Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - GGACP Classic: Kliph Nesteroff
Episode Date: November 9, 2023GGACP marks Native American Heritage Month by revisiting this interview with historian and New York Times bestselling author Kliph Nesteroff, who discusses his 2021 book about Native Americans and co...medy, "We Had a Little Real Estate Problem." In this episode, Kliph talks about banned cartoons, politically incorrect mascots, the pioneering comedy of Charlie Hill and the history of Hollywood stereotypes. Also, Buddy Hackett pulls a knife, Howard Hawks disses Rowan & Martin, Peter Sellers sends up Charlie Chan and Frank Sinatra's goons rough up Shecky Greene. PLUS: Allen & Rossi! "Go Go Gophers"! Alan Hale's Lobster Barrel! Jack Carter feuds with Al Jolson! And "F-Troop" rips off a Redd Foxx routine! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Colossal Podcast
with my co-host, Frank Santopadre.
Our guest this week is making his fourth appearance on this show,
and I swear that one of these times I'm going to get his name right.
He's a writer, producer, curator, an occasional podcaster,
a cultural historian, and a New York Times bestselling author.
He's been called everything from the human encyclopedia of comedy
to the king of comedy lore,
and has conducted live on stage interviews with everyone from Mel Brooks to Buck Henry
to Fred Willard to Triumph the Insult Comic Dog, just to name a few.
He served as the host of a TV series, Funny How, and was a consulting producer on the
popular CNN series, The History of Comedy. His best-selling, critically acclaimed 2015 book, The Comedians,
Drunks, Thieves, Scoundrels, and The History of American Comedy was selected as the book of the
year on the LA Weekly and Los Angeles Times. That book, as well as his terrific blog of interviews
with golden age comedians, classic showbiz, are essential reading for listeners of this podcast
or anyone interested in 20th century popular entertainment.
His latest book from Simon & Schuster is called We Had a Little Real Estate Problem,
The Unheralded Story of Native Americans and Comedy.
story of Native Americans and comedy.
And he's here to talk about it as well as other subjects we'll throw at him.
Please welcome back to the show a man who could personally verify that Jack Carter was the angriest man in showbiz.
Kliss Nesterov.
What was that?
Is it Nesterov?
You got it.
What was the first word?
You got the last name right, the first name wrong.
Wait.
It's.
Wait.
Okay.
Say your first name.
Kliss Nesterov. I said Kliss. Say your first name. Cliff.
Cliff.
I said Cliff.
I heard Kliss.
I heard Kliss too.
It's fine.
I said Cliff. Cliff.
I've had other people introduce me accidentally as Klit.
So I'll take Kliss.
So I'll take Kliss. I'll take Kliss.
That's a character in a movie.
Oh, Lord.
Before we move on to this wonderful new book, Cliff,
and because it's baked into the intro,
quickly a little bit about Jack Carter being the angriest man in show business.
Oh, man.
You know, I was so delighted to hear your John Biner episode
and hear John Biner do an impression of Jack Carter, the elderly, angry Jack Carter, because Biner do an impression of Jack Carter,
the elderly, angry Jack Carter.
Because when I do an impression of Jack Carter, I'm not,
I didn't think really impersonate his voice.
I just impersonated his anger, like his essence.
And when Biner did it, I was like, hey, that is the same voice.
But to refresh your guys' memory, Jack Carter,
I would interview him in his home many, many times.
And I would ask him things like, Jack, tell me about the Carol Burnett show.
What was it like working with Carol Burnett, Tim Conway, Vicki Lawrence, and the rest?
And Jack would sort of breathe heavily before saying anything.
Breathe heavily before saying anything.
Vicki Lawrence was a Nazi cunt.
To refresh.
And I said this one on the show many times.
Thank you for that refresher.
Yeah. And he agreed to do this
podcast and then died like two days later. Oh, man, that's that's a drag. That happened to me
with Don Rickles. I was hired to do a show in Las Vegas on stage. It was going to be about Las Vegas
comedians and the mafia. And it was going to be me interviewing Rickles. I have the contract
framed in my house. He died before we got to do
the show. I still got paid in a act of God, an act of God clause. I got paid, but it was a,
yeah, it was a drag because we were that close to doing it. And then it didn't happen. Jack Carter,
Jack Carter would have been the best guest for this podcast was like one of those people i heard you mention anybody or anything
and he'd like go off in a tangent yeah how horrible and and he actually had an incredible
memory like sometimes when i was talking to jack and i had this with george schlauter as well
they tell you this great story but you kind of felt like it's
bullshit. Like there's no way that what they're saying is true. That's 80% of this show, Cliff.
But then I would look it up and I'd go, why was Jack so mad about getting stranded on a boat with
Maury Amsterdam outside of Olympia, Washington in 1943? And then I'd look it up and there'd be a news article about it,
exactly as Jack had told it to me, you know, like 60, 70 years after the fact.
His memory was absolutely incredible. And he had, you know, he knew Al Jolson. He got into
like an argument with Jolson. Oh, man. Amazing. Lindy's, you know, so what was what was the
argument about? I think jack was doing an
impression of jolson and i don't remember the details but it was just you know it was just
more of jack carter venting it wasn't even really a story it's like ah jolson jolson was an asshole
jolson i did the best jolson there was this other guy who did jolson but i did the best jolson i
should have done the one man show you know he would just rant and rave, like you say, no matter who you mentioned.
And then every now and then he would surprise you by not getting angry.
He'd say, like, tell me about Maury Amsterdam.
You'd go, darling man, wonderful man.
Oh, wow.
And you'd be like, really?
And actually, since the last time I was on this show, you know what I've really enjoyed exploring? If you really want to see Jack Carter angry, because when he was on TV, on talk shows or on stage, he was never angry.
He was always smiling and genial and pretending to be this happy guy.
And when he got off stage, that's when he would start calling everybody a cocksucker.
a cocksucker but if you go if you go on if you go on youtube watch all the episodes of tattletales with jack carter and watch him get furious when his wife gets the answer wrong he's like pounding
the table with his fist he's like storming and if you watch that game show if you remember
tattletales hosted by convy bert convy at the act break they would switch so
the wives would be backstage and the husbands would be up front and when they went to commercial
you know bert convy said okay now we're going to switch the wives are going to come out to the
stage the husbands are going to go backstage and as they're throwing to commercial you see
the set revolve and all the couples sort of meet halfway and like embrace hug or kiss and when
you watch the jack carter episodes and they're supposed to embrace and kiss he just ignores his
wife and just like i'm like storms pastor in this rage while the other celebrity couples are like
you know you know what's funny just today on tv i'm switching around the stations and I saw Jack Carter on Living Singer.
There you go.
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
He was on everything.
It used to be like a running gag in my life.
Oh, he worked constantly.
Yeah.
I'd see like a Mod Squad or a Rocket Files or a bad made for TV movie.
And I go, huh, I wonder if Jack Carter will be in this.
And then he was, you know, like nine times out of 10.
He worked all the time.
Oh, here's a story that I brought up a few times on this show.
It doesn't have to do with comedians,
but everyone acted like they didn't know.
And I think they were bullshitting.
I think they were trying to be nice.
I'll give you the names involved and see if you know.
they were trying to be nice i'll give you the names involved and see if you know uh frank and dean and the chairman of hunt's foods you know this story cliff is it does it take place at the
beverly hills hotel i think so yeah or like he smashed somebody in the side of the head with a
telephone yes sounds right yeah. Tell us that story.
Well, as I understand it,
I don't remember why Sinatra smashed him in the face
with a telephone.
I think it was, you know...
The guy was making too much noise
at his table.
Right, right.
Supposedly.
I think I maybe also heard a story
that, you know, like a lot of times,
like business people
or people that are big
in the business world,
they think they deserve to know famous celebrities just because they're powerful.
And so I think also there was a degree where he felt like a level of familiarity with Sinatra and Sinatra didn't want anything to do with him.
My understanding is that in those days they had the telephone right on your table.
They would bring you a phone for to a call, like a rotary phone.
And my understanding is that Sinatra,
I heard that it was Heinz, but maybe I have it wrong.
Oh, it could be.
Hunts?
I think it was Hunts food.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh, like Hunts tomato paste?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Oh, okay.
I'm getting it confused with Heinz tomato catsup.
Okay, I got it. So I think tomato cats up okay i got it yeah so
he i think he picked up the rotary phone and smashed the guy in the side of his head like he
had to have reconstructive surgery the guy was going to sue sinatra and i think instead of going
through with the lawsuit sinatra paid um like out of court for the guy's plastic surgery to
reconstruct his face.
That's the story that I heard.
Yeah.
And I believe it.
And it took place at the Beverly Hills Hotel in the lounge there.
The Polo Lounge.
That sounds right.
Well, you don't miss a trick, Cliff.
That's the scariest part of that story is that he didn't press charges.
And see, yeah, I had heard that dean and frank were really loud and drunk and he asked
if they could hold it down and frank right like that yeah that sounds about right i think i read
that story in a book by earl wilson earl wilson the columnist the showbiz columnist he right used
to write these very salacious books that were sort
of like they were they're kind of disgusting to read because you don't really want to hear
graphic sexual stories from earl wilson yeah he was this little gross mole looking guy but i think
he tells that story in one of his uh books or maybe it was uh jim bacon one of those uh newspaper columnists from that era they all
came out with books that you know just uh recounted various showbiz stories about sinatra and jackie
gleason and stuff like that and i heard he crashed when he hit him with the phone he crashed through
like a glass table he got a skull fracture yeah oh my god it was like in a coma for a while oh my god it's a
guy named uh frederick weissman and it happened at beverly hills yeah polo lounge i'm pretty sure
that's right polo lounge very good yeah the guy knows his stuff and this guy this guy weissman
aside from just being the chairman of Hunt's Foods,
so you know he's not a tough guy, he was also retired.
So he wasn't that young either.
And Sinatra was a big tough guy around him.
Wow.
Was Stu Gillum implicated in any way?
Oh, God bless Stu Gillum. i refer to a previous episode with cliff yes yes alan hale's
lobster barrel the scene of the crime it's hard yeah look it up it's hard to go down uh las
llaniga boulevard without saluting the address of alan hale's lobster barrel which was on the
same street as the red fox nightclub which which had previously been the Slate Brothers nightclub,
where Don Rickles got his start after...
La Cienega.
Yeah, Restaurant Row, they called it.
There was a lot of celebrity-themed restaurants.
There's one artifact remaining that I know of
from Alan Hale's Lobster Barrel here in Hollywood,
the Frolic Room,
which is an old tavern next to the Pantages Theater,
which is probably most famous
for being in one of the establishing shots
in L.A. Confidential, that movie.
The Frolic Room is a really old bar,
and behind the bar,
they have an autographed drawing,
not even a photo,
of Alan Hale Jr.
And he didn't like to drink in his own establishment
because he liked to get drunk.
And he didn't, I guess it was bad optics,
tourists coming to see Alan Hale Jr. at the Lobster Barrel
and him being drunk.
So he would go to the Frolic Room and get wasted.
And so they have this autographed drawing of him
that is like the logo from Alan Hale's Lobster Barrel
up on the wall, autographed behind the bar, still to this day at the Frolic Room on Hollywood Boulevard.
Fantastic.
Next to Stu Gillum's booking sheet.
Yeah.
And there was also in the village, Grandpa's.
Yeah, in New York.
That was Al Lewis's.
Yeah, there were a lot of celebrity restaurants that went under.
We did a lot of that on a previous episode.
It wasn't just a restaurant.
It was like a restaurante.
Correct.
It was like a bistro.
And did any of these celebrities really do anything except occasionally show up?
I don't think so.
But the cool thing about Al Lewis's restaurante is that the logo and the menu was drawn and designed by Fred Gwynn.
Yes, Bella Ristorante.
Oh, wow.
That's right.
Fred Gwynn was a talented cartoonist, just like Dick Gauthier also was a talented cartoonist. They really knew how to draw. And so Grandpa Munster hired Herman Munster to design the logo for the Ristorante Bistro there in the village.
So they were good friends.
I guess. I guess.
I mean, I don't really know how much they stayed in contact.
Al Lewis is such a bizarre character.
Yeah.
stayed in contact al lewis is such a bizarre character yeah and much and unlike jack carter when al lewis told you a story and it sounded like bullshit it was bullshit certified bullshit
yeah al lewis um claimed that he donated all of his royalties or his residuals from the Munsters to the Black Panther Party in the late
60s. I don't know if that's true or not, but he said, I don't need the money. And he believed in
the cause of the Black Panther Party. Yeah, he was a radical.
Political radical. Very political guy.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. What made him think he was like some kind of cowboy
late in life? yeah string ties yeah the bolo
and would talk like this yeah that's weird isn't it a lot of elderly you know who else does that
is uh doesn't talk like that but the cowboy hat thing is uh well two people steve steve rossi
when he got old was always wearing a cowboy hat tony curtis tony curtis did that he did a cowboy hat. Tony Curtis. Tony Curtis did that?
Yes, yes.
He did a cowboy hat.
And still to this day,
alive, who does that?
He also wears a shirt
with no sleeves,
is Robert Blake.
Cowboy hat,
shirt with no sleeves.
I see him at the
farmer's market sometime
and I'm just like,
what is going on there
with Robert Blake?
Have you ever seen
the episode of Dr. Phil
with Robert Blake? I have not had the episode of Dr. Phil with Robert Blake?
I have not had the pleasure.
I have to now.
Yeah.
It has one of the funniest teasers that I've ever seen.
It's the only episode of Dr. Phil I've ever seen.
They have this teaser where it's like, coming up next.
And this is like after the trial, I guess, or whatever.
And Dr. Phil looks at Robert Blake and goes,
Robert Blake, are you crazy?
And Robert Blake gets those wide eyes and he goes,
am I crazy?
Am I crazy?
I'm fucking certifiable.
Great.
I used to love Robert Blake on the Tom Snyder show.
Remember, Gil?
Oh, yes.
Such great meltdown interviews.
See, Robert Blake, he said he eventually caught on that shows like that
and The Tonight Show were using him as a freak.
Right, right.
It was like fun.
It's nuts who would come on.
Yeah, well, him and Buddy Rich were the two on Carson that were like both crazy,
would roast everybody, would be like these chain-smoking assholes,
and so entertaining.
So entertaining.
Like, it still holds up to watch Buddy Rich or Robert Blake on Carson
because most people, I think, kind of were deferential to Johnny Carson
or maybe even, like, feared him a little bit and didn't want to top him.
And Robert Blake and Buddy Rich didn't care.
They would roast Carson, and he would roast them back.
And it was a great dynamic that they had. Why don't you go up to, uh, to Robert Blake in the farmer's market and
tell him you want to do an interview for the blog? I triple dog dare you. Well, I would,
I would do it. I mean, he's a loose cannon, but I mean, I was in Jack Carter's house a foot away
from him many times. I never, never uh he only turned on me once George
Schlatter used to say to me he go how do you handle it how do you deal with Jack Carter if you could
deal with Jack Carter you could deal with anybody you you intentionally deal with Jack Carter like
he just couldn't believe that I would put myself in this situation and I said George Jack Carter
is nice to me he goes uh-uh he's gonna turn on you. One of these days he's going to turn on
you. And I probably told you this before. After like three years, he finally did turn on me.
I'm sure I told this story the first time that I was on your show.
Go ahead, tell it again. It's good.
I had interviewed him for the internet and published transcripts of our many conversations
about Jolson and maury amsterdam
and then all of a sudden i get this phone call like three years after the fact
and uh i go hello he goes cliff it's jack carter you're dead to me we're we're finished we're
through it's over i go what are you talking about because i was at somebody's house the other day. They brought out the laptops.
They showed us the computer.
And there on the computer
is every fucking word I ever said to you.
You're making money off of me.
I don't know who you sold this to.
I said, Jack, I didn't sell it to anybody.
The whole reason we know each other
is because I asked if I could interview you
for my website.
He goes, oh, your website? Your website? I go, yeah, it's my website. He goes,
if it's your website, how did it get on my wife's computer?
Wow. Jack Carter once once, I guess, honored me with with an angry insult.
Somebody mentioned my name to him and Jack Carter said, oh, him.
He's a rebate. That's right. I never never figured that out i don't understand what that
means but it's a great great insult oh he had he did have great insults and none of them really
made sense rebate was one of them i think he meant i i think he he maybe meant like reject
or something knows and the other disordered mind the other insult of his that i
loved was uh i would say i'm trying to think of somebody he hated uh i'd say what did you think
of jamie farr ah jamie farr is a human garbage pail
gil we met we missed out by not having him.
Oh, my God.
We got Pat Cooper, the second angriest comedian in showbiz history.
I wonder if those two guys knew each other,
and I wonder if they ever occupied the same space.
Oh, they very much did know each other
because they were playing opposing Vegas hotels in the same era.
I think Cooper was playing the Flamingo
while Carter was playing the Riviera or something like that.
And Pat Cooper, I never really heard Jack Carter talk too much about Pat Cooper,
but Pat Cooper praised Jack Carter,
said he was the best comedian of his era,
the most powerful, the most potent, the most competent.
And I do respect Jack Carter, even though I didn't
really, his act was not for me, you know, it was a little bit too corny for my tastes, but
he could go into any city in North America and do two hours specifically for that city. And usually
I don't like road comics that like go from city to city and they just change the name of the mayor
and do the same joke and get laughs because it's a local reference but jack carter when he would play the cave night
club in vancouver would do two hours just about vancouver and for that reason he was invited back
year after year after year and they loved him he would do montreal and do two hours just about
montreal he would do toronto two hours just about toronto miami beach two hours just about Montreal. He would do Toronto, two hours just about Toronto, Miami Beach, two hours just about Miami Beach. And I think that's really impressive that he wasn't doing the same 45
minutes everywhere he went. He was constantly doing different acts for different places. Same
in England. He would do London, two hours just about England stuff. And he had a great memory,
which I know from interviewing him, but his material, it was amazing that he could
remember all of these jokes as angry as he was and as difficult as he was. And as sometimes corny as
the material was, it takes a great ability to be able to to be able to to know and retain that much.
Now, speaking of angry and difficult, and I this is one of those people I spoke to a handful of times,
and I could use the classic line, well, he was always nice to me.
Yeah.
And that said, you must have had dealings with Jerry Lewis.
Yes.
Yeah.
Well, only once, and it was through Drew Friedman, who gave me his phone number.
It was very brief.
I can't really say that he was nice or not nice.
It was disappointing, to be sure, because I had a whole page of notes.
I wanted to ask him about the Rio Bamba in 1945, you know, all these obscure nightclubs from the 40s.
I wanted to interview him about his lip-sync act.
And I think Jerry had no patience for people who didn't really do their research. And I had really
done my research. So I was ready to impress him in that or at least bond with him by not doing
the same bullshit interview. And he just didn't give me the time of day. He goes, I phoned him.
Drew set it up. Yeah. And I phonedoned him i said drew uh told me to call he goes
yeah i know and i said uh well um can we do an interview he goes no i never do interviews i go
oh well drew said that you would do an interview with me he goes yeah i know like it was just this
weird kafka-esque circle you caught you caught him on the wrong day yeah i i never really had that experience
with too many other people other than paul mazerski who um god rest his soul was real jerk
to me over the phone i'm sorry and uh cut me off and like i don't know it was really weird
and insulted me and uh that didn't and marty allen was the other one who which i know you
guys had a good experience with marty Marty Allen. That one shocked me.
I knew that story.
I knew your experience with Marty was shocking.
I've never met anyone that shocked me.
Yeah, it was weird.
I think because I think I was hitting some sort of sore nerve with the references I was making without knowing it.
Interesting.
Because I was asking him about all the things that he did before Steve Rossi.
So I was like, what can you tell me about your early comedy team
with this guy, Tiny Wolf?
And he'd go, he's just a guy.
I go, what does that mean?
And I go, you were in a comedy team with a guy named Mitch DeWood.
He goes, yeah, Mitch.
I go, what can you tell me about him?
He goes, nothing, just a guy.
I go, you performed with him for 10 years.
You headlined in Vegas with him before Steve Rossi.
He goes, it's the past.
It's the past.
Like, he didn't want to talk about it.
Wow.
And then I spoke with a, I think, I can't remember who,
but somebody told me, oh, yeah, he had a bad breakup
with that other comedy team.
Like, there was bad blood.
So he didn't want to get into
it but he was very curt with me and it was at least he didn't call you a rebate he didn't call
me a rebate yeah yeah we will return to gilbert gottfried's amazing colossal podcast after this
you know what i noticed when i watch and i remember TV from like the 60s and 70s, you could get away with an act where you said, especially comedy teams, you could get away with an act like, hey, is your refrigerator running?
Well, why don't you go catch it?
Yeah, I was going to say, I kind of write about this in the new book
there was a specific circuit in nevada called uh the silver circle and the silver circle
the silver circle circuit was every sort of small town in nevada and nightclub that wasn't
las vegas all the other places the big ones were Reno and Lake Tahoe, but there was also
like Sparks, Nevada and Elko. And there were like hundreds, I'm not even using hyperbole,
literally hundreds of comedy teams who you never heard of before or since who just played that
circuit. And they were doing that style of like 1940s or 50s comedy team style right through
the 1970s and it was partially inspired by Rowan and Martin because that was the circuit that they
played and when they became famous it it made all these other sort of two-bit comedy teams want to
be the next uh Rowan and Martin can you imagine wanting to be the next uh rowan and martin can you imagine wanting to be the next
rowan and martin no but and rowan and martin i mean dan rowan was always doing a dean martin
imitation up there totally even the way he held his cigarette and the drink it was a fairly good
straight man though i mean they were they were good at what they did uh i actually just read a book uh uh
this big long interview with howard hawks the filmmaker and he somebody told him in the 50s
uh one of the people that worked for him said howard i just saw the funniest comedy team of
all time you gotta go up to reno and see rowan and martin and howard hawks said i was expecting
to see somebody hilarious i didn't see anything funny at all.
Like he just hated Rowan and Martin.
The great Howard Hawks of all people.
I can't even picture it.
Early in Persky and Denhoff's career,
I think they were told to go right for Rowan and Martin
and went and saw them perform in a bowling alley.
Oh, weird.
Yeah, and I remember Billy saying,
this is the
bottom this is the bottom of show business but i'm gonna i'm gonna use marty allen as a segue
here to the new book cliff sure was it was it charlie hill native american comedian that
gilbert also crossed paths with in the in the comedy store days wasn't it charlie hill who said
you quote him in the book saying that one of the things that inspired him to go into comedy was how bad Alan and Rossi were. Yeah. He saw them on the Ed Sullivan show.
And up to that point, he'd wanted to do comedy, but he was a little bit insecure. He was just a
kid, but he saw Alan and Rossi on the, on the Ed Sullivan show. And he said, if these guys can do
it, then I can do it yeah because he thought they
were so bad and to be fair to everybody who ever did the Ed Sullivan show sometimes the quote-unquote
bad acts on Ed Sullivan were told to cut three minutes from their act right before they went
on the last minute yeah yeah so a lot of the time they bombed and maybe it wasn't really their fault because
alan and rossi also often killed on ed sullivan so maybe he saw them on one of those bad ones because
uh you know it's not if you're doing a comedy team and you're asked to cut three minutes from
like a five minute set you can sometimes see it there's a there's a ed sullivan segment with
rodney dangerfield and you can see it in Rodney's eyes that he's editing as he goes
along, where he's sort of like stalling for time where he goes, yeah, yeah, but like longer than
he normally would. And you can just see his mind grappling because he's probably had been told cut
out one or two minutes. By the way, the people that own the copyright on all the Ed Sullivan
material have been uploading dozens and dozens and dozens and dozens of comedy sets recently onto YouTube, full sets of all these comedians.
They just uploaded a Dick Capri set.
Oh, got to watch.
Love Dick Capri.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So everybody should check that out.
Well, we had Neil Sadaka on the show.
Well, we had Neil Sadaka on the show, and Neil Sadaka said he was on Sullivan, and he was going to sing My Yiddish Mama, and he rehearsed it, and Sullivan said, too Jewish.
Hilarious.
Well, Biner, too, if you read John Biner's new book, you know, stories about Sullivan's people cutting material at the last minute.
Yeah.
They were infamous for it.
And you can see it on YouTube.
Like it's comedians probably bombed more often than not on the Ed Sullivan show.
It was very hard to not bomb on that show.
It was such a great showcase, but the audience was sort of tough.
In those days, people were still sort of like
mesmerized by being at a live taping so they're like looking at the crew they're looking at the
cameras they're not really looking at the community or they're looking at ed who's standing
just off side uh side of the camera so they're kind of looking at his response before they respond
so it was a tough tough uh gig um when fred willard passed away the ed sullivan
people they uploaded his four appearances on the ed sullivan show a lot of people don't realize
that um that fred willard had appeared on the ed sullivan show four times in a comedy team called
greco and willard and oh yeah i had not seen it, even though I had researched it. And what I did not realize was that Willard was really the straight man,
and it was this guy Greco who was doing the comedy in the act.
I would have assumed that Fred Willard would have been the one doing more of the shtick,
but he was really more of the straight man.
Gil, what do you remember about Charlie Hill, who you worked with at the, was it the store?
The comedy store?
Yeah. Back in the day
yeah not much um oh but i i do remember a story not having to do with charlie hill uh when uh
when i was on saturday night live uh the producer was friends with woody. So she invited him to watch all the,
I think it's when I auditioned,
she invited him to watch all of the auditions on film.
And he's sitting there in the screening room,
this I heard, he's sitting in the screening room,
stone-faced at everybody.
And when I go on, he finally speaks and says, is he a Navajo Indian?
How did you never tell that story before? That's hilarious.
Well, tell us about Charlie Hill and how prominently he factors in the book, Cliff,
which is about the Native American experience and comedy, or in comedy.
Yeah, well, I mean, for decades there were very few Native American comedians.
Because comedy has become so popular in the past 10, 15 years,
podcasts, Netflix, this comedy boom,
suddenly there's actually a fairly large,
compared to the previous generation,
a fairly large Native American comedy scene,
over 100 indigenous stand-up comics, improv comics, and sketch comics.
Almost all of them told me that the reason they got into stand-up is
because they saw charlie hill when they were young either on tv or he played at their college
and the fact that there was this native american guy doing stand-up comedy and not doing stereotypes
um really inspired them so everybody in in indigenous communities all over North America consider
Charlie Hill a major celebrity, a major star, a major inspiration. But in like non-Native circles,
he's sort of obscure today. But he was the very first Native American comedian to appear on network
television on the Richard Pryor show in 1977, the sketch show. Yeah. And that's on YouTube. People
can see that. Yeah, and that show
was all sketch comedy, even though it was all comedy store stand-ups that made up the cast,
like Paul Mooney and Sandra Bernhardt, Robin Williams and Tim Reed. They were all in the cast,
and Charlie Hill was the only guy who did stand-up on that show. Richard Pryor had seen him at the
comedy store. He liked the way Charlie Hill sort of ridiculed white people, show. Richard Pryor had seen him at the Comedy Store. He liked the way Charlie
Hill sort of ridiculed white people the way Richard Pryor himself often did. And it was
Richard Pryor himself who got Charlie Hill on TV. And he had been doing stand-up, Charlie,
for about three years by that point. He started at the Comedy Store in 1974 before David Letterman,
at the Comedy Store in 1974 before David Letterman.
Did a lot of open mics with Letterman.
Became good friends with that era of Comedy Store comics like Michael Keaton and Jay Leno and whoever else.
Did the Richard Pryor Show in 1977.
It was a smash success and it gave him a whole career.
In 1978, he became the first and last up to this point
Native American comedian to do the tonight
show did johnny carson's tonight show killed and from there he was just perfectly positioned
because the comedy boom was just about to start so then he starts doing the mike douglas show
the murph griffin show um uh he did a program i wonder if you guys remember it. It only lasted 11 weeks. The big show?
The big show.
Oh, sure.
I remember it.
It was directed by your former guest.
Steve Bender.
Yeah, yeah.
You bet.
And it had an interesting cast.
It had Graham Chapman from Monty Python.
Steve Allen was a regular.
Edie McClurg was in the cast, the company of players.
Yeah, Rickles was on it.
Rickles, Herve Velichez.
Herve Velichez, Gil.
Nobody remembers the big show.
Was that a Fred Silverman thing?
It was.
It debuted the same week and was canceled the same week as Pink Lady and Jeff.
There you go.
So a blow to two guys at the comedy store.
Right. Charlie and Jeff. There you go. So a blow to two guys at the comedy store. Right.
Charlie and Jeff.
And on the subject, I always think if I were born a few years earlier, I would have definitely
have been an Indian chief on that troop.
That would have made Woody Allen happy.
Yes.
Yeah, it was almost
there was a guy named Don Diamond
who played one of those
characters on F Troop. He was Crazy Cat.
And he was from the Yiddish theater.
Like he was a star
in the Yiddish theater.
And who else?
Well, I mean, obviously Edward Everett Horton in the first few episodes.
Milton Berle.
Was Wise Owl.
Yeah.
Well, they were the guest stars.
Milton Berle, Don Rickles.
You know, they were really hamming it up.
But the regulars were Don Diamond and.
Oh, Frank Decova.
Frank Decova, of course.
But he was Italian.
Frank Decova.
Well, Frank Decova was one of those guys like J.
Carroll Nash, whose entire career was playing other ethnicities.
So sometimes he's an Irish guy.
Sometimes he's – it's always a stereotype.
Like it's always the most common stereotype.
It's never meant to be a believable Irish guy or a believable Native American dude.
It's always the organ grinder or the –
Yeah, you talked in the book about life with Luigi, which was Jake Harrell Nash,
who's an Irish guy, Gilbert, played a guy named Luigi who talk like this.
And then they replaced him with Vito Scotti in an attempt to actually be more accurate.
Well, the irony is everybody always talks about that era's big controversy
being the Amos and Andy show. And it was. But what a lot of people don't realize, some people
who apologize for the racial stereotypes of that era will say, well, well, the Irish never complained.
The Italians never complained, but they did. And that's why a lot of these shows were taken off
the air. Life with Luigi was protested by the Italian Anti-Defamation League.
And rightly so.
And it was canceled the same year as Amos and Andy.
So these two concurrent campaigns, one against Amos and Andy
and one against Life with Luigi,
but nobody remembers that Life with Luigi was canceled
because people considered it an old-, outmoded and insulting stereotype.
Yeah, I remember he was in I always called him Nash, J.
Carol Nash, but whatever. Maybe it is.
He was also in that Peter Lorre movie, Beasts with Five Fingers.
Oh, yeah. Where where it's like an out-and-out Chico imitation.
Yeah.
I looked it up.
He played Sitting Bull in a movie.
Oh, yeah.
Jake Harrell Natch.
Yeah.
I mean, he was an Irish dude from New York, I think.
Yeah, it was bizarre.
Like, these guys were all-purpose.
Sort of the last era of the dudes like that
were people like Bernie Capie capel you know who
were still or or like you said the veto scotties and even bernie even bernie capel who's still
around concedes you know it was that era he wouldn't do that uh today you know it had its
time blah blah blah um you know these guys were talented actors but they their specialty was not accuracy their specialty was the the stereotype which is
what all the films and tv shows wanted like there were many many instances of native american actors
being hired to play native american parts and then being told by the producer or the makeup
department you don't look indian enough so then they would put makeup on them, but they were Native American.
Or Dick Miller was getting that part.
Yeah. Or same thing with black actors in radio. The Red Skelton show in the 40s had a black
actor who called himself Wonderful Smith. And Wonderful Smith was sort of like the Rochester
for Red Skelton. And he actually appears as a, uh, uh, stage hand
in, uh, this is spinal tap decades later, that scene in spinal tap where they're lost backstage.
I know it is. Yeah. He gives them directions. That's wonderful Smith. Anyways, he would,
he was coached and expected to do like an Amos and Andy dialect, even though he was a black dude,
he wasn't allowed to use his real voice. They said, you have to do like the drawl.
And so he did. Then in World War II, he was in the service and he was on Armed Forces Radio.
And Armed Forces Radio, to boost morale for black servicemen, allowed black content on the radio
that wasn't stereotypical they would
be regular um talking in their regular voice about black issues and so wonderful smith got to do that
and he loved that when he got out of the service and returned uh to the red skelton program in the
late 40s they said now you got to go back to doing that amos and andy style dialect and he said no
i'm not going to do that. I don't do that anymore.
And so they fired him.
And that was basically the end of his career.
Wow.
He was considered difficult because he refused to do a fake version
of what the producers felt a black person should sound like.
Am I crazy or was I?
Did I, Gilbert, was Amos and Andy on New York television well into the 60s?
I think so.
Because I remember seeing it when I was a kid.
Well, yeah, it was in syndication.
65, 66 even?
It went through several different periods.
So it got pulled from being a network show in the early 50s because of the campaign.
This is the weird irony of the
Amos and Andy TV show. Well, there's several ironies. One, the stigma, you know, you've seen
the show. There's all these talented Chitlin Circuit legends in the show. And the sad story
is they were all put out of work, right? Yeah. The thing is, the show wasn't canceled because the TV show was racist.
The TV show was canceled because of the stigma attached to the name Amos and Andy because of the radio show.
So it wasn't really the content of the TV show that was considered defamatory.
It was the fact that they had tried to take the radio show off as early as 1930 for the same reason.
So they just felt that the name alone was a stigma.
But the weird thing is the sponsors and the networks were kind of happy to see the NAACP
get the blame for it being purged from the network because they were getting trouble
from Southern sponsors in the South who didn't want black actors on TV.
So instead of having to admit
that they had kotoed kowtowed however you say that to bigoted sponsors they could just say well
it was the naacp and wash their hands of it but it went into syndication and it remained on radio
throughout the rest of the 50s and i remember as a kid there was a cartoon called Calvin and the Colonel.
That's right.
Yes.
And it was Freeman Gustin and Charles Gorel.
The original name is an Andy.
Very good.
It was like a bear and a fox.
That's right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's got a really nice sort of mid-century design to it.
It sort of looks like Tennessee Tuxedo, the same style animation.
And one of the co-voice actors is june foray um but yeah it was it was basically just amos and andy but as as a
bear and a fox it didn't last that long and it was prime time it was actually a show that was
inspired by the success of the flintstones it was made for prime time not saturday morning or uh
weekday afternoons but it sure didn't last very long.
But there's an even weirder aspect to Amos and Andy.
The radio show, the TV show gets canceled, I guess, in 53 or something.
It was still on radio and nobody complained.
So it remained new episodes of the Amos and Andy program on radio with with gosden and correll 53 54 55 56 57
and then cbs changed the format and amos and andy became disc jockeys and actually played records
so it'll be like whatever i'm not going to do the dialect but they would be like now here's the
latest from connie francis and then they would play Where the Boys Are,
and then it would go back to Amos and Andy bantering with each other,
and now here's Johnny Mathis.
And that was like for three years until 1963.
I remember seeing the show in syndication in New York.
I want to say, Gilbert, on Channel 11 or Channel 9,
well into the 60s.
Because it's the only place I would have really seen it.
And I remember seeing it in regular rotation.
And I remember watching the early Flintstones where the theme music was da-da-da, da-da-da, da-da-da-da-da-da.
Like that Flintstones, the Flintstones came later.
Yeah, it was a song called Rise and Shine.
And Rise and Shine, if you listen to that original Flintstones theme song before it had, you know, lyrics,
it sounds exactly like the theme song to the Bugs Bunny show where it's dim the lights.
Oh, on with the show, yeah.
Da, da, da, da, da, da, da, da.
It also sounds a little bit like that Art Matrano song.
Talk about, too, we're talking about F Troop,
and specifically, in the book, you go into detail
about Native American stereotypes in popular culture. And there's a list, and we're
just talking about cartoons, and you singled out Tom and Jerry and Gumby and Betty Boop and Popeye
and Bugs Bunny cartoons for really obvious and crass stereotypes of indigenous characters.
Oh yeah, they're all racist. I mean, I love animation.
I love cartoons.
And they always jockeyed in stereotypes.
It's just kind of interesting that, you know,
there's the famous Notorious Looney Tunes Censored 11
that are all the blackface Bugs Bunny cartoons
and Chuck Jones cartoons.
And they've been pulled from syndication for years
and they're not available on DVD,
and you can only get them on bootlegs.
But when it was another race, it was like fair game.
So I always found that unusual,
and a lot of it had to do with the fact that
the Civil Rights Movement and the Black Power Movement
became very prominent,
but other minority movements were not as prominent. So their
requests were not heeded. One of the very last Looney Tunes cartoons ever made is basically,
in essence, a Roadrunner coyote cartoon. But instead of Roadrunner, it's this guy Merlin the Mouse.
And instead of Wile E. Coyote,
it's just a generic Native American character
who's getting smashed in the face with a hammer,
thrown off a cliff, you know.
And if that was a blackface character,
we would think it was the most abominable thing
you'd ever seen.
But because it's a Native American character,
it didn't get treated the same way. So my argument in the book is that these are basically the same.
And a lot of people get very, very defensive. They don't want to confess or say that, yeah,
it is racist. I think because they're terrified that that means that they're not allowed to watch
it or enjoy it or it'll be taken away from them. But you can enjoy things like F Troop.
You can enjoy things like Life with Luigi.
You can enjoy things with Amos and Andy.
I mean, there's no harm in confessing
that these are racial stereotypes
that are unnecessary today
and yet still appreciate the talent
of some of these character actors involved
or the design of the animation.
But I still feel that they're definitely racist.
I heard that Chinese people actually like the Charlie Chan movies.
Well, Charlie Chan is a fascinating.
The thing is, all of these movies, you can say the same thing about like Hollywood Westerns
with Native American stereotypes, stagecoach.
They are designed to be entertaining and they succeeded in that design.
That's what Hollywood was good at, was how to enamor you with entertainment.
And Charlie Chan, you know, there are minority actors in there.
Key Luke is, you know, is actually and mantan moorland is a great
black comic but i'm sure even uh uh chinese or asian people would say that sydney toller
looks and sounds uh ridiculous or warner olin looks and sounds ridiculous one of them was
swedish i think warner warner olin warner olin Oland was Swedish and he made a living playing these sort of Fu Manchu characters even before he even before he was cast as a werewolf of London.
That's right. Yeah. He's also in Shanghai Express with Marlena Dietrich.
And again, he's playing the word then, quote unquote, Chinaman.
That's what he's playing on a train with Marlena Dietrich.
he's playing on a train with Merlina Dietrich. Sidney Toller, who took over for Warner Olin,
because Warner Olin died, I guess, in the late 30s, right in the middle of the Charlie Chan,
not in the middle of making one of those movies, but the series was still in production.
And they had to replace him immediately. And they replaced him with Sidney Toller.
And I always thought that Sidney Toller, you know, did this terrible pigeon English,
you know, he do the Confucius sayings and Charlie Chan, and he would say, number one, son, don't forget that. And I always thought he was just doing bad pigeon English. Then I saw him in the Jack Benny,
Fred Allen movie. It's in the bag. And he still just talks like this, even when he's playing
a white guy. He wasn't doing all of the way he spoke.
That's fascinating.
The funny thing is, although it's offensive to have white actors,
and this always got me, in movies like that,
it would be a white actor in Asian makeup playing the main character,
but Asians, actual Asians, would be around him.
Yeah, isn't that so weird?
It's such a bizarre sort of fuck you.
Very strange.
All these Asian actors.
And the really sad thing and also sort of fascinating,
you know, the most prominent Asian actors of the 30s
and early 40s were people like Key Luke,
Philip Ahn, He was Korean,
but he always played Japanese villains. There's two good stories about Philip On.
The first one is the sad one. A lot of these act, there wasn't a lot of work for an Asian actor,
unless you were doing one of these stereotype movies where it was like a sinister, foggy
Chinatown and the guy has long fingernails, and he's smoking opium.
And then they get Boris Karloff or something.
Yeah.
Yeah, right, of course.
Or Myrna Loy.
Or Peter Lorre.
Yes.
And Louise Rayner won the Academy Award for doing Yellow Face in the...
That's right, she did, in The Good Earth.
But because a lot of the actual Asian actors
would go much of the year without working
to subsidize their income, they worked as what they called I models in like the MGM makeup
department. They would do like a plaster cast of Key Luke's face. And then when they wanted
Louise Rainer to star as an Asian or Catherine Hepburn in The Good Earth, they would put the mold of
Key Luke over the white person's face
and then paint around it
and then they would play the Asian.
I can't remember the name of that movie, The Katharine Hepburn,
where she wore fake eyelids.
I think it's, is it The Good Earth?
No, that's Louise Rainier.
But Katharine Hepburn
played an Asian character.
Yeah, and Jean Tierney in the Shanghai
gesture so many I I always think like it's interesting because it's you know it might
be offensive a white actor playing Asian but then you'd have to say but it's this brilliant asian character who's on the side of the law so he's like a good person
and a brilliant person yeah he's a hero and charlie chan is the smart guy he's not like a
step and fetch it dumb guy that's true um it is fascinating to watch. And really, if you like, like, we're all fans here of, like, you know, shock theater and universal horror.
Of course.
And the Charlie Chan movies and those Chinatown tropes are sort of like the cousin of those movies.
Like, they're mysterious.
They're moody.
They go into a wax museum or a haunted house.
Yes.
And so it's hard not to derive enormous pleasure
from those movies
if you're a fan
of that genre
as I am.
I got a Charlie Chan
movie poster in my house.
This is what I'm saying.
You can acknowledge
that this stuff
is sort of racist
and stereotypical
and still enjoy it
on its own level.
You know what I mean?
Sure, of course.
A lot of people get defensive
because I think they think,
oh, you're advocating
to walk it in a vault or something.
And I'm not advocating that.
Just acknowledge that it is what it is.
One of the shames was that
you didn't have Asian actors
who had attained the prominence
of somebody like Karloff
playing, I guess, Mr. Wong
and Peter Lorre playing Mr. Moto.
Philip Ahn worked so much during World War II
playing Japanese villains, and he was Korean.
And one of the really funny things,
a lot of movies were pulled from circulation during World War II
because at the time, Korea was subjugated by Japan,
and so they were enemies of each other.
And so Philip Ahn hated the Japanese
and he was constantly asked to play Japanese villains.
And directors would say,
okay, we need you to speak Japanese here.
And Philip Ahn would say, I'm not Japanese.
I don't know Japanese, I'm Korean.
They're like, well, nobody will know the difference.
Just speak Korean.
So he would speak Korean as a Japanese villain.
But if you understood Korean as peopleorea who saw the movie did he would say subversive things in korea sometimes swear words condemning the japanese i love it hollywood film moguls
didn't know this until they exported the movie and the movie is banned all throughout asia and they didn't understand why
yeah and richard liu was chinese dick cavett's favorite yeah yeah and he oh ah craft career
you know this stuff was still going on in the 60s you have gilbert you have joseph wiseman
in playing dr no with with with with asian makeup oh it went it went much longer than that.
The 80s, you have Jerry Lewis and Harley working.
Yeah, Jerry Lewis.
Gilbert and I were talking about Joel Grey today
in the Remo Williams movie with Fred Ward.
Joel Grey was a sensei, a key loop kind of a character.
And Tony Randall in the...
Tony Randall, Seven Faces of Dr. Lau.
Yeah.
Don't forget Brando in the tea house of the august moon everybody mickey rooney obviously in breakfast at tiffany
rooney is the worst offender and then the worst and last uh uh peter seller's movie uh the fiendish
plot of dr fuman or something like that and uh an unwatchable movie even without the yellow face he also did a charlie
chan knockoff in murder by death a couple of a couple of years earlier right i remember there's
a line in one of the charlie chan movies where like uh new york cop is talking to him and he goes, he goes, Charlie, you're like chop suey. Strange, but good.
We're talking about yellow face here, but because your book is about the Native American experience
and comedy here, here's a short list of, of, uh, examples of red face, I guess is what it's,
what it's called.
Chuck Connors played Geronimo.
Oh, yeah.
Blue-eyed, blonde hair.
Yeah.
Elvis as a Navajo in Stay Away Joe.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, that one is bad.
Victor Mature, Gilbert, played Crazy Horse.
Oh, yeah.
Brock Hudson famously in Winchester 73, which is a good movie. Yeah.
Burt Lancaster playing an Apache.
Yeah.
And J. Carol Nash we mentioned as Sitting Bull.
Gilbert, your favorite, Lon Chaney Jr. played Chingach Cook in Hawkeye and the Last of the Mohicans in 1957.
in Hawkeye and the Last of the Mohicans in 1957.
And my personal favorite,
the mascot from the Don't Litter spots,
Iron Eyes Cody,
was an Italian guy from Brooklyn.
Italian. Espera, Espera di Corti.
And he was only crying
because Gilbert had made yet another slur
about Italian-Americans.
And he was, at that time the symbol yes of native americans yeah that that one's so weird i mean it's a weird thing it still happens today um white people pretending that they're native
american or part native american i don't know what the psychology is, why you would do that.
Very weird.
But Jonathan Winters did it for a few years.
He claimed to have been Cherokee.
He wasn't.
I actually asked his family because people kept asking me
when I was researching this book,
are you going to write about Jonathan Winters?
And he was interested in Native American issues
and he donated money to the people
when they occupied Alcatraz in the early 70s.
But he did an interview with People Magazine in 1978 and Jonathan Winters claimed that
he was Native American.
And so still to this day, you'll sometimes find on the internet references to him being
part Native American, but he wasn't at all.
And he just made it up and asked his family or asked somebody to ask me ask them for me and they
said no he just you know he sympathized with certain causes and for some reason he he said
that he was Native American but he wasn't so I don't understand why anybody would do that
Elizabeth cultural appropriation right is that what they're calling what they call it yeah well
it's even more than that I don't know it's it's just a weird thing and I don't know. It's it's just a weird thing. And I don't understand why you would do that.
Getting back to, you know, white actors playing Asians in one of the Mr.
Moto movies, you know, where Peter Lorre is an Asian.
He interrogates this Mexican antique dealer.
And the Mexican is John Carradine.
Wow.
And I'm thinking, if ever there was someone who's not Mexican.
I love it.
It's John Carradine.
You know, Cliff, we talked about, in our little pre-interview that we did,
about the progress that's being made.
I mean, you mentioned in sports, the Redskins have dropped their offensive nickname.
The Cleveland Indians baseball team recently also made that decision.
So we're seeing signs of progress all over the place.
It makes me ask a question like, could you have somebody like Bill Dana doing a character character like jose jimenez today i don't think
so bill dana himself retired jose jimenez of his own volition around 1970 at the time the phrase
um it's very much of its era but it was called the chicano power movement and he actually publicly
retired jose jimenez at an event and said, I'm going to retire this.
It's not right to keep doing it anymore.
We should hire Latino actors to do this instead of a Polish Jewish comedian.
And Jose Jimenez, there's always two sides to all of these conversations.
I'm sure there's lots of latino fans who appreciated jose
jimenez it was this charming impish kind of cute uh a character my name jose jimenez yeah but it
was you know of its era and i know i don't think you could do that today or you shouldn't there's
no reason to you know we have that stuff from the past. We can watch it if we want. But really, why not just hire like a Latino comedian or somebody who, you know, you don't want to push somebody out of a job.
And stereotypes, the problem in those days especially, there were no Native Americans on TV playing a regular human being.
They were always playing a stereotype or portrayed as a stereotype.
Because some people will say,
well, Otis the drunk on the Andy Griffith show
is negative and a white person didn't complain.
But it's like, yeah, but Andy Griffith
is a white, like positive character
and Don Knotts is this bumbling idiot.
You have thousands of different types
of white characters portrayed
where you only had
one type of latino character usually some sort of we don't need no stinking badges right alfonso
bedoya yeah something like that so that's the thinking behind it you know a stereotype
is only at its most damaging when you have hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of them
compounded on top
of each other to the degree that people who do not belong to that ethnicity start to think that
that's what it is you know if it's all going to be fagin in an oliver twist of course then that's
a serious problem if it's like one fagin and thousands of other uh positive or realistic
examples it's not as damning.
So for Native Americans for decades and decades,
it was only the stereotype.
There are people, of course, who will say that they're wary
of the pendulum swinging too far in the other direction
so that you can't have a film like Blazing Saddles nowadays.
You couldn't have Mel Brooks playing a Sioux Indian chief.
You couldn't even have a show like All in the Family today in primetime on a network.
Yeah, but you have Blazing Saddles on Blu-ray.
You have All in the Family on DVD.
So why would you want a new Blazing Saddles?
If there was a new Blazing Saddles, I'm sure it would pale in comparison to Blazing Saddles.
How could you make it better?
It is, you know, it's perfect for its time period.
And I think any thinking person understands the context.
You know, there's nobody parading in front of the TCM headquarters in Atlanta
because they show a Mr. Moto movie.
You know, you get what it is as soon as you see it.
Or Mickey rooney and
judy garland in blackface we get it it was you know so um it's not you know as long as you
understand the context it's fine but a lot of the time the context isn't provided especially
about native american stuff very seldom and it deserves to be uh provided and understood in a sort of reasonable tone of voice. You know, you can't
teach people anything if you're screaming at them. If you had a school teacher in elementary school
or high school that screamed at you, you didn't like that teacher and you didn't learn anything.
But if somebody was like reasonable and took time with you to explain something. So I kind of feel
that's how the conversation around, you know, racist stuff in the history of show business has to go. And like I say, I'm a fan of
Charlie Chan movies and Mr. Moto movies and, you know, Larry Storch and Bernie Capel. Like,
I love those guys. Yeah, I love those guys. So, but it doesn't mean you can't have a reasonable
assessment of what that is and what that means.
Mark Arnold, who's a listener of the show, writes, my apologies in advance, but here's another one.
The cartoon show Go Go Gophers.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
Go Go Gophers.
Remember Go Go Gophers, Gilbert?
Oh, I remember the title.
Racist Native American characters.
Yeah.
Go Go Gophers is definitely very racist.
It's made by the same company that made
underdog underdog yeah yeah and it it aired for a few years there was a protest movement in the
late 60s as you know regarding all things like this inspired initially by the civil rights
movement you had you know uh people who are tired of lat stereotypes, Native American stereotypes. Well, they got jujitsu kicked off of Dick Tracy's.
Dick Tracy's.
And also the Pillsbury's funny drink mix.
Do you remember those?
They had like racist.
Oh, oh my God.
Oh my God.
There was, you know, there was, what was the famous powder drink?
Well, there's one called Injun Orange.
Oh, okay. Yes, one called Injun Orange.
Oh, okay.
Yes, it was Injun Orange.
Goofy grape, yeah.
And Cherry Chinese.
Yes, with the buck teeth and everything.
And then, oh, God, there's so... I one time put it up there.
Because what was the original, the more respected powder drink uh
oh god what the fuck was the name of that what kool-aid no no it was another one but i remember
when they came out with this one that was the cheap one and uh i said something like i put a bunch of those up and i said
it's like if kool-aid was really racist well there was there was goofy grape and jolly ollie orange
and rootin tootin raspberry ku klux kool-aid no but they had they had these. It reminds me of Ku Klux Klan on The Simpsons.
There were a couple in that powdered drink that were out and out racist.
Yes. And what people don't realize, because a lot of people who think this is new, they'll go, well, they had those drink mixes.
Then nobody complained. It's the opposite. Those were pulled from the market in 1970
because of pressure.
Same with the Frito Bandito.
He was pulled.
The Frito Bandito, yep.
That's another example.
Did that powder drink,
I think they had Injun Orange.
That's the one we said.
Yes, yes.
Injun Orange.
And the Chinese guy was what again?
Cherry, Chinese cherry with the eyes and the teeth and the chinese guy was what again cherry chinese cherry with the the eyes
and the teeth and the whole thing so we were talking about or i was talking about this
circuit of nightclubs in nevada called the silver circle all the sort of fringe places
outside of las vegas and one of the the teams that i talk about in my book are williams and re
also a guy named jackie curtis who was in a comedy team called Antonin Curtis.
Still going strong, Jackie Curtis.
He's still alive.
He's not performing, but, yeah, he's still around.
He did an episode of Adam 12 in the early 70s,
if you ever want to seek that out.
But I'm curious if you guys have ever heard of any of these comedy teams.
I'll just rattle them off.
But these were comedy teams that uh they only performed in
nevada occasionally they would get hired to do like a summer replacement like dean martin's gold
diggers or uh you know a show like that alan ludden's gallery you know these sort of obscure
summer replacements where they oh man these are deep cuts but here, let me just read you the passage.
To patronize the Silver Circle venues,
from the Holiday Hotel in Reno to the Thunderbird Motel in Elko,
was to be exposed to comedians whom you'd never heard of before
and whom you'd never hear from again.
Blackie Hunt, Rummy Bishop, Red Coffee, Frankie Ross, Lou Moscone, Anton and Curtis, Davis and Reese,
Tepper and Nelson, Nelson and Palmer, Crandall and Charles, Skiles and Henderson, Didi and Bill,
Sherman and Lee, Stanton and Petty, Romer and Howard, Ford and Mercer, and now Williams and
Reed. And so that's when I go into the Williams and Reed chapter.
Wow, I got one.
Skiles and Henderson.
Remember them?
Yes.
How about, do you remember Rummy Bishop?
Was Rummy Bishop related to Joey Bishop?
Well, sort of he was related,
he was related but not related.
He was a member of that trio,
the Bishop Brothers,
with Joey Bishop in the late 40s.
But my understanding is that none of them were actually brothers. They just called themselves the Bishop Brothers with Joey Bishop in the late 40s. But my understanding is that none of them
were actually brothers. They just called themselves
the Bishop Brothers. And of course,
Joey Bishop's real name is Gottlieb.
So I think they just all adopted
Bishop. But Rummy Bishop
lived in Toronto and lived a very long life.
But real
and obscure comedian.
And he's one of these fun guys
for me to research because the only thing you can find are bad reviews.
Gilbert, how many of those names did you recognize?
Boy.
Skiles and Henderson, you don't remember?
No.
That was amazing.
I remember a team from the 80s.
I remember Mack and Jamie.
Oh, yes, of course.
Yeah. And i remember fake teams
like joey fay and uh mac and meyer for hire oh yeah yeah they were a manufactured team for
television just for tv as far as ethnic comics i mean but ethnic being their own group right i i
find it interesting sometimes i'll go to an event if it's a Jewish event, there'll be these comics that get hired out for Jewish events.
They know how to work an audience, a Jewish audience.
And I'm thinking all these great TV comics started out like that, but they were able to branch out.
started out like that but they were able to branch out like uh like i'm sure you know jack carter was oh you know and and uncle uh morty comes over and uh but they were able to branch
out some don't branch out yeah you know myron cohen was uh lambasted by some Jewish organizations back in the late 50s.
They didn't like his portrayal on The Ed Sullivan Show.
Again, that controversy between some people really care, some people don't give a shit.
They felt that he was a harmful stereotype, which I never really saw.
But there were rabbis that were protesting Myron Cohen. I found an article
in Winnipeg where they were writing letters like, keep this guy off of TV. Myron Cohen is a bad
example. We don't want the goyim to see us in this light, you know? And it's just that that is a
constant thing in the history of show business and comedy, this sort of tug of war, this push
and pull. How do we want to be
portrayed? Like when Amos and Andy first came to radio, you always hear the story. It was the most
popular show in America. Everybody loved it, but it really was white people that loved it.
And in black communities, it was 50, 50, 50% loved it, 50% despised it. And so there was this
internal dialogue within the black community about Amos and Andy, who some who loved it 50 percent, despised it. And so there was this internal dialogue within the black community about Amos and Andy,
who some who loved it and some who despised it.
That just seems to be a constant no matter what throughout the whole history of show business.
We will return to Gilbert Gottfried's amazing, colossal podcast.
But first, a word from our sponsor.
I want to tie this conversation too into your first book
into the into the other book the comedian's book because in there you have a section about how
groucho at a certain point used his fame used his power to try to erase some of these uh more
offensive ethnic stereotypes yeah well i mean that movement went all the way back before Groucho was even
alive. In the 1890s, there were movements to purge Irish stereotypes from vaudeville,
Italian stereotypes from vaudeville. Every time a immigrant group came to America and became more
integrated over the course of 10 or 15 or 20 years, a protest movement would spring up saying,
okay, we no longer want to see our ethnicity defamed
or exaggerated on the stage.
And there was a group called the Clan na Gael,
I guess it's Gaelic, C-L-A-N-N-A-G-A-E-L.
And they organized to stop Irish stereotypes on the vaudeville stage.
Comedians doing, you know, a penurious character or a drunk character or a policeman.
And they would organize and literally pelt comedians with eggs.
Like they would make a date.
They'd go, this guy's playing here at 8 p.m. in this vaudeville house.
Let's all be there and pelt them with eggs if he
doesn't stop doing Irish stereotypes. To the extent that a lot of vaudeville houses started
to ban those things as early as 1903, 1904, stereotypes of Native Americans were protested
for the first time on a wide scale in the year 1911. And blackface, believe it or not, was banned by the Schubert vaudeville circuit and a couple
other vaudeville circuits in 1922. We don't think of blackface as ever being banned in vaudeville,
but it was for a while. And then it kind of had a resurrection when radio became popular. So
every time new media is created, this old stereotypes tend to return for a while.
So they left vaudeville.
They were resurrected in radio and silent film.
Then they were resurrected on TV
when old movies started getting played on TV.
There's these cycles and these controversies
have been going on since the 1800s.
It's nothing new.
But Groucho did want to eliminate um racial stereotypes
and he got into a feud with some as some of his fellow comedians this guy harry hirschfeld
who was on the show can you top this which was a radio show in the late 40s in which they would
tell jokes and on once it was like a game show they would give you a subject and each of the four
comedians would have to come up with a joke on the subject and try and top the other and a lot
of the jokes were delivered in uh dialect and so there was a push to cancel that show and groucho
was one of the people speaking out against these guys and they pushed back because their whole
livelihood as comedians was based on doing dialect so if they
couldn't do dialect they didn't have an act and if they didn't have an act they didn't have a career
so it was a huge controversy in show business not only are these guys doing ethnic stereotypes
if they're not allowed to do those ethnic stereotypes then they can't work for a living
so it's a bizarre and interesting kind of compelling controversy. And, you know, it's funny, like blackface at one point
was so popular that black performers would put on blackface. In the pre-Civil War era,
there were black blackface performers who would wear blackface and then do routines that agitated for the end of slavery, like political acts.
Likewise, as slavery, as the Civil War ended, there were blackface acts that were in celebration of the South defaming African Americans.
So different people were doing blackface for different reasons.
African Americans. So different people were doing blackface for different reasons.
Blackface pretty much was done by the end of World War II. It's very rare to see a movie after 1945 with blackface. One of the reasons was it was felt that people like the Tuskegee
Airmen and other black soldiers were fighting racism and fascism overseas out of respect they would eliminate those racial
stereotypes from hollywood um but they got away with it whenever they would do a movie about old
show business like the jolson story or jolson sings again or the eddie cantor story there was
a context they would put some blackface in there oh you mentioned jolson sings again yeah and what i love about that movie is larry parks as larry parks
meets larry parks as jolson that's right it violates the gilbert universe yes yeah well i
always think that i always think like if uh you know frank sinatra shows up in a movie as frank sinatra it's like well it's
like there was a movie uh with robert de niro and this girl says why can't there be more guys like
harrison ford and jack nicholson always think, okay, so this is a universe
where Harrison Ford and Jack Nicholson exist,
but Robert De Niro does not exist.
Well, one of the prime examples of that,
we broke Scott and Larry's balls about it,
is Man on the Moon.
Because Mary Lou Henner exists, and Judd Hirsch exists,
but Danny DeVito doesn't exist.
Yes, Danny DeVito. exists and and judd hirsch exists but danny devito doesn't exist yes he's playing danny devito danny
devito is one of the stars of the movie but according to this movie he was never on taxi
because he's busy being george shapiro in that movie no no well george shapiro also i thought
george shapiro plays a part in man on the moon as well doesn't he play like a pimp like in a bar
he's got like big butterfly collar.
That movie is so confusing because you've got Peter Bonners
is playing Jim Burrows.
It's headache-inducing.
People who've been on this podcast.
You know, I learn so much every time I read.
Boners.
Boners.
I believe the preferred pronunciation is Boners.
Is it Peter Boners?
It better be.
Please.
I'm just showing it.
He's not a porn star.
He's an actor director.
I learned so much reading this book.
It's not just about comedy, but of course your books always delve so deeply into history
that I learned about the Buffalo Bill Wild West shows and what distinguishes a Wild West
show from a medicine show.
And there's a great section on Will Rogers.
It's really wonderful history
uh people need to get the book uh very very few books talk about both geronimo and mitzi shore
i also learned that the hakawi on f troop was a ripoff of a red fox bit oh yes um george schlatter
who had nothing to do with f troop uh told me me this story. And I had heard the joke, you them. They're trying to find them.
They're traversing through the woods.
And the guy's like, I know where we are.
Don't worry.
Don't worry.
And the punchline is, well, then where the fuck are we?
Right.
So it was a Red Fox play on words.
There you go.
So that's why the heck how we on the F Troop are the Hekawi instead of the Fekawi.
It's based on that joke.
George Schlatter told me that the F in F Troop represents the missing fuck from the Fekawi.
There you go, Gil.
Oh, wow.
Now, this is going back to the other comedy book, but real quick, and then we'll plug the new book again.
But why the hell?
You know what we love on this show, and we started to talk about it.
We love unhinged people.
We love the Jack Carters and the Pat Coopers of the world, but also Shecky and Buddy Hackett.
Why the hell do we know why Buddy Hackett would throw a knife at a wonderful guy like Marvin Kaplan?
Oh, yeah, that's right.
That was during the filming.
It's in your other book. Yeah, that was during the. It's a mad? Oh, yeah, that's right. That was during the filming. It's in your other book.
Yeah, that was during the...
In the comedians.
It's a mad, mad, mad, mad book.
Did you guys get to interview Marvin Kaplan?
We had him.
Yeah.
He's a sweet guy.
Yeah, I remember.
I just love that voice.
Oh, we loved him.
I remember when he agreed to do the show,
I was talking to him on the phone,
and Marvin Kaplan said,
do I have to dress up for it?
But I went back to these great stories
like Hackett pulling a gun
and shooting Toadie Field's picture off the wall.
I also loved him putting the course,
the story where Hackett pulls the gun
on Shecky in the desert.
Yes, of course. In the middle of the story where Hackett pulls the gun on Shecky in the desert. Yes, of course.
In the middle of the night.
Who shot up Jackie Mason's hotel room?
It's assumed that it was somebody connected to Frank Sinatra, a mafioso.
That has never been verified.
Yikes.
It was really fun researching Jackie Mason's career in the 60s
because he's constantly getting beat up, shot at, attacked.
Somebody tried to run him over with a car?
Somebody tried to run him over.
Why did Sinatra have Shecky beaten up?
Do we know the circumstances of that?
Well, Shecky, as Shecky beaten up do we know the circumstances of that well Shecky as Shecky tells it it's
because Frank Sinatra wanted Shecky to be a member of the Rat Pack before Joey Bishop was established
as the comedian of the Rat Pack Sinatra was like I want you to be part of the gang and Shecky said
I don't want to be part of your gang goes come on be part of my gang Sinatra didn't take rejection
well you know he didn't want anything to do with him and apparently you know shecky sort of like that we're talking about buddy rich and robert
blake on carson how they would kind of insult him to his face but nobody else would yeah shecky
shecky would insult or roast sinatra to his face he didn't care and so when he was beat up on the
set of uh not on the set but but during the filming of Tony Rome,
apparently it was because Shecky was telling him to fuck off.
I don't want to be a part of your gang.
I don't want to go out and eat with you.
I don't like you.
I don't like Italians, you know.
And Shecky was a loose cannon in those days because he was drinking, so he was mouthy.
But if you ever watch the movie Tony Rome, it's not a very good movie.
It's sort of boring, but it's really interesting because the continuity is all fucked up.
Without explaining it, there are scenes where you see Shecky with his nice full head of gelled hair.
Next scene, Shecky's got a big bandage on his head.
Next scene, his hair.
Next scene, Shecky's got a big bandage on his head. Next scene, his hair. Next scene, a bandage.
They never explain the bandage,
but it's because he was beaten up by Sinatra's goons
halfway through the filming one night.
So there's evidence of him being beaten by,
Shecky says it was the Fischetti brothers from Chicago
who beat the hell out of him with a blackjack over the head
and drew blood on orders from Frank Sinatra. I love these stories so much. I love that
Shecky used to get bombed and walk through Caesar's Palace pushing statues over.
Oh, yeah. He knocked down the statues.
See, Gilbert, you're not the only one that Shecky ran afoul of.
Yeah. Although you might be the only one that ran afoul of him when he was sober.
You know, I don't think he's – he hasn't been drinking for like 30 years,
so he was really riled up.
But the funny thing about Shecky is he got mad at you
because you used like profane language or something.
Yeah, Shecky's words were,
I was in the Navy.
I never heard talk like that.
But look, I was talking to him on the phone.
He goes, these kids these days,
Bill Maher with his dirty fucking mouth.
Every other word is cocksuck.
This dirty son of a bitch.
These kids, they think they need to use the F word.
Well, fuck them.
Why do you use the fucking F word?
I'm like, Shecky, every other word out of your mouth is fuck.
And he's complaining about, you know, other people swearing.
I always find that hysterical.
These old comedians who hate young comedians for swearing.
And meanwhile, every other word is a cuss word.
He hates young comics like Gil.
Yes.
Young upstarts.
I remember hearing this story, this comic I know,
saw George Burns in a restaurant. And he talked to him and he said,
what's the difference between comedy in your time and comedy now? And he said, well, you know, they're dirty now. Well, we never spoke like that.
We respected the people we spoke to.
And then right after saying that, the waiter comes over.
And because Burns is putting his jacket on, the waiter walks over and goes, Mr. Burns, are you leaving?
And Burns goes, ah, yeah ah yeah i gotta get home i hired
i hired a teenage faggot to fuck me up the ass
the beloved george burns i got one last question from a listener reed hawkins uh please will cliff
write a book on comedic asian models gilbert should write the foreword oh oh yeah because
according to these writers i spoke to uh on the schedule on the Cosby show, he would take out an hour and that hour was to teach comedy to Asian models.
Bill Cosby?
Yes.
Supposedly.
Oh, my God.
Supposedly.
Oh, my God.
You know the story about Tommy Smothers sucker punching Bill Cosby, right?
Oh, I heard that bill cosby uh
punched him what happened oh no yeah you're right you're right it is the other way around it is the
other way around because they were on the tonight show and i guess bill cosby was the guest host
and tommy smothers made some sort of comment about how bill cosby was not very active like in the
civil rights or black power and he felt he should because he had a platform.
And apparently Bill Cosby was really smug and dismissive on the Tonight Show of Tommy Smothers.
Yeah, they were at the Playboy Mansion where Bill Cosby was busy raping people and took a break.
And he walked up behind Tommy Smothers and cold cocked him from behind.
I think he knocked him on conscience.
And I remember talking to Smothers back in like 2007.
And I said, have you talked to him since?
And he said, I've never talked to Bill Cosby in like 35 years.
But I kind of love the stories of the feuds,
especially these dudes that are considered sort of squeaky clean.
And you find out there's all this sort of scandalous stuff going on behind.
I interviewed a woman named Mickey Marlowe, who was sort of a pinch hitter on The Tonight Show,
like when Steve and Edie weren't available, she would come on and sing. And she told me that she
toured with Alan King and that he had a foot fetish and that he was obsessed with strippers.
And then, you know i just great we you
know we we have to do another show with you where we just do scandal from from from top to bottom
and feuds we love feuds and we love we love celebrity meltdowns they make us so happy don't
they gilbert yes anytime anytime i love that i i would really like somebody maybe it has to be me
to write the story of johnny carson's uh's drinking days in New York when he was considered a real loose cannon before he came to Burbank and maybe even before he had the Tonight Show.
There's a story about him ruining, I think it was Jerry Vale's opening at the Copacabana.
Do you know that story?
No.
No.
No.
Johnny was seated ringside for Jerry Vale's big opening at the Copacabana.
I think it's Jerry Vale.
Could have been Vic Damone or somebody like that, but I think it's Jerry Vale.
And he just starts heckling him like, fuck you!
Fuck you!
Get off the stage!
And Johnny Carson was drunk, just wasted.
They had to pull him physically
out in front of this whole crowd that was there for jerry vale's opening night at the copa
and there's an episode of the tonight show that i saw on decades or one of those cable channels
from like 78 or 79 and johnny and ed after the monologue are sitting there and doing their
little banter and johnny says to ed i hear you've got a big thing coming up.
And Ed McMahon says, yes, I'm opening at whatever the name of the nightclub is.
I'm going to be singing.
And I hope you'll be there.
And Johnny says, oh, yeah, I'll come.
And Ed says, just don't do what you did to Jerry Vale.
Wow.
That's great.
That's great.
And this is like 15 years later
and the audience
doesn't say anything
because they don't know
what he's talking about.
And Johnny goes,
doesn't say anything.
He just takes a sip of water
and Ed McMahon goes,
you remember Jerry Vale?
And Johnny goes,
I remember, I remember,
I remember.
Our first guest tonight
and just like brushes him off.
But it was this beautiful moment
where I was like,
oh, I know what
that's a reference to. So obviously there were some wild days john john
some of them are in bushkin's book yeah some unflattering stories this book goes into such
detail like i said there's the the history of will rogers his his fascinating life and his death and
not the mythologized will rogers we get the wheel will rogers the stories about paul
little chief and uh that was fascinating too and uh alexander posey who was almost the first
native american stand-up comic and pete red jacket and his cowboy donkey you know i love the vaudeville
acts yeah that was weird uh to discover i did not realize like i knew will rogers had worked with a
horse in his act doing like lasso tricks with rogers had worked with a horse in his act doing
like lasso tricks with a horse toured with a horse right gilbert could you imagine if you got
booked at carolines and had to bring a horse with you like do an act with a giant i i was in hot to
trot oh that's true so i did i did work with a horse but she didn't get on a train and go city to city
with no with a 2 000 pound horse the book comes out when cliff february the 16th okay and it's
we had a little real estate problem uh unheralded the unheralded story of native americans and
comedy uh really fantastic and again, I always learn so much.
I told you I go Google crazy when I start reading a Cliff book.
Oh, that's good.
Well, that's by design, you know.
Oh, it's great.
I want people to go and find the supplementary material on YouTube or wherever.
This is a good era, even though nobody reads anything anymore.
It's a good era to read a book because you can
supplement it with shit that's on youtube whereas you know in the old days if you read a book about
music and you didn't have access to any of the songs it was like kind of a pointless exercise so
uh you know all those obscure comedy teams i rattled off you might be able to find a clip
here or there of uh them appearing on Alan Ludden's gallery.
I love it.
You're like a no one yet has called you the human time machine.
But you but you are that too.
Are you in touch with our pal Kelly Carlin?
Yes, I know, Kelly.
Yeah, give Kelly our best if you talk to her.
Sure.
Well, Gilbert, let this man get back to his life. Oh, the book comes out in February.
Again, I'm going to say the title inspired by a Charlie Hill joke.
We had a little real estate problem.
The unheralded story of Native Americans and comedy.
And as always, it is a history lesson.
Yes, sir.
But a grandly entertaining one.
And this has been Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast with my co-host, Frank Santopadre.
And let's see if I could say his name again correctly.
Oh, God.
Cliff Nesterov.
Wow.
See, it only took like 20 appearances on the show, but I eventually.
It's a first.
I am honored.
I am honored. I am honored.
Wow.
Nice work, Gilbert.
Now say Akeem Tamaroff.
Cliff, thank you for this as always.
The book is great.
Cliff, we could do hours with you.
You are so entertaining.
My pleasure.
And come back and bring more scandal.
Okay.
Thanks, guys.
Appreciate it.
Thank you.
Thanks, pal.