Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - GGACP Classic: Bob Hope Specials and Richard Lester
Episode Date: January 18, 2024GGACP celebrates the 92nd birthday of innovative film director -- and long-sought podcast guest -- Richard Lester (b. January 19, 1932), by revisiting this double topic mini-ep from 2016. In this epi...sode, the boys look back on the American-born expatriate's impressive list of collaborators (Peter Sellers, Sean Connery, the Beatles, Peter Cook & Dudley Moore, et al.) as well as his influence on everyone from Martin Scorsese to Steven Soderbergh. Also: "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum"! John Lennon wins the war! Ted Bessell does George Jessel! The enduring appeal of "A Hard Day's Night"! And Gilbert weighs in on the Spice Girls movie! PLUS: The very first discussion of Bob Hope's "Jack Frost"! 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.
Colossal Obsessions.
Look at you.
I remembered it this time.
I'm impressed.
You know, I should have had cue cards all this time.
You know what I heard about Carson and cue cards?
Did you know this?
I heard Jackie, actually.
We just had Jackie Martling on the show.
That Carson would have his cue card guy move from side to side so he would do the jokes in succession.
And you would see him turn his head throughout the course of the monologue.
Did you know that?
No.
So he would do one to the left and one to the center and one to the right,
and he would keep having the guy move.
Instead of flipping the cards, he would move down the line in succession.
I heard that Bob Hope, when he was like, you know, like 500.
Well, when his daughter was in his ear.
Oh, yes, yes.
And his eyes were like beet red
color.
And I heard
the cue cards,
like one letter
would take up the side of a
building.
Did you ever see, I don't know, you know, I think
that YouTube has been scrubbed of the
last couple of Bob Hope specials, but there's
one. Oh, there's this one where he's Jack Frost.
Yes.
I remember seeing that.
Bless your heart for remembering that.
I remember seeing that when it was on.
It's terrifying.
Yeah.
And you can see it.
It's on YouTube.
Yeah, because he might as well be dead.
There's no proof he's not dead, the way he looks.
He looks like he's been dead for five years.
And he's dressed up in a Jack Frost outfit and a pointed beard.
He's got icicles hanging off of him.
And a pointed hat with a ball on top.
And she's...
Delores is doing all the singing.
Yes.
And it is hard.
And you could see if he is alive,
he has no fucking idea of his own name.
It's gold.
Every now and then he says,
I'm Jack Rust. Oh, says, I'm Jack Rust.
Oh, yeah.
I'm Jack Rust.
It's truly wonderful.
It's like a Bob Hope puppet.
I remember,
I think Louis Anderson
told me this story that
Bob Hope,
toward the end of his life, was there.
And it's like, you know, where he'd look out the tops of his eyes and he didn't know his name, whatever.
And there were a group of people who were old cronies, like old writers and friends. And each one was going up and saying, oh, and Bob's a great man and a great humanitarian
and a terrific guy and greatest comic, blah, blah, blah.
And then one idiot in the crowd starts going, speech, speech.
And it's like you could see Dolores panicking.
Unbelievable.
Because, you know, Bob Hope should not be talking.
Yes.
And so that gets the rest of the crowd going, speech, speech, speech, speech.
And Dolores nervously puts the mic to Bob's mouth and goes, uh, Bob, would you like to say something?
And he goes, decaf.
It's sort of like Karloff saying the one word as the monster.
Antipasto. Antipasto.
Antipasto.
I heard another Bob Hope story.
Give it to me.
We're way off topic.
Yeah.
Well, I think it'll be Bob Hope this session.
Your obsession's going to be Bob Hope.
Yes.
Because I heard
another story.
Of course, Bob Hope was
in... He would
take those girls
to overseas.
Uh-huh. For the USO tours.
Yeah, and I think
pretty much, I had heard stories,
he would, like, threaten to leave them
in the middle of the jungle or wherever they were unless they fucked him.
My story is not nearly as good as that.
And and but I heard like a story like writers.
If you work for Bob Hope, you had to be like a fireman on call any hour of the night and day when the bell rang.
And, you know, like so he would think nothing of calling someone up three in the morning.
Oh, yeah.
He needs some jokes about Nixon going to China.
And then they'd have to, like, get up in the 90s.
Yeah. Yes. Yeah, exactly. China and then they'd have to like get up in the 90s yeah yes yeah exactly and so one time
one of the writers was uh in bed with his wife and the phone rang it was past midnight
and and the writer turned to his wife and said, OK, if that's Bob, I'm not here.
OK.
And so the phone rings.
The wife picks it up and she goes, hello.
And it goes, yeah, she's serving there.
And she goes, oh, no, Bob, he's not here.
And he goes, oh, well, do you know where he's going?
And no, I really don't.
And well, you got any way of getting in touch with him?
And she goes, no, I really have no way of getting in touch with him.
And, you know, you know, and I'll be back.
And she goes, no, I don't.
And, you know, you know, and I'll be back.
And she goes, no, I don't. And then Hope goes, well, do you have any idea where he is?
Yeah, do you have any idea where he is right now?
And she goes, well, Bob, he told me he was going to your house.
told me he was going to your house, and right on cue, Bob Hope goes,
ah, gee, I'm sorry, there he is now.
He just walked in.
Hilarious.
You ever hear of a guy named Gene Perret?
P-E-R-R-E-T.
Gene?
That name sounds so familiar. He was Bob.
I believe he's still with us.
He was Bob Hope's probably number one guy, his number one writer.
Yeah.
And probably now living in Toluca Lake somewhere, Bob Hope country.
I think we could probably track him down and get him on the show.
If we don't send this to him.
Also not a rush.
Also not a rush.
Someone I know lived in the Valley
said he saw Bob and Dolores toward the end,
and they were in a supermarket,
like a Ralph's in L.A.,
and they got to the register,
and she went into her purse
and pulled out a coupon.
Oh!
Like a 90-cent coupon off of cream corn.
And meanwhile, he owned Toluca Lake.
He owned Los Angeles.
He owned Los Angeles.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think the three people owned California.
Well, Gene Autry.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Gene Autry, Bob Hope, and I think, oh, Bing Crosby.
And Harold Lloyd.
Yeah, Harold Lloyd and Fred McMurray.
That's right, Fred McMurray.
Owned a lot of them.
Yeah, Fred McMurray.
Yeah, and I think between all of those, they own the state of California.
So your obsession, completely by accident, because we got talking about cue cards, are bad Bob Hope specials.
You know what I miss?
The ones we're used to do, like, where he'd play a cheerleader with Ann Jillian.
The ones in the 80s where he'd put the giant bazooms under the sweater.
And the rouge.
My wife says they don't call it rouge anymore.
I got some blotch on his face.
And I remember, too, with Bob Hope and Lucille Ball.
Yeah.
And especially when they'd work together.
And it was like I'd be a kid watching this and going, oh, my God, they're so out of touch.
Oh, yeah.
The beetle wig.
Yes.
Yes.
They'd put a, you know, yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I'm one of them beetles.
You know.
Or Lucy would be, hey, we're hippies.
We got to find Dave Thomas and get him to come on and do his Bob Hope.
Oh, yes.
He's the best Bob Hope in the business.
And then I remember they would do, yeah, they would do that.
Oh, God.
And also, like, in Bob Hope's movies,
first he started out as this kind of, like, wacky, eye-rolling, effeminate guy
jumping around.
He was funny.
Yep.
Sure.
And then in the later movies-
Without Bing.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He became that TV Bob-O where he'd just stand there and talk.
And it looked like he would take time for the laugh.
Yeah. Like they put in a laugh
track. We do that mug face.
Oh, yes. They used to have the football
Americans would run out on the old Bob
Hope specials. The college all
stars would come out and each one of them would
hit their mark and
say, hi, Mr. Hope.
You know, Fran Tarkenton.
I can't remember the school he went to
you can't you can't he and he'd go and he'd do he'd just look into the camera and like do that
bad oh yeah and he had a line for each one of them for like 40 players as they would run out
and and i remember yeah there were those later movies like Cancel My Reservation, which they'd never allow now.
Because of the racism.
And he basically, it takes place in the West, and he's basically Bob Hope, but they don't call him Bob Hope.
Right.
basically Bob Hope, but they don't call him Bob Hope.
And at the end, there's like a scene where it's a lynch mob,
and the lynch mob is basically doing a Bob Hope roast.
And it's so fucking obvious that none of these people were there on the same day or even on the same location.
Right.
Like they'd pull over and all of a sudden
they'd be Johnny Carson and then Flip Wilson.
Yeah, these cameos.
Yeah.
And it's like you'd go,
they're nowhere near each other.
These two have probably done months.
What's worse, the later day Hope movies in the 60s or
the specials, the TV specials in the
70s and 80s? Oh, God.
If you could find those specials, I think
they were taken out of circulation because
he was so doddering. Those specials
were scary. Yeah, his daughter,
Linda Hope, he had an
IFB in his ear and she was
whispering. She was feeding
him the lines at the end.
I'm going to change. I'm going to change courses here.
I accidentally. That's all right. We'll do a future episode. Somebody, a famous director
turned 84 today. And so we've never I don't think we've ever talked about a director specifically for one of these things.
Yeah, he was a child prodigy born in Philadelphia.
A lot of people think this guy was a Brit because he did his best work in Britain.
And that's Richard Lester.
Yes.
Yes, that's one of those people everyone assumed was English because of Hard Day's Night, movies like that.
But what's interesting about him, and he turned 84 today.
I mean, he's been a recluse for years, which is another interesting thing about him.
But he was born in Philly and he did live television in Philly.
And he was influenced by Ernie Kovacs because Ernie Kovacs was working out of the same television studio.
And he was a child prodigy.
He went to college at 15 and was going to become a psychologist and then fell in love with show business.
And he moved to the U.K. because he thought he would get more work.
And that's how he was noticed by Peter Sellers.
He went to work for
the goon show and that led to the beatles basically hand picking him to make a hard day's night and
help and he made some great films i mean not only those beetle films uh he was on our original list
we talked about him yeah for the show i don't think he gives interviews yeah um unfortunately
but did you ever hear a movie called The Knack
and How to Get It? Yes. Yes. About where it's like the nerdy English guy. Correct. Cool. Played by
Michael Crawford, who would go on to become the Phantom of the Opera. And he made that between
the two Beatle movies. Terrific stuff. The first screened appearance of Jacqueline Bissett and
Charlotte Rampling. Wow. By the way, The knack on how to get it, a little trivia.
Oh, very important.
Yes.
Bissett.
What did I say?
You said Bissett.
Jacqueline Bissett.
Bissett.
Jacqueline.
It's kind of like calling her Demi Moore instead of Demi Moore.
What about Wit Bissell?
Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha.
And then he directed A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum, which was Keaton's last screen appearance.
So he worked with all of these great comedians.
He worked with Keaton.
He worked with Sellers and Spike Milligan and the Goons.
And then he made an anti-war picture called How I Won the War, the one with John Lennon.
Yes, yes.
And he has this great body of work.
Petulia with George C. Scott and Julie Christie.
You know that picture?
Oh, yeah.
Which he came back to America to do.
And you don't hear much about him.
You know, maybe if Hard Day's Night is dug out of mothballs or, you know, people are talking about the Beatle movies or some of the old cellar stuff.
But he's really a great director with a great body of work.
And interestingly, there was a death of a famous British actor on the set of his last movie.
And there is some speculation that he held himself responsible for the death of this British actor named Roy Kinnear.
Yeah.
Who was injured in a stunt and broke his pelvis and then died of a heart attack in the hospital.
Oh.
And that was in the late 80s, and he never directed another film.
Because he made those three Musketeer pictures, the ones with Raquel Welch and Christopher Lee.
And what's his name in it?
Reid?
Yeah, Oliver Reid was one of the Musketeers, and Michael York.
He made a revisionist Robin Hood movie called Robin and Marion with Sean Connery.
He did some really great work and influenced Scorsese and Soderbergh and Coppola and the Coen brothers.
And so if you guys don't know Richard Lester, look at his stuff.
It's funny.
It just gets me onto another thing of someone was
talking to John Lennon and he said when they were making that, when they were making A Hard Day's
Night, they had sent this writer to travel with them. And he said the writer came up with well you know john's the sharp one paul's the
whimsical one uh uh ringo is the silly little kid george is the is the serious and he said it was
you know john said it was all bullshit oh sure, sure. Yeah. Oh, sure. But those films are so much fun.
I, Hard Day's Night still works.
Yeah, it's just a joy.
I just saw it in a movie theater, I think, two years ago or last year.
And you got to see the difference here.
Well, I mean, not like you were expecting it to be a Hard Day's Night, but the Spice Girls movie.
Oh.
Spice Girls was trying to be hard day's night. You saw the Spice Girls movie?
Well, ten times.
Incredible.
Because you don't get the full story.
Right.
Of course.
You've got to come back.
And you remember my jessel-issell Bissett routine?
Of course.
Of course.
That's what I was referencing.
I never knew it was Jacqueline Bissett all these years.
Bissett Bessel.
Whit Bessel.
Yeah, Ted Bessel.
Right.
Whit Bessel.
Georgie Jessel.
Isn't there a joke, a review by the Jewish press?
We like Bissell but only
Oh, we like Bessel
Bessel
Bessel but only a
Oh, the Jewish press says
We like Bessel but only a Bissell
That's the first time I ever saw you do stand-up at the comic strip
I saw you do that bit
Yeah
In the, I'm going to date myself and you
In the late 70s.
Oh, jeez.
Early 80s.
Oh, jeez.
So Richard Lester worked with everybody from the Beatles to Peter Sellers to Buster Keaton to Zero Mostel, Peter Cook and Dudley Moore.
Marty Feldman is in the bed-sitting room, which is a post-apocalyptic comedy.
Look at his films.
He hasn't made a film in a long time.
It's a long shot to get him on the show, but boy,
wouldn't that be fun to talk to him
about those Beatles movies.
And then Ann Jillian to talk about.
And then we'll call Ann Jillian to talk about.
Talk about Bob
and Brooke Shields.
Show you're 14.
He was always so lecherous.
He would have.
So we've been talking about the great director Richard Lester.
Richard Lester, who was not British.
And the sad, hysterical decline.
This has been... Colossal depression.
Yes.
Gilbert and Gottfried's colossal suicidal depression.
See you next time. 1, 2, 1, 2, 3, 2 Give me that fractal
Colossal obsessions
Give me that fractal
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