest.
Oh, Frank and I were talking about that.
He was given a hotel room.
But he chose to sleep outside.
Is that true, too?
With his dog and his rifle?
This may be another urban myth.
The book of Apocrypha.
Would you just please agree?
Sure.
would you just please agree he slept on the western street
with his hat tucked over his eyes
the story that's been published
and it's funny because you see it in several places
was that he passed on the hotel room
and said I'm going to sleep outside with my rifle
to stay in character
that's a fabulous story I To stay in character. That's a fabulous story.
I was there when Mel interviewed him.
Interviewed him.
Just told him what it was going to be like,
and he said, we're going to put you,
we're going to build you up.
We have special boots made that are going to be like platform boots.
He said, Mr. Brooks, I like to wear my own boots.
And we said,
and we have, okay,
fine, but we have this
horse, this beautiful
magnificent Mr. Brooks.
I have
my own horse. I mean, he had
everything. Oh, he's a great rider.
I mean, you don't need a stunt
double for this guy. He was amazing. Oh, he was great. He did tell us He brings so much to the movie. Oh, he's a great writer. I mean, you don't need a stunt double for this guy. Pickens.
Oh, he was great.
Yeah.
He did tell us.
He brings so much to the movie.
Oh, God, he was hilarious.
He did tell us that the Dr. Strangelove story, which was that he was hanging upside down on the bomb.
And Kubrick was shooting him.
the bomb and kubrick was shooting him and he said he he did about 40 takes and he said he threw up
slim said he threw up like five times and he said of course kubrick used the first egg
one of those actors like jack warden that's incapable of giving a bad performance. He's always good.
Oh, he's great.
Even in subpar movies.
Yeah.
You stick around and watch them.
He had them in so far. I mean, in one night, Jack's amazing.
Oh, yes.
He's a fantastic actor.
Yeah, and you worked with Worden in So Fine, which we talked about last time.
One of our favorites.
Oh, God.
Loved him.
And the funny thing is, like, you know, Harvey Korman.
Brilliant.
Who's known as like the second banana all the time.
And in there, he's like as big a star as the other two.
And he gives an amazing.
I remember he came in and said, they're really letting you do this movie?
I mean, I couldn't believe it.
That's what I mean
about only running red lights
and stop signs.
The original choice was
John Cassavete.
John Carradine.
John Cassavete.
John Cassavete.
I would have loved to have seen him.
That would be perfect.
John Carradine?
Yeah.
Oh, Gilbert's favorite.
He was going to play a character named John Carradine. Yeah. Oh, Gilbert's favorite. He was going to play a character named John Carradine.
Yeah, that's funny.
That's funny.
We had a guy, we called him the man in the arrow shirt.
It's a guy stumbles into the bar, and he's got all these arrows in his back, and he falls down.
And the line was, we didn't use this
the line said
who did this to you, Saul?
and the dying man
the man in the arrow shirt
says
John Caraduh
and he dies
and it cut to a shot
of all the townspeople going
John Caradur
and Cleavon looks at
the camera and says
and they say
my people are dumb.
Wow.
I don't think we shot that.
No, we didn't.
There were various
subsidiary characters.
I think last time I talked about Bogey.
Tell us again.
A cowboy named Bogey, who Mel was going to play.
Mel did a pretty good Bogey with the crazy eyes and the wet lips.
And every time you cut to the campfire, Bogey would be saying,
now you had two quarts of strawberries.
How many strawberries did you eat?
He'd be doing the whole quick.
That's great.
There was another character called Sidler who just sidled into the,
he just would always walk around sidling in.
It was very sneaky.
And he died, of course, falling down sideways.
And the line was,
he died like he lived
sideways.
And we had
a character called Astray.
Astray was
the first time
we saw him
Harvey Korman's lighting
scar and says Astray
John Carradine. That was the thing
John Carradine's character.
And he disappears and and says, ashtray! John Carradine. That was the thing, was John Carradine's character. Yeah.
And he disappears.
And the ashtray disappears
and this small person appears,
Johnny Paleo,
because Mel loved him
because he bit people on the ankles.
And it turned out people on the ankles. And
it turned out
that ashtray had been hanged
but he didn't die.
He had a wooden neck.
He had a wooden neck.
Now it can seem to this guy
I'll describe, it's a real twist
though. He said he'd have a hump
but in the front.
He was a hump front.
So this whole thing
he had this wooden neck
and he and John Carradine
communicated
ashtray which is
wrap on his neck
that's hilarious
this like
Morse code kind of thing
and it was a grotesque character
it was a grotesque
but it had one of my
favorite lines ever
which was you cut
to ashtray
in the middle of the prairie
wrapping on his neck
and john carradine says schopenhauer never said that
wow having this philosophical wow so then we hear that woody allen has done this movie called
everything you want to know about sex and then john carradine is it, and he has a small person as an assistant. Wow. So, hey, two people who could see such a perverse, hideous thing.
So, they let us see a couple of reels of everything about sex.
And indeed, there's John Carradine, who looked like 400 years old.
Yeah.
And this little guy, and John Carradine's just kicking the shit out of him.
And we realized
this is
disgusting.
You couldn't
go through with it.
You couldn't.
It's horrible.
It was a
terrible character.
Both Andy and I
wanted to get rid
of this guy.
And we did.
And finally,
I remember the day
we were walking
over to 3rd Avenue
and I said, we can't.
You've got to let it go.
All right.
All right.
It was, that would have buried us.
Yeah.
We did fall in love with him for a while.
Everybody in the town was named Johnson.
Right.
But we did not, and I think Mel threw the flag on this one.
He said, no Lyndon Johnson.
Why?
He's not going to make it.
And he was absolutely right.
Oh, and he died right around that time.
We were out there in 73.
I remember I said to Mel, I saw a Johnson interview last night.
I think this isn't going to work.
He didn't look like he was going to live another year.
He didn't.
Yeah.
Love those inside jokes.
Olsen, Olsen, Johnson.
Olsen, Johnson.
And he saw John Carradine in the Warner Brothers commissary.
He came back.
He said, can't do it.
Can't do it.
Wow.
And we had a door where it was John Carradine.
He was the solicitor general or something and had all of his film credits.
Grapes of Rev.
There were a lot of them.
So, does this exist in some form?
I mean, obviously this stuff was not shot.
Are there notes?
Are there pages with these characters?
With Ashtray, sure.
And Mel's records somewhere?
I have 160 pages.
Wow.
Why did he say John Carradine couldn't do it?
Because he looked like he was
at death's door
he just looked
like an old man
yeah
and yet the joke
of him playing
a character named
John Carradine
would have fit perfectly
well in this kind of
because there's so many
inside movie jokes
Richard Dix
yeah
and Randolph Scott
and Olsen and Johnson.
And the Laurel and Hardy handshake, which I must tell you, I saw the movie maybe 15 times before I ever stopped to get that joke.
Well, that was the beauty.
The thing was so dense.
So dense.
Or the Mongo Santa Maria joke.
Oh, yeah.
Which, until I was in my 40s, I didn't know who Mongo Santa Maria was.
And the day that I heard his name in a different context I said
son of a bitch it's a Blazing
Saddles joke we wrote it
and I still never entirely got it
I said really that's funny
I remember the actor
too was a stand up
comic named Jimmy Martinez
oh yeah very good
or the Andrew
outside just said I don't need no stinking coffee.
Right.
I offered him a cup of coffee.
Well, that guy I love.
The Alfonso Bedoya guy on the line of thugs.
Right.
The worst people in the West, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
I want to go back to the writer's room, too, just to get back to casting.
But something, what you said you learned in that room about the specificity of comedy writing.
Right.
With the education you got.
Yeah,
which is,
it's so,
forget the consonants
and the,
you know,
Buick is funnier than Ford
and all that stuff.
It's just
one word too many
in a thing
and a joke
becomes a sentence.
It's just all the,
like,
you just
knocked all the air out of it.
It's so, You learn the poetry of it. You all the like you just knocked all the air out of it it's so
you learn the poetry of it you learn the yeah it is it's it's the scanning of the lines it's
yeah his you can't avoid it his timing and uh it just his not his name knowledge i did uh
there's a name that he gave me in my favorite year.
I have a character named Rookie Carroca, who is a bantamweight boxer.
Great character.
Yeah, he said, and Rookie says, he said, you were beaten by Manny Serpa.
He said, Manny Serpa?
I took him apart.
I turned him into guava jelly.
It all came from Mel.
Great stuff.
Just those kind of alliterations.
It was wonderful.
And then Mel Brooks said, well, as the famous line,
they're in the dark, Madeleine Kahn.
Right.
Oh, the one line.
And she says, you know, it's true.
Right.
That has got a big penis.
And what was the line they cut out?
It was.
You're sucking my arm.
Yeah.
We went through a lot of things.
Excuse me, Ms. Von Stubb.
You're sucking my arm.
You're sucking my elbow.
That whole scene is, depends on how much vitamin E I can get my hands on.
Well, it starts with the sausages.
The sausages and the...
He said, he stopped it.
That was a surprise to me because I think that would have been maybe...
A bridge too far.
But I don't think it would.
Not in the context we were in.
You think so?
You think audiences would have rebelled at that?
I don't think so.
I don't think so.
I think sort of the genius of it, of having her be a semi-Narzi, you know,
of having her be a semi-Narzi, you know,
Helen Kahn,
is the way to actually have an interracial romance in the movie, sub Rosa,
because she's such a grotesque girl.
Yeah.
And she's madly in love with him.
Yeah.
And everybody thought it was great, you know.
And the cutaway.
And it just blew away that barrier
in a comic way, which was quite brilliant.
He brings her back during the fight scene.
She's leading the Nazis.
Doing her little Lili Marlene thing.
So at some point, Alan, who had come in with you, your writing partner at the time, he left.
Richard was doing a bit of a disappearing act.
I know it-
Well, after six months, Richard just said,
no, six weeks, he said-
That was it.
That was it.
He was like a pitcher.
You know, you're going to get five innings out of him.
You're going to be happy with what you got.
And then you got the bullpen up and you, you know.
And it sort of boiled down to the three of you guys.
It did.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But as I say, Richie's contribution, which was to open the windows and say, hey, go for it.
Go for it.
You can do it.
It was our protection.
Yeah.
Because they said, you can't afford Jews writing this movie.
Yeah.
It was enormous.
And then Norman and I did all the little stuff.
I mean, and big stuff.
Afterwards,
it was a lot of,
a lot of.
Chinese restaurants.
Yeah,
a lot of, there were a lot of drafts to go
and it was a lot,
you know,
it was a lot of work
because as you know,
getting these things right
is,
is like diamond,
you know,
you're,
you're polishing a diamond.
What was the,
what was the length of time
from the,
from the moment you guys,
ballpark,
from the moment you sat down
in the room to,
when you turned into Warner Brothers?
A year and a half.
A year and a half.
Well, you mean the original draft?
Well, from when you guys first sat down together, when the clock started ticking.
I think about a year and a half, wasn't it?
Well, no.
It was faster.
Faster? We turned the draft in, yeah.
Because we went out to-
In April, we turned it... We were out in L.A. in March of 73 or something.
Because they started shooting like April of 73.
So it was...
Yeah.
And Mel bought that house in West Hollywood
and you guys went out there to do polishes or to work on it.
Yeah, and casting and stuff.
And casting, yeah.
Yeah, we were working at Warner Brothers.
Yeah.
And that's... In the writer's building.
It was very exciting.
I can imagine.
It was great.
But I was just thinking of a line.
When everybody is leaving town,
which I love this line,
and they're getting the hell out of town
because the town's being terrorized,
and he makes this speech.
He said,
can't you see this is the last act of a desperate man?
And he said,
and somebody in town says,
we don't care if it's the first act of Henry V.
Yes, it's Hillerman's line.
John Hillerman.
Very literary.
It's great.
So smart.
So smart. So you guys were involved in early line. John Hillerman. Very literary. It's great. So smart. So smart.
So you guys were involved in early casting.
You were there when these people walked in the room.
Did you have personal suggestions?
Did you have, you got to call this guy in?
Well, I was obsessed with Slim.
You were obsessed with Slim Pickens.
I worshipped him.
You know, originally, I believe in Strangelove that Sellers was supposed to play that guy.
Interesting.
And he had this first hard episode of something, and Slim wound up playing that guy.
Which makes sense if you think about it.
Yeah.
Because he played the Englishman.
He played the Strangelove.
Strangelove himself.
Right.
Chairman.
And Randre.
Murph and Muffy.
Murph and Muffly.
Right.
So it makes sense that he would have also put him in there.
But Slim was...
Pickens gives you that Western authenticity.
Suddenly it's a Western.
Yeah.
It is.
Because he really rides.
Right.
Because, I mean, you know, Cleavon couldn't ride.
When he comes into town on that horse, you just can see he's holding onto his hat so it doesn't blow off.
And what about Burton Gilliam?
Oh, Burton.
You used him again.
I used him again.
Yeah.
I mean, Burton was fabulous.
He's great.
We saw him on, what was the Bogdanovich film?
Oh, he's in Paper Moon.
Paper Moon.
He's great.
You have three cast members in Paper Moon.
Yeah.
Because Madeline's in it. Right. And who's the third person I'm thinking of? Hillerman's in Paper Moon. Paper Moon. He's great. You have three cast members in Paper Moon. Yeah.
Because Madeline's in it.
Right.
And who's the third person I'm thinking of?
Hillerman's in it.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah. He was great.
One of the townspeople.
Yeah.
John.
He's the guy who has the Henry IV line.
That's him.
Yeah.
And Huddleston, David Huddleston, who did such great work.
Turned out to be the big Lebowski many years later.
When you guys are sitting there and these guys walk in the room,
do you just, and you know, you've
both cast films over the years
since. Do you have that moment
where you just know? Yeah. Yeah. Sure.
Yeah. You know,
you knew it was Cleavon.
Cleavon was the first
person I ever saw the
old script. I sent
him because I saw him in a show called scuba duba that bruce
j friedman and he played this frog man he was hilarious that this guy is so funny and so whippy
and so cute um and of course he never read the script pearly victorious yeah he's great very
funny man he's great yeah but usually you know, you just, they walk in, they have it, or they don't, you know?
And, of course, the most famous scene from Blazing Saddles, the campfire.
How did that come about?
It was the other shoe.
The other shoe.
They said, look.
If you have a campfire and they're eating beans, as long as there's no red lights.
And they did a preview in Australia.
Really?
Yeah, and instead of a meal, they had a bean dinner at the beginning of the show.
But, yeah, I mean, I think we got just about every race
and we
we got the Irish
that's a great joke
yes
that's a great joke
about the Irish
the Asians
it's so good
it's so good
you mentioned Peter Sellers
now this could be
bullshit again
but did Peter Sellers
come in
go right ahead
say it is
did he read for the
Busby Berkeley character
no
oh see more bullshit thank you there's a lot of urban myths out there about the making of this movie Go right ahead and say it is. Did he read for the Busby Berkeley character? No. Oh, see?
More bullshit.
There's a lot of urban myths out there about the making of this movie.
I'm sure that was promised to Dom on, you know.
It must have been.
Well, Dom's in the 12 chairs, right?
So they had a pre-existing relationship.
And he's hilarious.
Well, you know, as someone who's directed,
you really try to work with people you've worked with before.
It just eliminates a lot of intermediate steps. You just... As someone who's directed, you really try to work with people you've worked with before.
It eliminates a lot of intermediate steps.
You know they're going to deliver.
You just know.
You don't have to say anything.
I did two pictures with Nick Cage, a third of the way through the first one.
I don't have to say anything anymore.
It's just you know.
That's nice when that happens.
Getting back to the campfire, did they censor the sound effects?
No.
Not on TV.
On TV, they had horses neighing every time the guys were squinching up their faces and rising up, you'd hear horses neighing, which was completely ridiculous.
Yeah.
It's not a movie you should watch on TV.
No, it is not.
Mel did all the sound effects on his own. He did a lot of them.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
It's so funny that now it seems like you can't make a comedy without a fart sound effect somewhere in it.
Right.
And back then, that was like...
It was.
It was like the first performance
of The Rite of Spring or something.
It was like a revolutionary...
People...
Saves the culture.
It did.
Literally,
people could not believe it.
And after the first fart,
you couldn't hear anything anymore.
People were so out of their minds.
I heard they were saying...
Somebody complained that
in the making of the movie that the farts were too loud.
You couldn't hear them.
Maybe it's on an empty theater.
It's possible.
The first screening, when he first screens it for the Warner suits, when nobody laughs except John Calley.
Were you guys there?
No.
No, Mel was there.
We saw him afterwards when he came back to. No, Mel was there. Okay. We saw him afterwards.
When he came back to the office, he was white.
He didn't know.
He said, I'm going to recut the movie.
But we had a screening that night with all the office help from Warner Brothers,
and they went crazy.
Don't trust the. And they were screaming
and Mel
got up and said, fuck them!
Onward.
Right.
They still thought it would die.
They thought it would just fall right off the screen.
Didn't you guys, wasn't that
something you guys comforted yourselves with in the writers
room? Nobody, this thing's never going to get
made. It's never going to get released. So no i don't write what you want no i had
i had a sense that it could get made i didn't know if anyone's going to see it i see and warner
brothers was confident that nobody was going to go see right yeah mel still remembers the name of
the executive that came up to him and said and and one of the things that particularly bothered
him was the indian speaking yiddish was it ted somebody ted ashley ted ashley
you can't release this outside of new york or los angeles it's not going to play anywhere or at
least he says they wanted to dump it and take the loss well here's the thing about the yiddish
speaking you know obviously it was a specialized joke i had a friend of mine lived in portland
and he went to see the movie said he's the only person who laughed at the Yiddish.
It's great.
He has one man laughing.
It's so good.
What is he talking about?
But there were so many jokes.
I mean, there was so much.
It was such a blizzard of comedy material.
It is.
I talked to somebody who was doing a TV series based on Paper Moon in Idaho.
They made it into a series.
Yeah.
With Joey Foster.
And they're in a theater watching Blazing Saddles.
And he hears people in back of him when Mel does The Indian.
And this guy says to his wife,
he's speaking Sioux.
As in Sue me?
Now,
Harvey Korman's character,
Hedley Lamar,
was of course a takeoff on the actress
Hedley Lamar. What happened?
She sued.
She did sue.
She did sue.
And in the film, he said, what are you worried about?
We can sue her.
It's 1874.
Yeah.
You can sue her.
And she sued.
And come on, they threw it out.
It was scurrilous. But did, I heard Mel Brooks said,
just give us some money.
She's Hedy Lamarr.
That's what he said.
She didn't need the money.
She was very rich.
It doesn't, you know, and Harvey loved it.
Harvey was so great.
He just rolled with every punch.
What a wonderful performance.
You know, the performance, he's a terrible, terrible human being.
And he manages to make himself vulnerable.
Because he's so ridiculous.
But he's got a froggy.
He's got a toy froggy for the bathtub.
He's so ridiculous. He's so ridiculous.
But he's got a froggy.
He's got a toy froggy for the bathtub.
Even though he's just a black-hearted scoundrel,
there's so much dimension to the character.
He's just great.
And those speeches to the...
Wonderful.
Great speech.
Go do that voodoo that you do.
And Methodists.
Methodists.
He's a gem so let's
let's talk about
Madeline
coming in too
and again
this could possibly
be bullshit
she was fired
from the movie Mame
that is possible
right before
I think so
even read speculation
that she wanted
out of Mame
and she wanted
to work with you guys
so she tanked
the performance
to get fired.
Now, I don't know if that's true.
That's dubious.
Dubious.
I think that's dubious
because she was a thoroughgoing professional.
She was great.
Yeah.
She was just a wonderful woman.
That's an incomparable performance.
I know, but this is the kind of stuff you read.
Oh, I thought you meant that rumor.
No.
Yeah, it's incomparable.
Suey Generous.
There's nothing like it. No. Yeah no yeah no you had worked with her before i worked
with her variety show my first first time i worked with her was on my first show with bob
robert klein called comedy tonight oh yeah sketch play and uh i they wrote a great sketch
for her where she was doing a
Marlene Dietrich
character and wrote a song
called And They Ate
Garbage
at a supper club.
She was talking about
Weimar Germany.
And then I worked
the last show that she ever did, which was Cosby.
And she was fabulous.
She was dying.
And she worked through, and she was just this wonderful, free soul and pure instinct of talent.
She's great in everything. Everything. soul and pure instinct of talent.
She's great in everything.
She's great in Paper Moon and she's great in
High Anxiety.
She's just, again,
one of those people that just can't give a bad performance.
It always comes from an angle
you weren't quite expecting.
Even when
after Cleavon leaves and she says, you know? Even when, after Cleavon
leaves, and she says, oh, don't go
shotzy, and he
goes, I gotta get some vitamin E,
and he goes out, and she falls
against the door and says,
what a nice guy.
That's great!
And she's hugging herself.
She does it, you know? That was her line.
Really? That was her line. I don't want to leave out her performance in Young Frankenstein, too, where she's hugging herself. She's hugging herself. That was her line. Really? That was her line.
That was not an Instagram.
I don't want to leave out her performance in Young Frankenstein, too, where she's just electric.
There was a funny story I heard that all of you, like Mel Brooks was definitely in there in the commissary, and you ran into John Wayne.
Yeah, Mel supposedly asked John Wayne.
It's possible.
I've heard that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He had a great sense of humor.
He said that John Wayne said he heard in this new movie that they're going to have the line
blow it out of your ass. blow it out of your ass.
Blow it out of your ass.
Mel Brooks said, do you want to be in the picture?
He goes, well, I won't be in it
but I'll be the first one to see it.
Well,
it's a good story. I bet he wasn't the first
one to see it. There's so many apocryphal
stories about the making of this movie.
You could write a book about all the things
that never happened
bsbs yeah yeah um i just this is a tiny part because we're talking about actors in small
parts and i want to ask about alex karras uh bob ridgely doing the hangman the karloff the little
the tribute to the tower of london yeah a favorite of ours we had the child star from tower of london
on this podcast donnie dunnigan is the boy star from Tower of London on this podcast.
Donnie Dunnigan.
He's the boy from Son of Frankenstein.
Still alive and living in Dallas.
But, I mean, even the smallest part.
Or George Firth, who maybe has.
Or Dom DeLuise's wife, Carol Arthur.
The number one asshole in the state.
Everybody makes something wonderful out of the littlest moments.
Well, yeah, and the beauty of the hangman
is he's hanging a guy in a wheelchair.
Yes.
I mean, talk about brutal,
which is logistically very hard to even think,
how the fuck do you do that?
Right.
And the wheelchair is up there,
and this guy with a beard was just so nuts
that was the
Dr. Gillespie
murder
Dr. Gillespie
murder
yeah
what a reference
and Liam Dunn
too
as the preacher
did that
oh he was
he was great
but
during that speech
he was making
Matthew
Mark
Luke
and Duck and he after he finished a take
he was a gay man he said he was his he was horse and he said does anyone have a rectal mic He was so great.
This is a question about Richard, too.
Was it just the drugs?
Was it just that he was radioactive?
Or was it that Warner Brothers couldn't see a guy like this
who put the N-word on his album titles
being the face of Warner Brothers movies?
I think there is that.
I think he had a reputation for occasionally slugging a director or two.
I think his last albums had bombed.
He wasn't like a hot commodity.
Right, right.
And he was thrilled.
He was thrilled to get the role
because when I spoke to him, he was breathless.
I said...
You mean to write on it?
Yeah.
Yeah.
He said, would you want to come to New York and work with Mel Brooks?
He said, and he was, Mel Brooks?
He couldn't even get Brooks out.
Brooks?
Yeah.
And he was in awe of Mel.
And Mel was in awe of him.
What a brave, Lenny Bruce and then here comes.
Gilbert got to work with him late in his life on one of the Wilder pictures.
It was going to be the last of the, it was a terrible movie.
But what I found with him is I just walked on the set and he came over to me
and he treated me like he was some little kid meeting the biggest comic in the world.
How nice.
And he knew everything that I did.
I'm sure.
Oh, no.
He was a really complicated dude, but a lovely, beneath all that stuff,
he was just a lovely human being.
Because I remember he said to me, he goes, you're super funny.
It's like even if you don't want to be funny, you're going to be funny.
And I thought, wow.
I couldn't get over it.
The last time I saw him, I was talking to him about this Casablanca idea.
Oh, yeah.
You told him about that.
And he said at the end, and it was so great to see him again.
It had been 15 years.
He said, you know, I don't remember anything from that car.
Not a one thing.
He said, that's the worst part.
It's a blank.
Unbelievable.
You know, you can see, I never met the man, obviously,
but you can see, as edgy as his performances are, you can see the sweetness.
Oh, absolutely.
Bingo Long, the Traveling All-Stars movie, and Silver Streak, and you could see the warmth in the man come through in his performances.
There was like nine years old, always.
Yeah.
He was like a kid.
It comes through.
Absolutely.
In those early stand-up specials, too. There's a genuine sweetness to them
inside the darkness.
He said something to me.
He gave me some advice.
And he said,
Norm,
if you're ever in prison,
I said, yeah.
And you have to,
you have to, you have to,
go to the shower.
After
the shower,
don't put no towel around
you. I said,
why is that?
He said, because they'll think you're hiding
something good.
That's hilarious.
That's certainly good advice.
Sage advice.
I got a couple of quick
questions for you guys from
previous guests that we've had on this show.
Your friend Phil Rosenthal,
where everybody loves Raymond Crater,
wants to know Richard Pryor's
specific contributions.
His specific contributions. The specific contributions.
I know you guys don't usually.
Is there a written part of this exam?
Is this an oral exam?
No.
You know, we had a rule that nobody took credit for anything.
That's my joke.
And I don't think any of us ever did.
No, and there was all this mythology.
He wrote all the Mongo stuff.
Everybody wrote everything.
Mel says he wrote a lot of the Mongo stuff.
Mel did.
The only pant-pon in Game of Life.
But who remembers?
You guys don't know
who wrote what line.
He did not write that.
Okay.
We have a scoop.
That was not...
It was really the United Nations.
I think I remember specific lines he wrote, but it blurs.
And wasn't it that it was so crazy in the writer's room, you don't know if it was your line.
It's the five guys shouting.
It's the game of telephone.
It goes around and around, and it comes back.
That's it.
It goes around and around, and it comes back.
That's it, you know?
After time in the room, did you notice that you guys all developed a different kind of a,
did it get a little smoother?
Was there a different kind of system?
It was just, there was no system. Or was it chaos?
There was no system.
I mean, the system was this poor woman trying to get all this stuff straight.
You've described it as more like being in a Marx Brothers movie.
Well, it was.
And what was wonderful, and this goes back to the, there's no red,
you go through in the red lights.
We were trying to figure out
whether a character should be named Dwayne or Earl.
One simple character.
And I said,
how about Dwhirl?
And Mel said,
he dictated,
Dwhirl, a cowpoke starts doing fancy.
It was in.
It was in.
That was it.
That was it.
When you said Dwhirl, that was it. H in that was it that was it when you said twirl that was it
hilarious
he never made it either
twirl
our friend Michael Weber
Norman
who's also a screenwriter
he wrote 500 Days of Summer
he's been on
oh I like that
it's a good movie
he's been on this show
he said I have hundreds
of questions
but they're all about
Yes Georgio
he's no friend of ours
touche Michael yeah Andrew's friend but yes, Giorgio. He's no friend of ours.
Touché, Michael.
Andrew's friend, Beverly D'Angelo,
was here a couple of weeks ago.
I have no questions, but I love Andy,
and I can't wait to work with him again.
Oh, that's sweet.
I love her, too.
Isn't she a doll?
She is great.
She was pretty bawdy on this show.
We welcomed it.
She has that streak.
She certainly does.
Last but not least,
Treat Williams says he wants you both
to know that he's deeply
offended by the farting scene.
Okay.
I respect that.
Thank you, Treat.
He clearly has some
intestinal issues.
And are there any more
Brando stories?
I remember how you started that last show.
Good Brando stories.
Forget about it.
Oh, yes.
That Brando fucked Richard Pryor.
Yeah, that was his icebreaker.
Yeah.
I'd been in the room for one minute.
And yet you came back.
He asked me.
I did come back.
I take a punch.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's based on something Quincy Jones said last year.
I don't know.
Maybe he's not with it anymore.
Why would he fuck Richie Pryor when he had Wally Cox?
There you go.
You'll figure that one out.
I read that Blazing Saddles is, for what this is worth,
Michael Bloomberg's favorite movie.
Have you heard this?
Yes.
Mayor Bloomberg.
Yes, it is his favorite movie.
And it's a favorite of Barack Obama's. It was the first R-rated movie he ever saw heard this? Yes. Mayor Bloomberg. Yes, it is his favorite movie. And it's a favorite of Barack Obama's.
It was the first R-rated movie he ever saw.
Yes.
And he gave him
that award, you know, the
citizenship award. Absolutely.
And Mel was,
I saw him there. I'm surprised he
showed up for that, but he did.
We will return to
Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing amazing colossal podcast after this
a little bit about the reception too because i've heard you talk norman about seeing lines
around the block and going in when it was finally released and you you you saw you were wandering
down east side or yeah and you saw theater theater also gone yeah yeah but i also saw it in He sighed. Yeah. Sutton Theater. Sutton Theater. Also gone.
Yeah.
But I also saw it in Midtown.
Was it the Roxy?
Originally, we were just in two theaters.
We were in one in L.A. and at the Sutton.
And a friend of mine worked in that building where the Sutton was.
He worked in some company there.
And he called me like at noon on the first day.
He said, there's a line around the block.
I said, are you serious?
Wow.
A movie you thought was never going to get released.
I said, it was unbelievable.
Yeah.
And Madeline Kahn's mother lived in that neighborhood.
Oh, yeah.
And she would go into the Sutton Theater every day.
With a clicker, right?
Yeah.
How many times did you guys go in and see it with an audience?
And now it's happened many times over the years, obviously,
as it's trotted out. Well, when it first came out, I would, you know,
get chummy with the people at the Sutton.
Say, someone go in for 10 minutes.
Because you want to hear that.
Of course.
You wanted the reward. He said, someone go in for 10 minutes. Because he wanted to hear that. Of course. He wanted the reward.
You wanted the eruption,
you know.
And you knew
when the laughs were coming.
Once you know,
it's just,
it's.
I may have seen it
15 times at the Sutton.
Because I'd walk home
from past the theater.
And years later,
we showed it
at Radio City.
They did some
tribute to
old Warner Brothers pictures. And they asked Norman Knight to speak at the, at Radio City. They did some tribute to old Warner Brothers pictures,
and they asked Norman Knight to speak at Radio City Musical,
and they screened the movie.
There were 6,000 people.
And it was the same thing.
It was like a greatest hits album.
Now, here it comes.
Watching it again last night, too,
and this is one of the things that sticks with you,
is not only is it funny,
but it's a very, very broad comedy that's about something.
Yes.
It's about an idea.
There have been funny movies like Airplane and Young Frankenstein is brilliant in its own way as well.
But this is a movie that I don't want to make it sound too highfalutin, but it's making a statement about the history of this country.
It certainly does. It's making a statement about the history of this country, the history of race relations in this country that we're not that far removed from, though we think we are.
It tears at the American myth that the West was settled by white heroes instead of on the backs of immigrants.
It's got a lot to say.
It's courageous.
It does.
And it's a love affair, after all is said and done, between these characters.
And that's the beauty of those two performances, because you really do believe those guys have a real affection for each other.
Never seen a better buddy-buddy relationship on screen.
And the ending is surreal, where they escape from the movie.
Right.
Let's drive me off this film.
Yes.
No, just the limos.
The limos are beautiful.
Oh, I love all that.
The Count Basie.
I love the breaking of the fourth wall.
The Count Basie stuff.
Count Basie stuff.
It's just great.
I just want to read you guys a quote from a website about the movie.
This is interesting.
The language the writers use in Blazing Saddles
has been culturally shamed
out of the national lexicon
in small part because of art like Blazing Saddles,
which aggressively shamed and marginalized
anyone who acted in such a way.
This is written by who?
It's on a website called Den of Geek,
which is actually a pretty smart website
about filmmaking.
It's interesting that, you know,
we're supposed to be in a post-racial age
after the election of Obama.
Remember that whole thing?
It's, you know, we've had a,
we had Rod Serling's daughter here
and we were
talking about
the Twilight Zone
and what a
wonderful job
he always did
of putting
important information
into entertainment
in that case
in science fiction
you know
the monsters
that do on
Maple Street
I don't know
if you know
this famous
Twilight Zone
episode
House of Un-American
Activities
all of that stuff
being done
as a science fiction
anthology series.
You guys managed
to do the same thing
with the comedy.
Yeah.
Maybe the broadest
comedy ever made
that has
a theme.
A theme.
And an ideology.
It's something that's
important
and worth saying.
And I don't,
that's why,
one of the reasons
I don't think the film's
ever going to go out of style.
After 45 years, it hasn't gone out of style yet.
It's not going to go out of style.
Yeah.
I just, you know, Mel goes around the country and does.
Yeah, I saw him at Radio City.
Does the, Radio City does.
Every time he goes somewhere, it sells out.
And you can track the laughs, and it's a revelation.
It's fresh.
It's new, and there are new audiences.
Yeah, that's the thing.
Yeah, and even in 74, there was a lot going on when you guys were writing it.
I mean, Nixon, Watergate had not happened yet.
The Southern Strategy was still alive.
Dr. King had just been killed, what, seven, eight years before.
So on some level, it must have occurred to you guys, not only are we making a, I guess this is a question,
not only are we making a crazy comedy that's offensive, but we have a responsibility here?
No.
You didn't think about that?
No, I thought, well, that's what the movie was.
The movie was about that. Now, how do you make it didn't think about that? No, I thought, well that's what the movie was. The movie was about that.
How do you make it funny and still
about that? Does it get in your way if you think
about that? Does it get in the way of the funny? Absolutely.
You can't second guess yourself.
I want to know why we're not being
interviewed by John Meacham.
Yeah.
It's an important
movie.
It is. It is.
It is.
I don't want to lose sight of that.
You guys remember somebody named Ralph Manza?
Ralph Manza?
Yeah.
Or Manza.
I bring this up.
Not Mamza.
No, I was working on a terrible sitcom in the 90s,
and he walked in to audition,
and I recognized him immediately.
And I got up and I said,
you're Ralph Manza.
And he had, you know, a working character actor had never been recognized him immediately. And I got up and I said, you're Ralph Manza. And he had, you know,
a working character actor
had never been recognized by name,
only face.
And he was thrilled
that somebody for the first time
knew his name
because I'm so obsessed
with Blazing Saddles.
He's the Hitler in the commissary.
They lose me after the bunker scene.
There's got to be any picture
that Mel is involved in that has to be at least one Hitler. Of course. There's got to be any picture that Mel is involved in.
There has to be at least one hit.
Of course.
That's Ralph Manza.
Did he make it possible?
Did Mel make it possible for the Jojo Rabbit?
That's interesting.
That's an interesting question.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Maybe.
See, now that film is coming out,
and we're supposedly living in a climate where there's no room for that movie. And yet
did he ever tell
Frankie Lane that he
was singing for a comedy?
No, no. That would have ruined it.
Frankie Lane thought he was doing a hit
single, which he was.
It's a great song.
You want to ask these guys anything else, Gil, before we let Norman dry off?
Yeah, no.
I'm dry, dog.
Everything we've brought up has been untrue.
We've debunked one myth after the other.
Andrew was going to tell us why he chose the pseudonym Warren Bogle for Big Trouble.
Well, I wasn't going to put my name on that.
Yeah.
That's the first thing.
It had to be some pseudonym
after Cassavetes wreaked havoc.
Oh, God.
No, W.C. Fields used a name,
Charles C. Bogle,
on a bunch of scripts that he wrote
because he wrote all the old stuff,
but he didn't use his name.
And he used the name Charles Bogle.
So I just switched Charles to Warren.
I thought it was hipper.
So that's Warren.
Didn't want to go with Alan Smith.
Alan Smith, he's only for the DGA?
No, no.
It's a cliche.
A real good one.
When you left here last time,
you didn't tell us any James Caan or Burt Reynolds stories.
Do you have a quick, even if it's just a thought or a quick memory?
James, Jimmy Kahn really had like stage fright.
And he worked at the last possible second, you know.
This is Honeymoon in Vegas.
And Honeymoon in Vegas, you know.
And he's always bullshitting and he's a great bullshitter.
And he talks, he's a talkie.
He likes to tell dirty jokes.
He's done dirty jokes, just schmooze and and i i realized i would have to walk with him and listen
and i would walk with him walk with him and walk with him until we got to where
this the shot was gonna be and then he realized it was all set up. He said, you son of a bitch.
There was no way.
If I was waiting
in front of the camper,
he'd have 50 other stories
about, you know,
Godfather.
I mean, he had great...
Oh, we got to get him on here
if he'll do it.
He has a wonderful story
about the start of
the first table reading
of Godfather.
He says,
they say,
start,
and Marlon has the first line.
And Marlon's like.
Nobody can hear a word he's saying.
It's Marlon Brando.
So now the other actors.
They're just all mumbling for three hours.
And Francis Culp was going completely crazy.
He can't hear anything.
He had a lot of great stories.
He did an interview recently with Alec Baldwin on his podcast.
Oh, I have to listen.
Yeah.
Jimmy did?
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's worth listening to.
What about, I'm going to throw one at you, Norman.
You worked on a show called The Bay City Amusement Company.
I found Pat McCormick's name in the cast.
Pat McCormick,
he was wonderful.
He played
one of the writers.
It was a
Saturday Night Live type
situation in San Francisco.
And I found
somebody brought me this guy.
They said, you got to see this guy.
We were looking for the head writer, the head sketch player.
And he said, this kid, you got to see him.
And he comes in.
It's Robin Williams.
And he comes in. It's Robin Williams. And he just exploded.
And I called.
We were in Burbank, and I called NBC.
I said, I have him.
I have the character.
I'm coming down.
We were there in a half hour.
He was brilliantly funny.
They asked him to step out of the room, and they said, too crazy.
Too crazy.
Wow.
So funny.
And the next thing, which even was dumber, they said, why don't you do it?
You know all the words.
To you?
Yeah, to me.
I said, what?
Who are these geniuses?
I digress,
but Pat McCormick came in the first day.
I remember the first joke.
He was waving
a piece of paper.
He said,
I got my license.
I can shit in the street.
Just a television show?
Pat McCormick.
This was just a rehearsal.
Oh, a rehearsal.
And then the second thing he said, he sat down and he said,
Oh, I have Lenny Bruce's old typewriter.
It has four extra F's in it.
That's funny.
We've heard a lot of stories about him on this show.
Like putting his newborn baby on a platter at a party and putting a garnish around it.
He was a Harvard graduate,
drove around in a red Rolls Royce and he ended up in the Writers Guild home.
Supposedly rooming with Stanley
Kramer. And so Jack Riley came in
and he said to Pat,
Oh, I see you finally got a meeting.
That's good.
Can you imagine living in an old writer's home?
That is the scariest thing I've ever heard of.
Just the thought of it.
I couldn't sleep with one eye open.
I maybe have one more question for each of you.
Timmy Rogers.
Ring any bells?
You worked with Timmy Rogers
on a show called
The Wonderful World of Aggravation
with Klugman and Randall?
Does this mean anything?
Holy moly.
That's like an Alan King.
Larry Storch, Alan King?
Yeah.
No memories.
Boy, I'm trying to forget that.
Okay.
I loved Alan King, by the way.
Alan King was, I loved him because he loved writers.
And he owned part of, I think he owned the Eastern Distribution for Tanker Agent.
Yes, he had some booze connection.
Did he? Yeah.
You want to tell these guys your Alan King story?
It's worth it.
I remember there was a big show, a big comedy show at Lincoln Center, and he was the emcee.
And he introduced me.
I went up.
And I was out there in jeans and a sweatshirt and sneakers.
And as I'm walking off and the audience is applauding, Alan King goes back up to the mic, looks at me, stares at me, and then looks at the crowd and goes,
When I come up on stage, my hair is combed and quaffed
my suit
is pressed
my shoes are shined
and then he walks out
looking like he
rolled around in shit
laughter
laughter
laughter
laughter laughter goodnight Good night.
It's been great, folks.
I want to tell our listeners,
if you haven't seen Norman's wonderful movie,
My Favorite Year, what are you waiting for?
By the way, we had you, we had Macy here,
we had Richard Benjamin here.
We have put the word out
about this wonderful movie.
Well, we are now developing
a TV series
based on it. Wonderful. Yes, with
Barry Levinson and Tom Fontana.
You couldn't get two better guys.
The greatest. What a fantastic
movie. So many levels.
We also have to recommend, we didn't talk
about The In-Laws, but we could do
whole episodes about these wonderful
movies. If our listeners, if you haven't
seen The In-Laws, what are you waiting for?
What are you doing listening to this show?
And Andrew, it's wonderful it could happen
to you, which I think of as the
best Frank Capra movie that he never made.
Bless your heart.
It's terrific.
And it's a great valentine to this city we all live in.
That's all I got, Gil.
Yeah.
Unless you want to tell Norman about Cosby and the Asian models.
We can get out of here.
Last time we were doing John MacGyver imitations.
Oh yeah!
Hit him with your John MacGyver imitations. Oh, yeah. Hit him with your John MacGyver.
Okay.
Everything must be run according to schedule.
We will have no slackers working here.
I run this company like the captain of a ship.
It's my favorite. It's sick. It just kills me. It's sick. Have you heard of Peter Lorre? Yes. Yeah. company like the captain of a ship.
It's my favorite.
It's sick.
It just kills me. It's sick.
Have you heard of Peter Lorre?
Yes.
The MacGyver is so perverse.
I know.
I've heard other Peter Lorres.
Nobody does John MacGyver.
John MacGyver didn't do it.
The Bill Cosby story is the writers of the Cosby show told me that he had an hour set
told me that he had an hour set apart in the schedule,
in the day where he teaches comedy to Asian models.
So you...
Norman's had his own Cosby stories.
Intensively.
Yeah.
What did you say?
It explains why you see so many beautiful Asian comedians. So many funny Asian models.
The comedy clubs are packed with Asian models.
I got in trouble.
We had Griffin Dunn here, and I did not ask any questions about Johnny Dangerously.
I had lunch with Griffin. He's the best.
He's really good. And he's in
This Is Us now. Yes,
he's doing all kinds of stuff.
Yeah, he's great. So my fans,
our listeners will get mad at us if I
don't ask one Johnny Dangerously story.
Was it loosely
based on Manhattan melodrama?
The Clark Gable, William Powell? No.
Not at all.
Okay.
There was a guy named Bud Austin
who was head of Paramount Television
said,
hey, you did Blazing Saddles,
why not do Blazing Tommy Guns?
And that was the genesis.
And that was it.
That was it.
What a cast in that movie.
Great.
Great.
It was a lot of fun.
And, you know, it resonates.
It's on, they tell me, on social media.
It's a big hit.
Yeah.
They got after me for not asking Johnny.
By the way, Andrew, since you were last here, the stories of the Brando phone call levels.
Yes.
Our listeners, I'll send you more.
I'm still getting mad about it.
Is it the tuna fish?
The tuna fish. The tuna fish.
The tuna fish one, tuna fish two.
You had to be there.
It's all true.
This was fun.
This was a lot of fun.
It's just so easy to interview you guys and talk to you.
We're sorry nothing that we said was true.
It's better that way.
If it was true, it would be so depressing.
Oh, yeah, that's right. right that's right you'll come back we have a million more questions about john cleese and and uh and joe bologna and so much so much stuff we could go on for hours
and this has been gilbert godfrey's amazing colossal podcast with my co-host, Frank Santopadre,
and our return guest, Andrew Bergman and Norman Steinberg,
who, among a million other credits, helped write the film Blazing Saddles,
which is celebrating its 45th anniversary.
You guys have officially been friends for 45 years.
We have.
Pretty good.
47 years.
More than that.
We met in 72.
Came out in 45.
We met in 72.
Right.
You throw a great party, too, by the way.
We're older gentlemen.
Gentlemen.
Older gentlemen.
Older Jewish gentlemen.
I mean, high middle age.
I'm approaching high middle age.
We love talking to you guys.
Thanks for schlepping out
in the rain.
Yeah,
yeah,
enough.
Next time
we get a
cab service.
Let's step
up a little.
Talk to him.
Here I stand,
the goddess
of desire.
Set men
on fire.
I have
this power.
Morning,
noon,
and night,
it's wink and dancing.
Some quick romancing.
And then a shower.
Stage door johnnies constantly surround me.
They always hound me with one request.
Who can satisfy their lustful habit?
I'm not a rabbit
I need some rest
I'm tired
Sick and tired of love
I've had my fill of love, from below and above.
Tired, tired of being admired, tired of love uninspired
Let's face it, I'm tired
I've been with thousands of men
Again and again
They promised the moon
They're always coming and going
And going and coming.
And always too soon.
White girls, I'm tired.
Tired of playing the game.
Into the crying shame.
I'm so tired.
Got the ceramic sauce. I'm so tired. God damn it, I'm exhausted. Hello, cowboy. What's your name?
Taxman.
Taxman?
Tell me, taxman, are you in show business?
Nope.
Well, then why don't you get your friggin' speedo back?
Yeah. You friggin' beat up!
Hello, handsome.
Is that a 10-gallon hat,
or are you just enjoying the show? Oh, Miss Willie.
Oh, my lovely baby.
Push it, Jack.
Put it there, baby.
Put it...
I'm tired of playing the game
Ain't it a cryin' shame?
I'm so tired
She's tired, she's tired
Sick and tired of love
She's had a bill of love She's done a snake from below and above
Can't you see she's sick? Tired, she's bushed, tired of being admired
Let her alone, tired of love and despise, get off the phone
She's tired, don't you know she's pooped?
I've been with thousands of men
Again and again
They sing the same tune
They start with Byron and Shirley
Then chomp on your belly
And bust your balloon
I'm tired
Tired
Tired of playing the game
Ain't it a frickin' shame?
I'm so...
Let's face it
Everything below the waist is kaput! ¡Escapón!