Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - GGACP Classic: Bruce Vilanch
Episode Date: June 2, 2022To celebrate the start of Pride Month, GGACP revisits this memorable 2018 interview with legendary comedy writer-performer Bruce Vilanch. In this episode, Bruce looks back at the “golden age” of ...TV variety shows and specials, including “Donny & Marie,” “The Brady Bunch Hour,” “The Star Wars Holiday Special” and “The Paul Lynde Halloween Special.” (all written or co-written by Bruce himself). Also, Margaret Hamilton makes her move, Robert Reed channels Carmen Miranda, Jack Benny does “The Match Bit” and Gilbert takes over the new “Hollywood Squares.” PLUS: Jack Palance! Bob Hope’s filing cabinet! “Wayne Newton at SeaWorld”! Bruce hangs with Tallulah Bankhead! And the Oscar joke that never made it to air! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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What happens when 20 extremely athletic Canadians
who thrive on competition
and won't settle for less than number one
find themselves on a team?
Taking on jaw-dropping obstacles all across Canada is one thing.
Working together on a team with some pretty big personalities is another.
It's a new season of Canada's Ultimate Challenge,
and sparks are gonna fly.
New episodes Sundays.
Watch free on CBC Gem.
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 Peter Riegert, and I'm on Gilbert Gottfried's amazing, colossal podcast.
Listen in. Hi, this is Gilbert Gottfried,
and this is Gilbert Gottfried's amazing, colossal podcast
with my co-host, Frank Santopadre, and we're once again recording at Nutmeg with our engineer,
Frank Furtarosa.
Our guest this week is a producer, actor, songwriter, activist, TV personality,
and one of the most prolific and sought-after comedy writers
in the history of the entertainment business.
As a performer, you've seen him in movies like Mahogany, The Morning After,
You Don't Mess With the Sohan.
You Don't Mess With the Zohan. You Don't Mess With the Title.
And The Aristocrats.
Yes.
I'm familiar with that one.
As well as hit TV shows such as The Nanny, The Simpsons, The Martin Short Show, RuPaul's Drag Race, Hollywood Squares, another one I think I've caught, as well as the Broadway production of Hairspray in the role of Edna Turnblad.
As a writer, he's contributed to dozens of specials and award shows, including Comic Relief, the Primetime Emmy Awards, the Tony Awards, the People's Choice Awards, and the American Comedy Awards, as well as an impressive 23 Academy Award telecasts.
He's also taken home six Emmy Awards himself for his writing.
But wait, there's more.
He's also wrote some of the most iconic, for lack of another word, variety shows and specials of the 1970s,
including the Donnie and Marie Show,
the Brady Bunch Variety Hour,
the Paul Lynn Halloween Special,
and last but definitely
not least,
the Star Wars
holiday special.
Religious experience.
In a career spanning
five decades, he's written
jokes, songs, and
special material
for such artists as
Cher, Carol Burnett, Billy Crystal, Steve Martin,
Nathan Lane, Lily Tomlin, and of course his longtime friend and muse, Bette Midler.
He's even had the honor of working with beloved entertainer Gilbert Gottfried.
Please welcome to the show an artist of many talents and a man who delights in the fact
that he once got Marie Osmond to sing Don't't let the sun go down on me.
Our pal, Bruce Valanche.
And the Mormons have never recovered.
Bruce is so sharp, he knows the jokes that are coming in the intro.
Before they come, he's never seen it.
To anyone who will listen.
He's like six seconds ahead of the joke to his intro.
I actually just told somebody that story the other night about how that happened.
Marie?
Marie.
Yeah.
It was the Mormon censors who are really the worst.
They're worse than the network censors.
The elders?
The elders.
The network censor has nothing to do.
She's counting the strobe lights to see if it's going to put epileptics into season.
The Mormon sensors are saying, oh, no, you mentioned coffee.
Oh, God, no, you mentioned tea.
Oh, yeah, they couldn't say caffeine.
They couldn't say caffeine.
Everybody had a milk break on the Donnie and Marie show.
And so it was, I mean, every lyric that came along, they censored.
And I kept bringing in
songs for marie to do and they'd say oh she can't sing that that's just too uh it was an ira gershwin
song called treat me rough and they said oh no it's it's it's it's too salacious about getting
knocked around by by your lovers and so ira gershwin wrote a new lyric for her and they said
no it's still too too much and i i couldn't i said, Ira Gershwin, the Ira Gershwin.
Oh, well, it doesn't matter.
It's just she can't possibly do it.
So then I brought in Coming from the Rain, which was –
Oh, I love that.
My friend Melissa Manchester and Carol Sager had just written.
And they said, well, it's about a woman who accepts her husband when he philanders.
I don't know where they got that from.
I mean, from that lyric.
It's just a lover song.
Yeah, right.
And they said that she couldn't possibly do it.
So out of desperation, I brought in Don't Let the Sun Go Down on Me.
That they love.
Oh, that Elton John.
Oh, he's so peppy.
He's so upbeat.
What a sweet message.
And so I was sitting in the booth with the network censor, Mrs. Futterman, who looked the way she sounded.
Mrs. Futterman.
She weighed in.
She was on the heavy side.
The plus size.
Melissa McCarthy will do her movie.
And the owl's eyeglasses.
And we're sitting there.
And Maria's singing, don't let the sun go down on me.
And she's shaky.
She got away with it, didn't she?
Beautiful.
Beautiful.
The Mormons were just kind of, oh, this is wonderful.
The irony is you were brought in in part to adult her up.
Well, I was actually.
I was formally brought in when she turned 18
because they wanted to make her more adult.
Exactly right.
Bob Mackey was brought in to give her dresses.
Wow.
You know, he gave her the, you know, Bob worked with a woman named Elizabeth Courtney, and
she built all of his costumes.
And one of the tricks to the Bob Mackie costume is it's what's called a Moliere bodice.
It's whale bone.
It's a corset.
And so it's like early version of Spanx.
It pushes everything in.
And then at the top of the corset are cups for your
boobs. And so you take whatever boob you have and you put it in those cups and you look like you
have gigantic boobs. And so he did that for everybody. So people who were really not known
for their boobs, you know, suddenly, oh my God, she's bodacious. Look at her.
And that was part of, they wanted that for Marie.
They wanted her to have that thing.
These same Mormons who would not let her sing Ira Gershwin, Treat Me Right.
I wrote her talk show, the morning talk show
she did with Donnie, the syndicated show.
I found her to be a bit randy.
Oh, well, now she has eight kids.
Yeah.
You know, we all went to her wedding.
We all flew to Utah to the wedding
because it happened while she was – she married the basketball player.
I remember.
And we were all – we got there and we discovered that we couldn't go inside because we were all Jews.
Oh, God.
Geez.
Because they kept hiring Jews because in variety television in those days, you know, the more Jews in the room, the funnier the show.
So there was a whole – a whole passel of Jews had flown up.
A whole passel of Jews had flown up, and we all were in the courtyard of the Mormon tabernacle sitting on lawn furniture listening to the thing while the Mormons were in the tabernacle.
Incredible.
Yeah.
Then she really got it.
Donnie, too, once they were freed of being Mormon kids.
He was a prankster, and she was a little on the handsy side.
Yes, right. So when did, how did you find out and when did you find out that Jews weren't
allowed in the Mormon
tabernacle? That was the day.
Nobody had told us. We flew up for the wedding
and they said, oh, you can't come in, by the way.
We've organized a lawn party
for you. And we sat up there and Art
Fisher was the director of the show and he was
a big Jew and he was
in love with Marie.
I mean,
we,
I think,
first of all, I think he wanted to marry her and,
and they said under no circumstances,
you know,
could you possibly go near this,
this girl?
And,
and they married her off to the,
the basketball coach,
the basketball player.
He was a star like BYU.
And then they had kids.
And then she took the unprecedented step of getting divorced
I remember just don't do and then years later she came back to him finally after after a bunch of
other adventures but that so we we know we figured okay well we will kind of respect you know I'd
always said that uh uh we all had to respect each other's religions. I mean, at the beginning, the very beginning, Mother Osmond, Olive, who looked a bit like Mrs. Futterman, actually.
Olive Osmond came into my office, and I was drinking a Bloody Mary, and it was the 70s.
And I was on the phone with my drug dealer looking up.
I had the physician's desk referenced, so he could mention a drug and I could look it up right there.
And she came in and she looked and she said, smoking and drinking.
Your body is a temple.
How can you desecrate your body this way?
And I looked at her and I said, mixing meat with milk, you heathen.
Toy! this way and i looked at her and i said mixing meat with milk you even toy
and she abruptly left and i thought that's it i'm done here but no they figured we need the jews
gotta have juice comedy can't have comedy without juice the juice so we're not getting rid of him
but it was like that it was at that point it was like, okay, literally, you go to your church and I go to mine.
And I won't mock yours if you won't mock mine.
And we would just cheerfully mock each other's.
Wow.
And there's a famous Valance story that Donny Osmond, when he was about five or something, said to you, oh, you look like a big Muppet.
It was the first day on the show.
He came into my office to meet me.
And he looked at me, and I had a huge beard and a lot of hair.
I was very Unabomber in my look.
And I was larger than I am now.
And behind the desk, there wasn't a desk that fit.
They had to go down to KTLA and get the news anchor desk and bring it up from my desk.
So I was a formidable presence, but fluffy and kind of squishy and cute.
And he came in and looked at me and he said, you look just like a Muppet.
And I said, it's the funniest thing.
Jim Henson had his hand up my ass not 10 minutes ago i think i i think i said fist up my up my ass and there was this pause
this long pause and he started giggling and also doing what turned out to be the moonwalk
you know backing out of the office while giggling.
And I thought, okay, I'm done here.
I always thought I was done there.
I thought I'd never survive.
And then he decided I was okay.
I was one of them.
I wasn't one of them.
I was one of them.
I was like an ally because he was always looking for people
who would enable him to get out from under the family,
because the family was completely suffocating.
I mean, these kids had only known the family.
And when I say the family, I mean everything, religion, family, business, show business,
all was one great big ball of wax that was the Osman Empire.
And those kids were were part of it
and there was no escaping they lived together and they worked together and they did everything as a
unit and so anybody who could like spring him from that for an hour to go get his face sanded
yeah uh was was the the ally and and marie was like that too except they were she had to fight her way in because they didn't want her to be, she was supposed to be a good Mormon housewife.
And they had like 14 kids, one of them a girl.
And they didn't want her to do it.
They were promoting Jimmy.
I remember Jimmy.
Who was at the time.
They said, isn't he wonderful?
Little Jimmy Osmond.
I said, yeah, he looks like they let the air out of Wayne Newton.
Yeah.
That was then.
Then I got, I mean, subsequently I got friendly with him.
He became a TV producer, and I was in a TV movie that he produced.
No kidding.
Yeah, I played Santa's elf.
It's called, it nearly wasn't Christmas.
How nice, you've both played elves.
Charles Durning was Santa Claus, and I was the elf on steroids.
I was all little people.
All the other elves were little people.
We shot the whole thing in, guess where?
Utah.
Where Jimmy Osmond built a studio in Orem, Utah.
And the Jews flew up.
A plane load of Jews would fly up every week to do the show.
What was Durning like, as long as you've mentioned him?
Durning was fabulous.
Somebody we love to talk about on the show. What was Durning like, as long as you've mentioned him? Durning was fabulous. Somebody we love to talk about
on this show. He was hysterical.
He was a great
raconteur.
He was a wonderful
actor and very naturalistic
and
was not one of these actors
who
spent a lot of time
on process. If he did, it was privately.
He got to the set, and he was just kind of ready to go.
I mean, and we'd rehearse it.
And then right before we would do the take, he'd say,
is that how you're going to do it in the take,
the way you did it in the rehearsal?
I wasn't sure if he was saying you wanted to make sure
or he didn't like what I did in the rehearsal.
Because at that point they said, action.
So we would play this.
So this was just his, you know.
Right.
Was he busting balls?
Oh, no.
No, he was serious.
There was a girl, a child actress in the thing.
She was local, which by local in Utah means they brought her in from denver because they were cheaper than
flying so and she was uh she was good but she was like a bratty kid and uh and we were driving home
from the set the first day that she worked and he said you know i i met her this morning and i
thought what a cute little kid and now i've worked with her all day and fuck, it's Faye Dunaway.
Wow.
Jeez.
So he, yeah, I mean, that was, you know, he absolutely broke no trap.
We love character actors on the show.
We love to talk about people like him and Jack Warden and who Gilbert's worked with.
He never worked with Durning, Gilbert.
No, I would have loved to have worked with him. Oh, he was.
He had great—we also had war stories.
He had literal war stories.
Oh, I know.
He fought in the war, and he killed people, and he carried this tremendous guilt around.
That's what we heard.
Because he said, everybody who I killed was a kid.
He said they were like teenage soldiers by the time I got over there
and they were fighting the last stand.
And he said it was heartbreaking
because I would be close enough
to actually shoot them.
And I had to.
It was him or me.
And since the kid,
it was always a kid,
I knew he would shoot me.
So I had to shoot him first.
But he, you know,
I'm doing a very abbreviated
version of it. But I mean, with Charles Durning telling But he, you know, I'm doing a very abbreviated version of it.
But I mean,
with Charles Durning
telling you this,
you know,
I mean, it's Charles Durning.
He must have liked you
because my understanding
was that he did not like
talking about that to anyone.
Oh, I realize.
He must have taken you
into his confidence.
And I heard that Charles Durning
was among the troops
liberating the camps, too.
Mm-hmm.
He was.
When did you guys meet?
Do you remember meeting for the first time?
Would it have been Hollywood Squares?
It might have been Hollywood Squares or it might have been at the comedy
store one night. I was never
performing, but I would have been seeing you.
I think probably it was Hollywood
Squares. Yeah.
Or some other award show,
maybe the Comedy Awards, maybe
Schlatter. Oh, that's right.
I used to do that.
Oh, the night you pissed Schlatter off by going on and doing the, you did something.
That one they wrote for me and I did it.
And it wasn't funny to begin with.
I see.
Was this where you were stuck in the podium?
No, no.
This was.
Did you do a bit about Pee Wee Herman?
No, it had to do.
This was, that was on the Emmys
oh
where they got pissed off
okay
this had to do with
you know
wearing the red ribbon
the age ribbon
and I thought
in the middle of a comedy show
oh they wanted everybody
to wear
yeah they
I remember that
yeah
and I remember
that didn't do
and I remember
while I was up there thinking eh they'll never have me back and that didn't do and i remember that while i was up there thinking
and they'll never have me back and and i didn't write that thing they handed it to me
i don't think i did either there were a bunch of us writing on it but i wrote on a lot of those
were you present for the famous uh you fool uh recurring gag i was up there, absolutely. You were on the board? I was up on the
grid. On the grid?
I was. And Penn,
right?
I think Whoopi was up there.
He first did it
and then I just
started doing it after each joke.
And then I was like the entire show.
But it was
a guy who kept getting it
wrong, the contestant
i mean every answer and the woman she went back and forth it went back and forth everyone and
we were bluffing them every time and they went for it every time and so it was you fool yeah
it was so obvious yeah but yes i i was i was. I don't know that she actually called on me.
But, you know, in Hollywood Squares, like, they call on you if you're strategically where they need to be.
I mean, some people they would never call on, and they only will call on them if they have to use it to win or block.
Yeah, and I think with that show, I was the only one left.
They had to get through me.
Yeah, that's right.
So it was like I was the entire show.
And they kept missing until the next one would have to go to him again.
Yeah, yeah.
So it was like six jokes in a row or something like that.
Yeah.
It's a legendary one, at least among us, among aficionados of the square.
It's funny.
Growing up, I would watch Hollywood Squares, and I always liked it, and I always laughed.
But I remember growing up thinking, oh, this has got to be the bottom of everyone's career, doing Hollywood.
And then when they offered it to me, I had so much fun on that show it was great
you know it was on 14 years the first time and it was a network show and uh I think by the end it
had become I think a lot of people thought that's what it was and then it came back in the 80s for
five years and then our version that was the John Davidson version. John Davidson and Joan Rivers and Wayland and Madden.
I don't really remember that.
And then our version came back, which was like, with Whoopi,
it was sort of like star-loaded.
And the idea was that she would attract big names.
And to a degree, she did.
I mean, a lot of people use it as a vehicle to promote stuff.
Did you audition to host the show? I did. Yeah. Yes, I she did. I mean, a lot of people use it as a vehicle to promote stuff. Did you audition to host the show?
I did.
Yeah.
Yes, I actually did.
She suggested I host the show.
And they all said, oh, well, she's nuts.
But we can't piss her off this early in the game.
I could see that.
So they auditioned me.
And there I was with all these other hosty types.
And this one's for the win, Louise.
And they said, well, you know, we like your energy.
We want to put you in a square.
And I thought, I mean, my friends were producing the show,
and so they liked me and they wanted me to be in a square.
But I thought that King World that owned the show wanted me
because I think they thought I might tame her.
You know, I might like, because I've been, they put me next to her so that she and I could like, you know, chat.
Right.
And have something going on camera and off camera.
And of course they, you know, you can't tame that.
I mean, we used to joke that they mistakenly, they didn't realize that she is basically a Jewish gay guy and I am basically a black woman.
Ask anybody who has slept with me and you will know.
And you worked with someone, well, Paul Lynn.
Yeah, I worked with Paul.
Now, he was a legendary Jew hater, wasn't he?
Oh, yeah.
Well, you know, he was, Paul, on one drink was wonderful,
and on two drinks he was the Wannsee Conference.
He was the Luftwaffe High Command.
Hilarious.
He was, you know.
You lousy cuck.
You fucked me over, you goddamn cuck.
And he, and so the goal was to keep him on one drink
and not to get the second glass of wine.
And the Jews were the cause of all of his troubles.
And, of course, he was surrounded by Jews.
His managers were two Jews.
Incredible.
Ray Katz and Sandy Gallen.
And everybody significant in his life were Jews. But the other reason he was annoyed was he always felt that he was a big star and had made a lot of money.
But he'd come up in New York with other people.
Charlie Ray.
Well, yeah, but specifically Woody Allen and Mel Brooks had become movie stars.
Oh, I see what you mean.
And Paul was always like the guy, Rock Hudson's psychiatrist.
Right.
You know, or the next door neighbor,
Jade Tadaris Day or someone like that.
And basically it started with Bye Bye Birdie,
which was his biggest acting role,
where he played the harassed father,
you know, the suburban dad.
And he never got to where they were
and it just pissed him off and decided it's because
they were jews and i kept saying to him they write their own material come up with stuff
and they make their movies yes that's a good point you know they are two filmmakers and they
generate their own stuff and it's not because they're Jews. It's because they're brilliant and they're funny.
And they have this other skill set that you don't have,
aside from the fact that Paul was a great flavor.
I mean, he was exhibited best on the squares
because he would come in,
would do the one line and get out.
And it's hard to carry something
when they gave him a sitcom the
temperature's rising yeah well that was the second one oh right which had a huge first week and the
second week was half the first week because he didn't really carry you know it's very hard for
the antic character to be the central character in a sitcom because basically you have to have
a cool character who is surrounded by colorful
people i mean think van dyke mary tyler newhart newhart i mean those are the things that work
it's rare that you get archie bunker i mean uh that was a magical combination but i mean maude
was too hot to last you know as a soul the center of the thing and paul was just uh the wrong guy to be
the centerpiece of a show but great when you'd see him like his uncle arthur on bewitched when
he had to come in steel yeah so um so it did that never happened and they bought him out and put him
on donny marie as a regular at the salary he would have gotten had he been doing his own show so he
was making a ton of money and And then we would do specials.
But they were special by the nature of it.
And we would surround him with funny people.
And so he wouldn't have to be on that much.
You know, we'd have Betty White and other people around him doing things.
Florence Henderson.
Yeah, exactly.
We had that Halloween show with everybody.
I'm glad you got there because we were going to get there eventually.
I mean, and Kiss. Yeah, exactly. We had that Halloween show with everybody. I'm glad you got there because we were going to get there eventually.
I mean, and Kiss, you know, and Witches.
He was a witch.
And who do you know who Kiss was?
Margaret Hamilton is the Wicked Witch of the West. That's what I was going to ask you about her.
And Witchy Poo.
Billy Hayes.
Billy Hayes.
We had witches.
We had Tim Conway.
We had Roz Kelly.
Pinky Tuscadero.
Yes.
We had about 12 guest stars on
that show so he was well protected and and who came first paul lynn or alice gosling well everybody
when they came together although probably not in the same room
they were both i believe in new faces of 52 and. And Leonard Silman discovered them both and put them in the show.
And I was too young to have seen it.
And the movie, there's a movie of it.
But you don't really get the flavor of them too much.
You can't figure.
I mean, the claim always was one of them imitated the other.
And they became the same person as it went along but uh i never
was sure who was the funniest of all is that i mean like paul has been dead for 40 years
if he's been 40 already 1981 or 82 wow and uh if he thought that we would be talking about him, he would be stunned because in his mind he hadn't made it.
He hadn't done anything.
He'd made money, but he hadn't become an icon, that figure.
And now he is.
He would be absolutely amazed.
Watching that Paul Lynn special, first of all, I mean,
you keep talking about the assortment of drugs.
Well, yeah.
I mean, you said Tim Con the assortment of drugs. Well, yeah. I mean,
you said Tim Conway, Betty White,
Kiss. It's just,
it's the perfect 70s TV
special. He's a trucker,
right? He's a trucker at one point,
and he's covered in rhinestones, because I guess
it's a... He's a rhinestone trucker. Yeah, I guess it's
a Glenn Campbell, the song was
on the charts, and then he and Tim Conway
fight over Pinky Tuscadero in a trucker bar.
I mean, it's unbelievable.
I've been watching you, Pinky.
Oh, yeah, I've been watching you watching me tour, Paul.
I bet I'm having a better time than you are.
Oh, yeah?
Do you think you could teach me to do that?
I don't know. Give me a little whistle.
That's too little.
All right, I'll tell you what you do.
All you gotta do is follow me everywhere.
Shake it up, shake it down
Move it in, move it round
Disco baby
Move it in, move it down
Move it in and move it round, disco baby
Shake it up, shake it down, move it in, move it round, disco baby
Shake it up, shake it down, move it in, move it round, disco baby
Move it in, move it out, move it in and about, disco baby
Shake it, baby, shake it, baby, shake it.
Baby, shake your thing.
Shake it, baby, shake it.
Baby, shake your thing.
You got us grooving.
We feel like moving.
It's such a key thing.
For Halloween day.
I like that funky stuff.
And he didn't know who Kiss was?
Is that true?
He didn't know who Kiss was.
He didn't know who Kiss was.
Gil, but you've seen it, yes?
Oh, yes. He didn't know who Kiss was, but he was profoundly depressed when they brought over the president of their fan club.
And that was Ringo's daughter.
Oh, interesting.
Way back then.
And he knew who Ringo was.
And he was kind of like, he has a daughter.
She's old enough to do this and that made him feel but at this at the time we were shooting the thing i mean he didn't know
who anybody was really except like from golden age people um but roots had been was on and it
was a huge success gigantic success And we were standing outside because
I think they had just passed a cigarette law. We were standing outside the soundstage smoking
and Paul was in a cape and a witch's hat smoking. And LeVar Burton, who played Quintu Quinte,
walked by with a little entourage of people because he was going to do, I don't know, live with Regis or something like that that used to be on that lot.
And he's walking by and he sees Paul.
And Paul, of course, doesn't remember his name.
Just looks at him and goes, Ritz.
Much to his credit,
Love Harbor just burst out laughing.
What else can you do?
Here's a guy in a wizard outfit.
That voice.
What was Margaret Hamilton like?
She was adorable.
She was, at that point,
a very old lesbian.
A lesbian.
She's a lesbian,
and she had, of course,
lived on the down low for many years i would
imagine uh she was living in gramercy park here in new york and uh she was pretty frail and she
didn't come out much but she just couldn't resist this the opportunity to do this thing and with
billy hayes who she admired a lot right she thought it would be like her uh kind of swan song to just do the wicked witch of the
one more time and she was she was just really funny and of course you know told all the stories
and and everybody flocked to her and all that but i did get a kick out of her because every now and
again you know there would like some gorgeous girl would walk by and she would nudge me in the elbow. Get me her number, would you?
I love it.
I'm sorry, she's dating Marjorie Maine.
Marjorie Maine.
Marjorie Maine was another lesbian.
Yeah, I'm aware.
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Live from Nutmeg Post, we now return to gilbert and frank's amazing colossal podcast
and you did that that very surreal star wars holiday special we had steve bender in here too
bender yeah well he was called in I know he was the second guy.
He's oddly proud of it, by the way.
Well, you know, look, first of all, it was the 70s.
We were on everything, really, but skateboards.
We could have been if we had any balance left from all the weed we smoked.
But, I mean, if we thought that 40 years later we'd be talking about it, we would have paid closer attention.
I mean, it was, in the world of television,
it was not unusual to do something insane
just to get the audience's attention.
You know, Wayne Newton at SeaWorld.
Did you write Wayne Newton at SeaWorld?
I did.
Oh, jeez.
Cole Porter in Paris starring Connie Stevens.
It was just who you want to hear sing Cole Porter in Paris.
My God.
A great woman.
I'm a friend of hers and I'm a fan.
But I mean, it was just, but that was the kind of show, you know.
Steve and Edie sing The Beatles.
This was, you know.
And so this was, it wasn't so unusual.
Sure.
Because you would do this thing and it would have a theme and then you would load it up with stars.
You were cross-promoting things.
Like it was a CBS show.
So it was full of Harvey Korman and originally Cher.
But she had had a little surgery and she couldn't do it.
And so Diane Carroll, who fit into the costume.
She's the fantasy.
Was the fantasy sequence.
Which, by the way, was the first.
She was the fantasy of one of the Wookiees.
Yes.
And he was wearing a VR helmet, which George kind of came up with.
And now they exist.
Wow.
A virtual reality helmet.
And it would plug in and your fantasy would be realized.
And she was his fantasy realized.
I can't remember if it was Itchy or Lumpy.
It was the grandpa. Oh, it was the grandpa was Itchy or Lumpy. It was the grandpa.
Oh, it was the grandpa.
Itchy.
Lumpy was the kid.
That's right.
And Itchy had the fantasy.
So it was the first interracial, interspecies romance on network television.
Where is my NAACP Image Award?
I ask you.
You should have one.
We broke ground.
It was a doublehead not merely racial but special
what did you describe the wookiee language as the sound of well i said the wookies
they sound like fat people having orgasm right trust me i know
that was hi, I'm home. And the Wookiees, they had a strange description of what they looked like.
Really?
Well, there was one in particular, I think, that he's alluding to, that George Lucas referred to.
One of them.
Well, Cunface.
Yeah, that's the one.
Cunface was not a Wookiee.
Cunface was an alien.
Okay. You don't want to call him by the wrong name. I made the same mistake. Yeah, that's the one. Cunface. Cunface was not a Wookiee. Cunface was an alien.
Okay.
You don't want to call him by the wrong name. George had done – I have to explain that.
They're on their way home to the Wookiee planet, Chewbacca,
and he's in the Millennium Falcon with Han Solo and Princess Leia and Luke Skywalker,
and they stop off on the planet Tatooine with a cantina.
That, that, that, that, that, that, that, that, that's the cantina.
And all these aliens are there.
And George had shot the Empire, but it was editing it,
and so he had a whole bunch of new aliens,
but he didn't want to use them on the show.
And he didn't want to build new aliens,
so we used remainder aliens.
We went to the alien warehouse
and pulled out the aliens
that had not made the cut
in the first two movies.
And they were all like
Elmer's glue all
and scotch tape
and those were the aliens.
And one of them
was like a huge vagina
on your shoulders.
A kind of nondescript
space captain outfit. but and george has this
there's a vaginal leitmotif in those movies you know in the empire there's a huge vagina that
almost swallows jabba the huck oh yes and carrie's holding on like she's got handcuffs and she almost
goes it's a big hole in the desert that looks the third one big old vajayjay and the prototype i think was was this puppet this uh this head that we
called we called him cunface and he would he made the cut he was on our show because we just said
you know we can't we have to even even the censor let us use him And then it was like he had to be there while Bea Arthur.
Bea was singing a song.
Yeah, she wanted a song.
Bea was mauled at the time, and she had come from Broadway,
where she had won the Tony for Mame as Vera Charles,
and she had been the original Yen to the Matchmaker in Fiddler,
and she wanted to sing.
And she brought in a song that she wanted to sing,
and it was, you know, the dark alien bar,
and she decided that she was the kind of Brechtian bartender,
the woman who runs the thing.
And she was very Statue of Liberty, you know,
standing there with her beer stein.
And she wanted to sing the Alabama song
by Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill.
Oh, show me the way to the next whiskey bar.
Oh, no, that's why.
And it ends with, I tell you I will die.
I tell you I will die.
And she said, this is my Brecht Weill number.
I said, it's your Weill Brecht number is what it is.
Very good.
But we should, you know, and we had to clear it
with Bertolt Brecht's estate
and they said,
what are you, nuts?
You're singing this
so she should sing this thing
on television
with the alien,
with the cunt face?
So,
so,
we had Ken and Mitzi Welch
who had written
all of those Carol Burnett medleys.
Oh, yes, sure, they're lit.
And they wrote a piece of special material that was sort of homage to Brecht and Weill.
Uh-huh.
And it was, I forget what the song was, but it was kind of, it also was a lot like Those Were the Days, my friend.
Yeah, I didn't write it down, but.
It was one of those kinds of songs.
And so it was a bit more up than the Alabama song.
And B and Bea sang it.
And Cunface was part of the group behind her.
And it was 123 degrees,
and these guys in the heads were boiling,
and they would keep passing out.
And every time one passed out and had to be taken away,
I would move Cuntface closer to
and so finally it was like a two shot with her and cuntface at the end of the thing and she's
singing it to whose idea was it to put harvey corman in drag as a julia child i don't know
well and i remember it may have been mine or it may have been Rod Warren, who was one of the writers, or Lenny Ripps, or Pat Proff.
They were all writers on the show.
And, you know, in a stone session, who knows?
Right, right.
But we knew we had to use Harvey because Harvey was on the Burnett Show, which was a big CBS show.
And part of it was—
Working the CBS people in.
Yeah, right.
And so we were trying to think of somebody funny Harvey would do.
And Harvey, of course, loved to do drag.
He loved to do the big bosomy.
And the big bosomy, you know, as the stomach churns.
Yes.
And so we thought it would be funny to have him as Julia.
There were a lot of people doing Julia Child.
Dan Aykroyd did the very funny one with all the blood, which, of course, we couldn't do.
But we had to do a different one.
So we said, let's make Julia Child an alien and have her cooking with eight arms so she can do a million different things.
You've brought it up to Lucas over the years when you've run into him.
Oh, he walks away.
He walks away.
Whenever I see him, his head goes down.
He doesn't want to be reminded.
Don't want to talk about it.
Yeah, for a long time.
Nobody knew about it, and then the internet happened.
Yeah.
And what happened was a generation of kids who had watched the first three,
which are, of course, now the second three,
they watched the first three Star Wars
movies on video
and knew everything
about it and took it
as a religion,
discovered through the internet that there was
this other thing that they had
never known about that
George had actually been involved in that
they then of course had to had to get it study and and they were betrayed they felt how could
he have done this how could he have lowered himself to this vaudeville with this thing which
is kind of like you know the mishnah yeah they take it very seriously. It's the Talmud, these three movies.
So they began writing him serious hate mail,
and so he was appalled because he really thought it was dead and buried.
Nice thing to be a part of, though.
A nice part of pop culture history to have been a part of.
Oh, yeah.
From your standpoint.
The author, at the end of her song, she, like, hits her big note and swings her arm.
Yeah, she swung her, well,
she swung her arm and she knocked Cuntface
and he went over.
And
she turned to the camera and she said,
I've never hit a man in the cunt before.
What would you kill to be on that
set, Galen? Oh my god.
The whole thing got cut and we had to reshoot
the number one.
I just want to,
I said one other thing
about the Paul Lynn
Halloween special.
And by the way,
I just watched it again.
I own it on DVD.
It makes me happy.
Like the Marty Allen song
makes you happy.
Oh, yes.
Every year people say,
oh, we watch it ritually.
Oh, it's just great.
And Billy Barty,
we didn't ask you about.
It is so surreal. Yeah, it's't ask you about. It is so surreal.
Yeah, it's wonderful.
It is.
It is incredibly surreal.
Julie Newmar told me a story.
Isn't it Julie Newmar?
Sure, we had her on here.
Oh, you did?
Okay.
She told me a story about a Billy Barty story.
She said that they worked together on something, and he said to her,
I want to eat your pussy.
And she said, if you do, and I hear about it.
Oh, God.
And, you know, we've had many.
We used to have.
We always had something that we would put in for the sensor to cut out.
And it was always Billy Barty walking over to some tall creature creature and saying i want to go up on you hilarious you know
and it was never failed you worked on that show that i i remember i watched it recently
and thought this must be what hell looks like and that was the brady bunch variety hour oh
actually we had a lot of fun but it was like
Sid and Marty
what was it
that was
that was Sid and Marty
yeah
Sid and Marty Croft
I remember
one of them
that I watch
they were all in
of course
spandex
because
that was
and costumes
ugly by 70s standards
oh god
and they did and now we're going to do a tribute to disco.
Always.
Always.
They also did a disco number to end the Paul Lynn special.
That's right.
With Billy Barty.
Right.
They sing like Stay Alive or something.
Well, that was very popular then.
At all the Sid and Marty shows,
Earl Brown was a writer of special
material who was actually quite brilliant.
He
had a Christmas
present for everybody and it was
a framed,
a glass frame
and inside there was
a feather and confetti
and a balloon
and a little note that said, break in case of finale.
Perfect.
Because every one of their shows ended with balloon drops, confetti.
Yep, the whole thing.
Well, Sid was a showman, you know, going back to the Garland stuff.
But they did that show in the image of Donny and Marie.
I mean, you know, Donny and Marie had ice skaters.
They had water ballads.
Right, that's right.
And there was a guy named Fred Silverman who ran all three major networks at the time, at one point or another.
And he kind of came up with the idea of weird host couplings.
And some of them, of course, were huge.
Sonny and Cher, Tony and Donny and Dawn.
Pink Lady and Jeff.
Well, that was one of the, you know, disgraces. Right. But he had a lot of them of course were huge sunny and share tony and i knew when dawn pink lady and jeff well that was one of the you know disgraces but he had a lot a lot of them really worked i mean the very
last variety show was barbara mandrell and the mandrell sisters and that was a silverman idea
and both donnie and marie and the brady bunch were so he had originally wanted the partridge family
and both the partridge family and the brunch, which were like on in an hour together.
Sure.
Friday night.
Friday nights.
They had both gone out on tour for their audiences.
And so he wanted it to be the Partridge family because it was an extension of the old Partridge family show about these people who do a show and they live together.
And it's a variety show instead of a sitcom.
And they didn't want to do it and so
he decided the brady bunch should do it so it was about the brady family which you've described as
a meta well it was totally meta yeah yeah the brady family goes to hollywood to do a tv variety
show the fact that you know they couldn't sing or dance we called it one to neil and seven captains
yeah i love that it's a very 70s reference.
I love that.
But they had done, you know, they did state fairs and things like that,
but they were not like, you know, a big Vegas act.
They were not cast for that.
But on this show, they had to do all of that, everything,
and deal with guest stars.
Yeah, The Simpsons does a wonderful parody of The Simpsons' Smile Time Hour.
I remember they –
Dead on.
In one of their tributes to disco, they have Rip Taylor.
Oh, yeah.
Rick D's first singing disco duck.
We had Rick D singing disco duck.
Yeah, and then he comes on in a big duck out.
And so does Anne B. Davis.
Yes, Anne.
She's singing next to him.
And in the same one –
His love interest. in a big duck out. And so does Ann B. Davis. Yes, and in the same one,
his love interest.
Rerun
comes out
in his full rerun outfit.
Well,
he was,
you know,
it was an ABC show
and What's Happening
was on.
He came out
with the cast
of What's Happening.
Yeah,
and they were all,
this is my childhood,
damn it.
One of Tina Turner's
first gigs
after she left Ike
to make some money
on her own
that did not involve him was on the Brady Bunch Variety.
Wow.
Wow.
I remember her on that Cher special, too.
Tina Turner.
The one with Elton John and Tim Conway.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Where she was solo.
Oh, yeah.
Tina Turner.
Later on, yeah.
Actually, it was all around the same time.
She had a lot of gigs that she had to do where they had bought Ike and Tina,
and they weren't interested in Ike's solo, but they were interested in her solo,
and that was how we put together an act.
Did Robert Reed enjoy doing drag?
He actually did.
He was so repressed.
I think he got to work out a whole thing.
I'm going to put him in as Carmen Miranda.
Oh, jeez.
He loved being Carmen Miranda.
What about guest stars on those shows, by the way, before we jump off?
A Miltie, Buddy Hackett, Bob Hope, Vincent Price, anything stand out?
I worked with all of them.
Well, Vincent Price was hysterical and really loved the kids.
And he played it.
When I tell people this, they don't believe it, but the model for the show was the old Jack Benny show.
Interesting.
Where Jack Benny would just say, oh, Mary, I'm going next door to Ronald Coleman's to borrow a cup of sugar.
That kind of stuff.
Right, right, right.
Which is that great – that sound, the radio gag, you know, this gag with him where he says, we're out of sugar, I'm going down.
He said, I'm going to take a cup and go over and borrow. And you hear footsteps and you hear
footsteps and then you hear footsteps approaching and then suddenly the footsteps stop and you hear
a quarter going into the cup. It's a great radio joke. You know that Jack Benny just put the cup
out like a beggar. Anyway anyway so that was the idea was they
live in hollywood and all their friends are stars and and so vincent price was the new neighbor at
malibu right the brady's right the brady's brady's had the brazier mouth when vincent price had bought
the house next door and was coming over to meet the kids and all it was just I forget the rest of it, but it was a funny episode.
I think it may have been like the Halloween episode.
Sounds right.
But all of those people showed up.
They were on both shows a lot.
On Donny and Marie, yeah.
Well, Hope would do every show to kind of promote himself.
Right.
His own specials.
But he was on Donny and Marie
because he loved the kids.
And Lucille Ball was on Donny and Marie
because she wanted to sing and dance.
It was crazy.
So you had to write something for,
some things for the guest stars as well?
I always, yeah.
So you had to deal with Lucy and Red Fox
and Miltie and all of these people.
And what was Bob Hope's,
I think it was Bob Hope's nickname to you?
To me?
Oh, he called me Mansfield.
Because of your long hair.
Yeah.
You look like Jane Mansfield with a dick.
This is amazing.
And I wrote for him separately.
Aside from the show.
I didn't know that.
Oh, yeah. I had a big kick out of writing for him separately aside from the show. I didn't know that. Oh, yeah.
I had a big kick out of writing for him.
And we got as friendly as you get.
You used to just drop – you have to drop the jokes off with the guard at the gate of the house.
To look alike.
Yeah.
I said, no, I'm coming over and I want you to hear you do the jokes.
And then he had a box, like a toolbox, or it was a file cabinet,
and he'd pull out jokes and they were on cards
and he would deal them like a blackjack dealer.
Yeah, that's good, that's good.
That's a beauty, that's good, that's good.
And you realize this was a world about gas rationing.
And I realized I was competing with writers who had been dead for years.
These were World War II gas rationers.
Yes, of course.
He was going over again.
Because of the energy crisis.
Oh, it's in vogue again.
He was very funny and he was very randy.
He was very randy.
But I do have to say, I called him up and asked him to do a PSA about AIDS with Everett Coop, who was the Surgeon General.
Right, sure.
And he did it.
No questions asked.
He came and he did it.
He said, I'm yours.
He said, this is a horrible thing and nobody should have to die from this thing.
Props for Bob Hope.
I know.
I mean, the famous, like, right-wing, you know.
Yeah, yeah.
I don't know.
Well, Charlton Heston marched with Dr. King, so you never know.
Did you write for George Burns, too?
I did write for George Burns.
I don't know if I wrote so much.
I did write stuff, but I remembered for George.
I mean, because he was still doing his act, and he would forget.
And I was the archivist, you know, I would say. Right.
We used to do this joke about, oh, let's do that, yeah.
And we'd put that in, and we'd meet for breakfast,
and then he would take a long nap.
Did he talk about the old acts?
He did.
Yeah.
Yeah, Fink's Mules, he always.
Fink's Mules.
Fink's Mules.
You were sitting in when Ron Delsner was here,
but did you hear us talking about Swain's Rats and Cats?
No.
Okay.
That was another vaudeville act.
What was Fink's Mules?
They were trained mules.
They were like.
Fantastic.
They would do things.
Generally, I think a gorgeous girl would ride on them,
and they would, I don't know, they would do,
I'm trying to remember what he told me about them,
but they were a lot like, there was an act, Lata and her horse.
And she also, Lata worked with doves,
and her finale would be the doves would fly from the back of the house
and land on the back of the horse at her command.
Just think about getting in a time machine and going back
and seeing those vaudeville acts.
We're seeing the Marx Brothers in vaudeville
on stage. When I was with
George, one of the things,
the Pointer Sisters were the opening act.
And one of our big jokes was
well, we got
here and the stage manager
came in and said, George,
there is a hole in the wall between
your dressing room and the pointer sister's dressing room should i fill it up with something
and he said ah let him look right so did you work with benny i didn't work with him i interviewed
him i was a journalist and I interviewed him and I
interviewed him a few times, uh, for the Chicago Tribune. He was in town. I don't know. He was
going up to Waukegan to do something. They were honoring him. And I interviewed him then. And then
he had a book and he called and asked me to interview him again. We had a good time doing
it. And he was, and at the time they were trying to do, I remember, uh, hello, Dolly. Merrick thought it'd be funny if they did hello,
Dolly. And he was Dolly and George Burns was Horace. And they were going back and forth and
back and forth. And he said, well, then he said, well, you know, I do it except he won't show up.
And I'll be standing there in a dress.
And they tried to do the Sunshine Boys with Benny Burns.
They did try, yeah.
And he had many stories about Burns
and how Burns had screwed him over at various public appearances.
Well, they shared that manager, right?
Irving Fine.
Irving Fine.
Tisha's father, yeah.
Sure.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, they had many he said uh
he told oh god uh he told a story about um uh a fortune cookie dinner where uh everybody had to
read their fortunes and and and burns had had put all these fortunes in and then like he gave irene
dunn a fortune to reach thing i want a dwarf to eat my pussy Irene Dunn gets up and very fast
I want a dwarf to eat my pussy
he did that and he would did
the thing he would always do
he told me was
when he would
be at a party and
and Jack would go to light a cigarette
and George would go,
shh, shh, he's going to do the match bit.
Oh, that's funny.
Yeah.
There was no match bit.
That's funny.
He was now with a cigarette and a lighter and a match
and everybody looking at him.
And he was, of course, Jack Benny.
What was he supposed to do?
So he just said, and at some level I hated him, but I at him. And he was, of course, Jack Benny. What was he supposed to do? So he's just at some level I hated him, but I loved him.
I don't think people know this about you, too,
that you were a journalist and a film critic.
And you were a child model, too.
They made a movie about me 20 years ago called Get Bruce.
It's a good documentary.
It's all in there.
Produced by Harvey Weinstein.
Yeah, you were telling me outside.
And who never touched me.
Forget me, too.
I'm starting.
Why not me?
The doc is good.
What was so wrong?
The doc is good, by the way.
Is Rose McGowan that much prettier than I am?
Jesus.
The doc is good and your mom shines in it, as I was saying outside.
She and Robin Williams are the stars of the thing.
Yeah.
And she was really, really funny.
And she's very funny in that, particularly.
And you were a child model?
I was a child model.
I was a charming chub in Lane Bryant.
It was a very, talk about a niche market.
Yeah.
But it didn't go much beyond that.
It's all in the dog.
I was a child actor, too.
But I'm never a star.
And another rumored to be a jew hater who you
worked with engelbert humperdink you know he was great to me i didn't i didn't know that i never
heard he was a jew hater i heard that twice really yeah but i remember principally that
engelbert was that he was deaf in one ear and and he couldn't hear the orchestra and I would say turn around
seemed to me
to be the most
obvious thing
we tried to get
him here
it didn't
work out
I haven't seen
him in years
I mean I
love to have him
we had fun
and it was
but you know
he was resisting
he wanted new stuff
but he was using
stuff he'd always
he'd come up with,
like in, I don't know, English musicals or something like that.
And he also kind of resented that he had bought Jane Mansfield's house
in Holmby Hills, which is now all gone.
It's part of the Aaron Spelling estate.
But one of the things that was in the house was a piano.
And he said, this is the piano where Cole Porter wrote,
they can't take that away from me.
And I said, Cole Porter didn't write that.
I regressed from it.
No, no, I know it was Cole Porter.
And he went back and forth about this. And I said,ed from it. No, no, I know it was Cole Porter. And he went back and forth about this.
And I said, no, no.
And Cole Porter probably wrote nothing on this piece.
Because he basically was in New York.
He may have come out here for something and all that.
But it's not worth it.
If they told you that was the song, they were making it up.
Where did you come up with this?
He loves to talk about anti-Semites on the show.
He loves to talk about which of our guests are Jewish.
I have heard two different sources.
One was Stewie Stone.
Oh, well, that must be true.
And he said he was opening for Engelbert Humperdinck.
Yeah, he did open.
And Engelbert Humperdinck said that the Jews killed Christ,
and Stewie Stone said, he goes, no, it was the Romans.
The Jews might have stolen the nails.
Hell.
Did Red Fox say you were too dirty?
No.
Give you jokes that were too dirty for him?
Did he give them to you for someone else?
Oh, yeah, he did give me one that I gave to Beth that we turned into a Sophie Tucker joke.
Okay.
Oh, God.
I couldn't read my own card.
Forgive me.
Too dirty for Red Fox.
No, it wasn't.
Henry Youngman gave me stuff that he had gotten from Red Fox. Gotcha. And he said it was too dirty for red no it wasn't any young man gave me stuff that that he had that he had gotten from
a red fox gotcha and he said it was too dirty i couldn't do it it was uh one of them was the uh
one of the first sophie tucker jokes we did about uh
i forget what it was i remember the punch line
you've been munching grass for the last 10 minutes.
Something about, you know.
I forget what it was.
But I also, I mean, I wrote clean stuff for Red Fox.
You did?
That was what was funny, yes.
I mean, because Red Fox had this filthy act.
Oh, yes.
And then he became a big TV star with Sanford.
And so he got all these huge bookings that he'd never had before.
And he would go and people would come with their families because they wanted to see Fred Sanford.
And he would come out and say, you got to wash your ass.
And it was like people streaming up the aisle.
And so we constructed this show where he would come out and do stuff, funny but not dirty.
And then he would say, now I'm going to bring out the lovely Miss Lola Falama.
And she's going to sing for you.
And when she leaves, I'm going to come back, but it's not going to be Blue Fox.
It's going to be Red Fox.
It's going to be Blue Fox.
So if you want to stay and hear that, you can stay.
After he had done like 45 minutes yeah and
they would you know stay and they would see lola and lola would do like a half an hour and then he
would come back out and do the old material and so everybody with kids would leave and but they
felt they'd gotten a show so they hadn't been shortchanged was he great live oh he was hysterical
you ever see him live kill red fox no no boy No. No. Boy, what I wouldn't have given.
Is there a George Burns, before we move on from George Burns,
is there a George Burns, Pia Zadora story?
Yeah, there is.
I feel terrible telling it.
You don't have to tell it.
You don't have to tell it.
I saw you tell it somewhere.
I do it in my act sometimes, but I ran into her now.
Oh, okay.
We won't put you on the spot.
What about Jack Palance?
Well, I only knew him from the Oscars, and he won for City Slickers,
and he came up and he did the one-arm push-ups.
Yeah, sure.
But what he did before was he – what people didn't realize was that he was, it was, Billy was the host.
And he introduced Whoopi and Whoopi came out and presented the award and Jack won and he came up.
And his first thing he said was, Billy Crystal, I crap bigger than him.
And then he started thanking Billy for putting him in the movie.
And then, you know, they all think I'm an old guy and he did the pushups.
And of course
that became
like iconic
and we were in the wings
and Billy said
well we have to
go with this
I mean
first of all
he said
I'm a piece of shit
and then he thanked me
and then
he did these things
it's hysterical
so we just kept
cutting material
that we were going to do
and we kept
making jokes
about what was going to happen
and it became a thing.
We won an Emmy for it.
And then the following year, he came back to present.
And Billy was hosting again.
So, you know, we did a whole thing where he's dragging the Oscar, a pyramid.
Like, you know, a huge.
Oh, sure.
I remember.
He's dragging it.
He's wearing a harness and bringing the whole thing on and all that.
So, I mean, that's been my only experience with him.
But I remember Billy telling me that he's really quite scary.
We've had people tell us that.
He's an actively scary guy.
Yeah.
And Billy tells a very funny story about Jack Pounce going up to him on the first day and looking at him and saying,
Don't be nervous.
showing up to him on the first day and looking at him and saying,
don't be nervous.
And he was towering.
I mean, he was towering.
We've had people in here who said he was intimidating.
Yeah.
Oh, I think.
I think.
And so when you see him in that picture with Joan Crawford,
you realize it really is Godzilla versus the smog monster.
What?
Can you, just speaking of the Oscars, can you tell,
and I know people always ask you which jokes never got on,
and it's probably a cliched question at this point,
but can you tell the off-color Sharon Stone joke?
Yeah, but it got on, actually.
Oh, it did?
It was.
Well, there was a theme.
It was the year of the woman.
Gil Cage, the producer of those shows,
loved themes, and it was the year of the woman. Gil Cage, the producer of those shows, loved themes.
And it was the year of the woman.
But it wasn't a big year for women.
And the joke we had was, oddly enough, the biggest part this year was Sharon Stones.
And she was not nominated, but she was there, of course,
and they shot, they went to her, and she kind of,
the problem was somebody, and I don't know who to credit,
put together a really incredible clip package of women in film,
and it was absolutely gorgeous and weepy.
I mean, by the end of the thing, the audience was like in tears.
And Billy followed that.
I see.
So it was the placement.
It was the placement.
That was the problem.
It was the placement that got it.
And we all felt mortified.
And there was no time to change it.
And he was, you know, he just said, I'll go ahead and see.
He did it. But it wasn't, you know, he just said, I'll go ahead and see. He did it.
But it wasn't, you know, it wasn't an obscene thing.
We did have, many, many years ago, Richard Gere was going to present.
And it was after the gerbil incident.
And we were going to introduce him as Richard.
Richard McGeer was going to present,
and his original presenter was Fievel from an American tale.
But Fievel backed out.
Full of a joke.
And Billy said, Richard was sitting in the audience,
and there was a camera on him.
And so he wondered, why is there a camera on me?
Because I'm not nominated, and I'm not.
And so Billy said, look at him.
He's going to have a heart attack.
I can't do it to him.
I just can't do it.
So we cut it.
I just heard you say this is funny, too.
Maybe this was in the doc.
Were you talking about everybody that got a Life Achievement Award died so Doris Day turned it down
every year?
Doris turns it down
every single year.
Right.
Because you get that,
you die.
Myrna Loy got it.
Dead.
Tell Gilbert
the other story
that's great
is that you and Shaman
are trying to do
a musical number
about JFK?
We were,
well, you know,
Billy did those
film packages. The packages. And they, well, you know, Billy did those film packages.
The packages.
And they were all,
it was title songs from the nominated movies.
Gotcha.
Of course,
they had no title songs,
but we would take,
we would take another song and do a parody of it.
And the hardest was JFK because nobody wanted to be associated with the movie because it was Oliver Stone and it was about the candidate and all that.
And so one of the ideas we had was trouble.
You got trouble right here in Dallas, Texas with a capital J and it rhymes with K.
There's an F in between.
And it was written from the music man by Meredith Wilson.
And this is Meredith Wilson who was living in a home somewhere in West LA.
She had the rights.
Of course.
And so we had to call her and sing it.
Billy and Mark at the piano had to sing it over the phone to her.
I love that story.
And she said, very funny boys.
No way.
That was that.
Right.
And finally, I mean, really really we had a lot of ideas and and one of the other things
was uh uh we were working on this particular number when maria shriver showed up with her
camera crew for her nbc show that she was doing and she was doing a behind the scenes and we said
uh you know billy took her side and said you you know, we're doing the JFK section.
Maybe you want to sit this out.
She said,
Oh no.
She said,
I'm a journalist.
I can take it.
So she came and recorded all of this stuff.
Um,
and finally when nobody would do it,
uh,
Billy called Sammy Khan and,
he gave us three coins in the fountain.
Oh,
nice.
Three shots in the Plaza.
I don't know.
Right.
FBI or Homer Simpson. That job is, is problem solving. It was. Yes. It was, the fountain oh nice three shots in the plaza i don't know right fbi or homer simpson that job
is problem solving it was yes that was it was exactly yeah uh i teased gilbert with this
over the phone is there a story about joan crawford and david niven yes there is a story
a story that david niven jr told me or maybe it may have been David Niven when I interviewed him.
Seems perfect for this show somehow.
After we'd had some drinks.
But the story was, well, you know, after the book came out, Mommy Dearest,
people started telling the Crawford stories that they'd never told.
And a lot of them had to do with stuff she did when she was drunk,
which was a lot. And I knew her i knew her oh you didn't have a drinker i as i i was a favorite interviewer
of hers when i was a journalist and uh so i i'd done seven she was always drunk in these interviews
and um david niven said that when he came to Hollywood, he was fixed up with her on a studio date.
And they went out and it was a terrible thunderstorm.
And he took her home.
And it was made fairly clear to him that, you know, when you went on a date with her, you wound up fucking her.
So that was what she liked.
Or if you starred in a movie with her, you know, and all these guys,
it was like part of the drill, as it were.
And so he said, I should call the people I'm staying with
to tell them that I'm going to be overnight here or late or whatever.
And she said, I'll slip into something comfortable.
And she had in the house had a gorgeous staircase
that you probably saw in the movies
that went up to the second floor.
And in those days, people didn't have phones in every room.
There were telephone rooms in some houses.
There were like little phone booths off the hall.
Or she had a phone on a pedestal,
and it was in the crook of this staircase, of the grand staircase. And so he went over to use the
phone, and he's calling these people. And he's thinking, and it's like raining on him. And he
said, oh, she must have a leak in the roof. I must tell her she has a leak in the roof.
And he looks up to see where the leak is.
And she is hanging over the banister, peeing on him.
There you go, Gil.
Oh, my God.
Whether deliberately or by accident, he never knew.
Because it was a good way to end the evening.
This is my early Christmas gift for you, Gilbert.
From how many feet above?
I don't know. A high ceiling.
12, 14,
maybe 18.
You didn't see A.J. Benz's
reenactment?
It was a great haul.
What they called a great haul.
I knew that would
make him happy, Bruce.
I know my co-host.
You know, it's
semi-legendary, but
I remember it being, I think he
told it to me in an interview, but I remember
asking, I think, his son, who was a producer,
David Newman Jr., was a producer, if that was
true, and he said, oh yes, he said that was the crawford story lucille lasur lucille lasur
but she was uh there were many many i mean i collected for a while stories
nothing as good as that that's pretty good nothing as such as i mean just just all kind of like
kind of crazy.
That makes you believe that all the stuff that happened in the book, you know, with chopping down the tree and harnessing the kids and making them clean the bathroom,
all that stuff happened during what they call blackout drunk periods.
But, I mean, during drunk periods.
Because she would always start by being fabulous.
My mother used to play cards with Gertie Moskowitz
who lived down the hall from Crawford in the Imperial House
up on the Upper East Side.
And she said she left.
They were playing cards.
They used to play.
Actually, they would play at night,
and she left at night, late they used to play actually they would play at night and she left
at night late at night like around midnight and went to and there was Crawford was in the hall
at midnight vacuuming the hall because it was dirty wow and she was like in academy awards outfit
you know to vacuum the hall and I'm and she said she was completely plastered but
she said it was so it's like you hear enough of those and you think
i don't think the the woman was lying a lot you know when she made up when she wrote the book
now now do you know because it's connected do you know any Faye Dunaway stories? Oh, I know a bunch because we had the same agent and all that.
But nothing like crazy.
I mean, a couple of things like when she was playing Maria Callas in L.A.,
they had a limo driver who said, yeah, we're having a pool to see how many.
How many telephones has she thrown at you?
It was stuff like that. I i mean i don't have anything you know that's really davis and i know well i knew her
toward but i knew her after you know towards the end not after i knew her before the stroke but uh
she was just uh she was just kind of colorful i mean she, she said, I would joke with her.
I was on the Midnight Special.
I do it like a politically correct thing.
Bird Sugarman's Midnight Special.
Bird Sugarman's Midnight Special.
And we did, David Steinberg hosted the first one,
and the other David Steinberg was a guest,
and I was a guest, and a few other people,
and he didn't come back the second week,
and I wound up hosting it.
And I hosted it for two years
because people stopped doing live television.
They would give you their video.
They didn't want to come to the studio
and do a performance.
So they had to fill that time
that they used to have with bands.
So they did it with with the politically kind of politically incorrect
model and um and uh and david was on it and um we were uh ever what we how did i start this
you were betty davis i was betty davis oh anyway so i was on i was on that show and i
knew i was friendly with a guy who was dating Betty Davis's secretary.
And he said, you've got to meet Betty Davis.
She's hysterical.
And she has seen you on the Midnight Special because we were talking about it because she's up all night.
So we had dinner at Betty Davis's apartment.
Very cool.
And I came and she said, Mr. Valanche with the cigarette.
I saw your television show, Wretched.
I said, well, that was an early one.
We've done more since.
And she said, well, it had nowhere to go but up.
And your hair.
and your hair.
When you come in at the beginning of the day,
you go to your hairdresser and you say, fluff me.
And I said, well, you know, that means something else. I don't care.
You need fluffing.
So it was kind of like that.
Hilarious.
I spent New Year's Eve with her one year,
and it was during her period where she had the hats with all the buttons.
And I went over and I just said,
I said, something I've always wanted to say to you, Miss Davis.
Happy New Year's Eve.
And she was a long pause and she went.
Nice.
Nice job.
You know, I think one of the things I liked that Susan Sarandon did Betty Davis on that show was that Betty Davis would do Betty.
She would pull out the Betty Davis character when she needed it.
I see.
But you could have a real conversation with her i mean
and sarani did that on that show too crawford was always crawford she was always in character
i never caught her when she was you know being offhand or anything like that i was glad to see
that show that somebody was making in this day and age is making a show well ryan murphy yeah
right now he's resuscitated vogue and ball culture and all that.
And wasn't Joan Crawford in like stag films?
Well, that was the story that she had done a picture with a donkey in Tijuana.
Yeah.
And there are a million versions of it on the internet that claim that that's it.
Right.
I don't know.
Speaking of all. we never spoke we will
return to gilbert godfrey's amazing colossal podcast after this speaking of off-color stories
where do you stand on the paul lynn uh gold diggers dressing room story because we've heard
different versions of it what was i don't know that oh where, where he said. Peter Marshall tells it. He walks into the dressing room and he goes, this.
Oh, that.
Yeah.
Well, I.
That could be.
I tell that story differently because I had a similar thing.
Maybe he was repeating it.
Do tell.
Well, we were playing Houston, the Arena Theater, which was brand new,
and there was,
the dressing room was a trailer
parked over a septic tank.
And this was his act we were doing
with Roz Kelly and Mimi Hines
and a bunch of people.
And he was putting his makeup on
and he had one of his young nephews
with him.
This one was named Zach. They were all named Chad. One of his young nephews with him. This one was named Zach.
They were all named Chad.
One of his nephews.
Yes.
Chad and Dash and things like that.
They all looked faintly Hitler Youth.
And he was putting his makeup on, and I walked in, and he said,
Harold, this trailer smells like a cunt.
I think. Is's the same story that's the same story but now it's very interesting because there
are several versions of it yeah but he actually said now now whether it may not have been the
first time he said it he may have saw i came in and here's a chance because it really did stink
to high heaven peter marshall says it happened to him in the gold diggers dressing room.
Well, I wouldn't be surprised.
Yeah.
I mean, I was using the same because I remember we did.
We talked about the Rockettes dressing room smelling like a sushi bar.
And you wrote quips for him for Hollywood's for the old Hollywood.
Well, we were doing Donny and Marie and he would would – then they – those days they would do squares at night
because that's when people were available
rather than asking them to do it on the weekend.
And so they would do like one – three shows one night
and two shows another night.
And he was leaving ABC and going to NBC to shoot it,
and he said, come with me to the squares.
I haven't got shit.
And we would go and went through
the questions and wrote some jokes and that way i would do that periodically for him and that was
towards the end of well it was the the end of squares i mean it was uh uh it was the late 70s
but um so i did write for i wrote donnie marie stuff for him and then i wrote some squares right
i think it's fun that to know that he would have gotten a kick out of people talking about him.
Oh, yeah.
All these, as you said, 40 years later.
He would have just been completely stunned.
Yeah.
Gil, did you meet him?
Never met him, no.
You never met Paul Lind?
No.
You met Vincent Price?
I met Vincent Price twice.
And he also lost a part to Billy Barty, which he likes to dine out on.
Yeah.
Do you have anything else for Bruce?
I lost a part to Nell Carter.
Did you?
I did.
I seriously did.
It was, as you might expect.
I love it.
I love it.
It was a fantasy.
We're going a different way.
What way is that?
Nell Carter.
Oh.
It was a ghost.
Fantasy.
We're going a different way.
What way is that?
Nell Carter.
Oh, it was a ghost.
It was a strange ectoplasmic spirit in a pilot that never happens.
It was strange.
Okay, as we wrap, Bruce.
Wrapping.
I got a couple here.
We already talked about Wayne Newton at SeaWorld, which I must get my hands on.
Las Vegas, an all-star 75th anniversary special.
Yeah, I did that.
Did you work with the Rat Pack?
Did you work with Dean and Jerry and Sinatra?
They were on it.
They were all on it. It was a George Slaughter production, yes.
And they were all, was Frank on it?
Well, on the IMD, maybe it was clips.
Tom Jones, Rickles, Shecky, even Gallagher.
Yes, they were all there.
And Dean and Sammy were on it.
I remember that, yeah.
It was great.
It was at the convention center, and it was one of those bogus things,
a high-concept show.
Right, right, right.
You get a whole bunch of guys on the thing.
But everybody kind of came in and did their little their thing and and went
out it wasn't um they nobody hung out i would love to say that yeah we were in vegas all that
kind of okay i got one of three wild cards for you and you can you can pick um you can tell us
about being in ice pirates oh that's another Another epic up there with Star Wars.
Or you can talk about writing.
You said you like to say you've written for every combination of Sonny and Cher.
That's true.
Including Sonny's comedy review.
Brilliant.
Which I will never forget.
Which was opposite Cher.
The Sonny, well, not opposite, but at the same time they had, each had individual shows.
the sunny, well not opposite but at the same time they had
individual shows
and then they went back to do
they went back to work
together because
they hadn't had
success or
I forget what the timeline
was but he
had his own show
and
he was on ABC because if it takes a village –
oh, no, this is the – if TV is the global village and he's the global village idiot.
He tried so hard.
He did.
I remember hearing like – because, you know, and the big news story was that chastity bono is a lesbian
and i remember and and share went out and said you know how shocked and i remember hearing that
she was a big lesbian years before this ever hit the news well Well, yeah. I mean, she was a tomboy, and she was a very butch girl.
But she was, at the time, a rock and roller.
She was not a successful rock and roller.
No.
But she was very much in the Melissa Etheridge vein.
She wasn't heavy.
She was in the Melissa Etheridge vein of rock singers.
It just didn't take.
And then she decided to come out and kind of give up the performing career.
And she went to work for GLAAD as their communications person and all that.
And so I think probably Cher was.
I don't know.
How can I say?
I mean, she's the mother and she probably knew.
Must have been a weird childhood for her.
Oh, it was very. Because
she was, I mean, here she is
with the mother who's a mannequin.
Married out on stage, too, as a prop.
Oh, yes.
That used to be scary.
She was adorable.
She was cute, but she was never
comfortable in that role.
But Cher did a very funny thing after that.
Some years later, she started, she did a couple of big gay fundraisers.
And she said, I'm doing this to make amends to my daughter.
She said, because when she told me she was a lesbian, I did a very unshare thing.
And I regret it.
It was not a share reaction.
And it was bizarre
because she was talking about share
in the third person.
There really is no third person.
I mean, share is share.
She's share dressed up
and she's share in mufti,
if that's what I want to say.
But it's always,
the attitude is exactly the same. And she shoots him in the hip and she's Cher in Mufti, if that's what I want to say. But it's always the attitude is exactly the same. And she shoots from the hip and she calls him as she sees him
and all those cliches.
Last week she gave somebody an interview.
She went to see the musical about her that's trying out in Chicago.
I saw that.
She said, some of it's great.
Some of it needs work.
It could use a few more jokes.
But I had a good time watching it.
I mean, you know obviously
she's getting money over this thing but it was a very share thing to do it was like hey i'm telling
you what i thought it's going to get better you know because she doesn't want to say it's fabulous
it's great and then reviews come out that are not terrific so it will get there i'm sure but
it's just i thought it was yeah and. We had one of the Hudson brothers.
We had Mark Hudson, who's a lot of fun.
Yeah, he is.
He had a story that Cher used to hold auditions for her next boyfriend.
In the house.
Oh, that's good.
While he was in the house.
Oh.
Yeah.
Was he one of the?
I guess they had a dalliance, but I think they were more friends than anything.
I guess.
Yeah.
He was friends with one of her boy...
He is probably still friends with Josh Donnan, who was one of her boyfriends.
He's very funny.
Before Bagel Boy came in.
But Bagel Boy apparently is a character.
Rob Camillay is a character.
In the Cher musical?
Yeah.
I don't know if any of the other boyfriends are characters.
We didn't even get to bet, but Gilbert and I found it very entertaining,
the whole idea that old red hair is back, that she only wanted one guest,
and it was Olivier, and he agreed to do it.
That's right.
He did.
That is interesting.
I know, he did.
And then he called and said he had to go do The Boys from Brazil.
One of Gilbert's favorites.
He said, I'm an old man.
I need the money.
He said, I'm going to go hunt Nazis in South America.
But getting Hoffman as a substitute worked out well.
She had met him through Hoffman.
They were shooting Marathon Man.
And Dustin brought him to see her.
We were playing L.A. at the time.
And he came back. We were, like the Channel Pavilion, and he came back.
We were, like, doing six nights,
and he came back for every night.
He was totally taken with her
and said he would do it.
You know, he said he would,
any opportunity.
In fact, there was,
at one point,
they were going to do a big TV version of a,
the second show from Anthony Newley and Leslie Brickus, Stop the World, I Want to Get Off big TV version of the second show
from Anthony Newley and Leslie Brickus,
Stop the World, I Want to Get Off of It.
And the second was called The Roar of the Grease Paint,
The Smell of the Crowd.
And it's a lousy show with a phenomenal score.
And they were going to do that.
It was Cyril Richard and Anthony Newley,
and it was going to be Olivier and Bette.
And the Anthony Newley character is like a cockney,
could be a woman, could be a woman could be a boy interesting
and um uh and it just never happened it was it was the material was like a little too rarefied
but uh he said he would do this and then and then he couldn't do it and so dustin said i'll step in
and do it and we really we won the emmy for that show so it worked out very well i remember it yes i
remember it's a really good show what else you have gill oh i don't know i've gone through almost
every card i will i will say this i loved i want our listeners and we have many of them to to to
find bruce's documentary get bruce which is great full of stories yes i also enjoyed your book
well that was you know i was on hollywood squares and i got a lot of book offers i didn't have a which is great, full of stories. Yes. I also enjoyed your book.
Well, that was, you know, I was on Hollywood Squares,
and I got a lot of book offers.
I didn't have a book at the time,
and I couldn't sit down and write one at the time.
So I collected a bunch of articles and things I'd written for magazines.
Yeah.
And then watched as it got reviewed like I deliberately published this thing.
Oh, there were fun stories in there.
Yeah, that's what I did.
And it was fine.
I mean, that's what happens.
And now I'm working on another, a book book.
I was just going to ask you, what's up now? What are you doing?
Well, I've written a musical, which is with all of Petula Clark's music.
Oh, we love Petula Clark.
I love Crazy Basin.
Oh.
85.
Sign of the Times.
Yep, that's the title.
Sign of the Times.
Oh, my God, I love that.
And we're going to do it in Wilmington at the Delaware Theater Center.
We open November 20th for six weeks.
And we've done a few regional theater productions.
Wonderful.
Did you love playing Edna in Hairspray?
Oh, it was the greatest.
It was the most fun ever.
Yeah.
How many shows did you do?
778.
Good Lord.
But who's counting?
I mean, it was two years.
What a work ethic.
Yeah, it was.
It hit an OCD button.
You're complaining about going up on stage two nights a week.
Yes.
This man did 770 shows.
Well, you know, you get into that harness.
It's getting into the harness that's the hard part.
Once you're in it, it's great fun.
I mean, Bette does a hilarious thing, which I hope she will film.
Like vaudeville performers.
Hello, Dolly. Yeah. About getting herself up the staircase to do the number. thing which i hope she will film like void performers hello dolly about about getting
herself up the staircase to do the number like at the end of the week after the eighth time she's
doing it and hauling hand over and then the light comes out and boom it's dolly but it's it's
hysterical but that's what it's like i mean it, you do the same thing over and you find a way to make it fresh for yourself.
Of course.
But it's physically exhausting because, you know, it's repetitive.
It must have been.
Yeah.
But stage actors, that's what they do.
I mean.
Did you have, and we talked about Gilbert, talked to Gilbert about this same thing.
Did you get the high and then have a hard time coming down sometimes after a show?
Oh, yeah.
Because you just. Yeah, you come off and you're totally exhilarated.
It's like when I
get off stage, I
totally understand
why some people get
into drugs. Oh, yeah.
I'm with you. I totally get it.
Because you want
to preserve that great feeling
when it was a good night,
when it's worked well and all that.
But it's exhilarating.
It's hard to just come down from it.
And it's also difficult to be with people who haven't had that experience.
And so you wind up seeking out people who –
that's why actors meet each other after the show.
It makes sense.
Yeah.
I mean, because they're all sharing that thing.
Go to Joe Allen's and drink till four o'clock so you don't have to go home.
And I,
I always remember watching a talk show where,
uh,
Lauren Bacall was on and she was doing a Broadway show and she said she,
she would get the adulation and the cheers and then go back to her hotel and be sitting by herself
that's common we know that's common you know that was part of you know what killed janice
joplin i think is that she was the only female rock star who got that kind of reception and then
there was nobody there when she came off after 20 000 people were screaming
there was no one person she tried to find one person but it never really worked out but yeah
it's uh it's an amazing thing to suddenly have that all of that and then it boils down to
okay i'll get a cab now and oh i just got a flashback of one story. You probably wrote this for her.
Yeah.
Melissa Gilbert was on Hollywood Squares.
Yes.
Granddaughter of Harry Crane.
Oh.
The legendary comedy writer Harry Crane.
I have a great Harry Crane story.
So Melissa Gilbert's line was, if I married Gilbert Gottfried, would I be Melissa Gilbert Gilbert Gottfried?
Yeah.
And you were on this show and you said you'd be the happiest woman in the world.
I know.
Well, you know, I'd spoken to the staff at the comedy store.
I knew. Fantastic. I know. Well, you know, I'd spoken to the staff at the comedy store. I knew.
I knew.
Harry Crane and I wrote the first People's Choice Awards.
Okay.
Whenever that was.
And I was like the young writer, and he was the old pro.
His reputation precedes him.
I couldn't even remember who hosted it but we were um
we were i was you know i was about something about you know this this guy wouldn't do this
material and it wouldn't work and all that kind of stuff and he said hey when you come across
one of those do what i do i take the check and I put the check
on the passenger seat
of the Mercedes
and I drive down
Sunset Boulevard
and I come to a light
and I look
and there's a person
waiting for a bus
and I look at the person
and I look at the check
and I sing zippity and I look at the check and I sing,
Zippity-doo-dah, zippity-day.
I love that.
That's for you, Gil.
That's advice you need to follow.
As Sophie Tucker said, I will never forget it.
That is great.
Harry Crane.
What a legend.
Oh, yeah.
I mean, then he was writing Stephen Eadie, but he was like one of the original of those guys who wrote this kind of stuff, who wrote variety shows.
Right, right, right.
When there was a lot of variety shows.
Look at the person.
So you're working on the Petula Clark musical, which is soon to happen.
Did I hear another book?
I'm writing another one, but it's taken.
I want it to be like a David Sedaris book.
Great.
You're the perfect person to do that.
Essays, fiction, nonfiction.
I don't want it to be another like, okay, and then I wrote the People's Choice Awards.
I wanted to have something more.
Right.
And I would be remiss if I didn't say that Arnie Kogan said,
please thank Bruce for not letting the band play Jay, his son, offstage when he was making his Emmy acceptance speech.
Oh, that's funny.
I remember that, yeah.
That you were in the control room saying let him talk.
No, no, you can't.
This is Jay Kogan.
Yeah.
And he appreciates that.
What did he win?
Was he a simpsons
what did he was winning for frazier oh for frazier well yeah yeah and we did a father's day show with
jay and arnie and they were a lot of fun there's so much crossover here we had jay and arnie and
he was donnie and marie and then we had we had sid and marty and they said say hello to bruce and
now you're here to give a different perspective on those shows. We should one day do a whole chart.
A flow chart of our guests?
I think, yeah.
When you do 200 some odd of these, you know, it's funny how everybody intersects.
Beyond six degrees.
They're all.
You all kind of bleed into each other.
And this one's purely for Gilbert.
Okay.
And you don't have to tell it if you don't want to.
But is there a Tallulah Bankhead story?
Oh, there are several.
But, yeah.
This is a gift I hardly tell it because you know I have to explain who she was not well our listeners know
but uh well if I do it on stage but I was in a summer stock with her I was in a production
called of a play called murder on the rocks sometimes, sometimes called The House on the Rocks. And it was
kind of a ridiculous sort of melodrama. And I was playing the butler and I was very young
and I was like 14 and I had a deep voice and all that. But they were casting on the cheap.
And we toured all of these, wherever there were nice young men who sold antiques, we played. Mostly barn theaters on Cape Cod.
They were kind of ecstatic.
And it's a long story.
But we played, as I recall, it was the Tap Enzy Playhouse up the river.
And it was a star.
There was always a star in whatever the production was.
And Helen Hayes lived at NIAC, where the theater was.
And Tallulah did not care for Helen Hayes.
And we never were sure.
You know, when you would talk to Tallulah,
you couldn't quite make out what she was saying.
You'd say, this is lovely.
Oh, yeah.
It's happy to.
It's happy.
It's happy.
And you'd say, it's a weather.
It's a weather. It's a day. Oh. And I'd say, and I say,
we thought you might go say,
so you just say,
okay,
Ixnay,
I'm the Ellen Hay.
But you talking to her was like,
like talking to your dog and your dog is kind of going,
kind of gleaning what you're saying.
And so, so we, so so we we would learn
not to to tread too heavily and um they kept trying to get her to go up to uh to have to meet
helen and finally on the last day she relented and she went up and she had a bite between shows
with helen and she came back and uh she looked a little green, a little bilious,
and the guy who worked for her said, how was it?
And he said, oh, it was, the food was terrible, revolting.
Tallulah has such gas.
And so she got through the first act, and she said,
and then we go act, the top of the second act,
it was kind of a period thing.
She wore hoop skirts and the top of the second act,
the curtain went up and she was discovered downstage center,
sort of squatting over the prompter's box where she belonged you know and she was in a pose and uh before she could say anything she let out with
the longest loudest most vivid fart in the English speaking stage.
Her skirt billowed off.
The air turned blue in her vicinity.
He enjoys this.
And the audience began like, they all heard it.
I mean, we could hear it.
I was in the third floor and i heard
it on the pa oh my god she cut the cheese we ran downstairs what's she gonna do and the audience
is now like tittering and they're laughing and now it becomes uh you know a wave of laughter
and it's now there's now it's hysterical now they're oh my, my God, she got the ticket. You believe the surprise, man? And she just stands there, just majestically, Spartan in her bravery.
And it all dies down.
And she's now alone.
And she just turns very grandly and says, that one was for Helen.
Fantastic.
You got to write another book.
She was quite a fabulous.
She was quite, quite, yeah.
The other joke that she said, she would tell me whether,
she would tell me famous stories about her and then stuff that was true and all that.
But there was a, she was, I was reading the paper and on the train between one of these places and the other.
And it said six out of every – wait, what is it?
One out of every seven Americans is carrying a weapon and a gun, is carrying a gun.
And she looked at this and said, you know what this means, don't you, darling?
One of the Lennon sisters is packing a rod.
That's a fantastic line.
She must have been hilarious.
She was very funny.
But she was also drunk a lot.
At that point, she wasn't around too much longer after that.
It's funny.
We talk about this flow chart of names.
You are a link to so much classic Hollywood.
Yeah, to a lot of it.
I mean, how many people knew Tallulah Bankhead and Betty Davis and Joan Crawford and interacted?
How old are you?
I said, well, I was very young when I worked with them.
They were very old.
Or they weren't that very old,
but they were at the end of their careers,
the end of their lives, old or not.
But so it was that kind of confluence.
Not many people have worked with Tallulah Bankhead and Gallagher.
It's true.
Although you wouldn't have done badly with tarp around tomorrow.
At a certain point, it could get messy.
Gilbert will not soon get over that Joan Crawford, David Niven story.
Boy.
That is a great one.
Hear it back.
Now I'll hear from David Niven Jr.
I didn't mean it.
Let this man go home.
Okay.
All right.
Thank you for coming here and doing this.
It's true.
When I was on Hollywood Squares with you, those were like the jobs that I didn't consider jobs.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Sure, because they were fun. They were just fun, and it was consider jobs. Yeah. Yeah. Sure, because they were fun.
They were just fun, and it was a party.
Yeah.
Whoopi tells me all the time how much fun you guys had,
and I'm so envious.
It was a day.
You showed up in the morning, and there was breakfast,
and then we did three shows,
and there was a big elaborate Wolfgang Puck catered lunch,
and then two shows, and lots of wine,
and we were out by four but it was it was just
fun and uh you'd be up there and really nobody could really act up because if they did there
were like eight other people going girl put one together zan pulled some shit on it i forget she
wasn't having an attitude and pamelaela Anderson, I don't know,
had a reduction or an enhancement or something,
and she was in pain.
And Anna Nicole Smith, I remember,
was also kind of out of it.
Props to the joke writers too.
You, Dave Boone, John Max, good people.
Yeah, they were great.
All good people.
And it was fun to write, you know, it was fun to write that stuff.
It was fun to write for people.
The funniest stuff was people who weren't, I mean, scripted,
who weren't funny necessarily stumbling on something.
Yeah.
But it was fun to write for the people who were funny.
Like him?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Sure.
Yeah.
And, yeah, now I just remember that show.
Yeah.
It was,
it never felt like work to me.
It was.
Right.
Just having a good time there.
Well,
I'll be looking for that
Petula Clark musical
for sure.
We love her.
Come on down.
And so does Dara.
Come down to Wilmington.
It's just two stops
on the Acela.
I'm going to come and see it.
Don't sleep in the subway.
It's in there.
So this has been Gilbert Gottfried's amazing colossal podcast.
I'm here with my co-host, Frank Santopadre, and our friend, the hilarious Bruce Volland.
Hilarious.
Hey.
Thank you.
Stories all day.
And into the night.
Thanks, man. Thank you. Stories all day. And into the night. Thanks, man.
Thank you.
We'd like to thank the incredibly talented kids from What's Happening.
Ernest Thomas.
Haywood Nelson.
Fred Berry and Danielle Spencer.
And the far-out sounds of Rick Dees and Disco Willa.
The man listed in the dictionary under bananas, Rip Davis.
And the lady we love to love, Anne B. Davis.
And the crop-tet dancers in Water Folly.
And John Steerwalt.
John Steerwalt. He's the guy who holds up the cards.
Good night, John.
You've written very well.
And why don't I sing now?
Right.
Oh, I'm going to get you, John.
Right.
Why don't I sing now?
There's nowhere in the world that I would rather be
than with you, my love.
And there's nothing in the world that I would rather see than your smile, my love.
For united we stand, divided we fall And if our backs should ever be against the wall
We'll be together, together you and I
Good night, everybody! Also appearing in tonight's show were
Patty Maloney, Mike Kagan, Bruce Valance
and the characters from the world of Sid and Marnie Cross.