Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - GGACP Classic: Stuart Margolin
Episode Date: January 5, 2023GGACP marks the recent passing of one of Gilbert and Frank's favorite character actors, Stuart Margolin, by revisiting this entertaining interview from 2016. In this episode, Stuart looks back on his ...55-year career in films and television and shares stories about "Love, American Style," "Death Wish," his pop songwriting career and his decades-long friendship with "Rockford Files" co-star James Garner. Also, Stuart directs Uncle Miltie, casts Marvin Gaye, imitates Maxwell Smart and pens a tune for Johnny Fontane. PLUS: Remembering Richard Mulligan! "Evil Roy Slade"! Julie Andrews takes it off! Stuart boards "The Big Bus"! And the strange tale of "Lanigan's Rabbi"! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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So here's another Gilbert and Franks.
Here's another Gilbert and Franks.
Here's another Gilbert and Franks.
Colossal Podcast. I'm here with my co-host, Frank Santopadre.
And we're once again at Nutmeg with our engineer, Frank Furtarosa.
Our guest this week is an actor, director, playwright, and composer who's been working steadily in films and television for five decades,
in films and television for five decades, sharing the screen with everyone from Julie Andrews to Charles Bronson
to the Olsen twins.
Movies include Kelly's Heroes, Death Wish, The Stone Killer,
Future World, Class, Days of Heaven, Arbitrage,
Blake Edwards' S.O.B. and A Fine Mess.
He's appeared in dozens of beloved TV shows such as Gunsmoke, The Fugitive, The Monkees, Bewitched,
The Partridge Family, MASH, The Mary Tyler Moore Show, Rhoda, Hill Street Blues, and 30 Rock, and he was a featured player on a favorite
show of Frank's and mine, Love American Style.
You bet.
Brighter than the red, white, and blue whoo-hoo.
He was also directed memorable films and TV movies, including A Shining Season, The Long Summer of George Adams and the Glitter Dome, as well as episodes of the Mary Tyler Moore show, Wonder Woman, The Love Boat, Heart to Heart, Quantum Leap, and Northern Exposure, for which he won a Director's Guild Award for Best Direction. But he's perhaps best known for his Emmy-winning portrayal of Jim
Rockford's former jailmate, Angel Martin, on the classic series The Rockford Files, starring longtime friend James Garner.
Please welcome to the show a man who appeared in two of this podcast's strange obsessions,
the Big Bus and Lanigan's Rabbi, the multi-talented Stuart Margolin.
Hey, that was a walk down memory lane, my guy.
I'll bet.
Now, if you had done nothing else in your career, Stuart,
I would want you on the show just because in Death Wish,
I would want you on the show just because in Death Wish, one of my favorite movies, you're the guy who gives Paul Kersey the gun that he mows down all the muggers with.
Including Jeff Goldblum, right? Yes.
And not just Jeff Goldblum, but Denzel Washington.
Yeah.
Right. It. Right.
It was interesting.
We made that movie and then it came out.
It was playing some opening in some theater in Westwood.
And so I went over to see it.
We're excited about, hey, this.
And I happen to be upstairs and there's a guy on the phone and he's going, I want this pulled from every theater in the United States.
the phone and he's going, I want this pulled from every theater in the United States.
It was the critic for the L.A. Times, Charles Champlin, who was a hell of a good writer.
But I thought, oh, my God.
And a powerful critic.
Yeah.
But it didn't.
That turned out to be that year, Paramount's number one box office hit.
Actually beat the longest yard.
Al Ruddy always used to tell me that.
You beat us. I always said, like with Death Wish, unless you were in the movie theater when that movie came out, you didn't see Death Wish.
It was an experience with a crowd.
Everyone went nuts. Yeah. Yeah. You didn't see Death Wish. It was an experience with a crowd.
Everyone went nuts.
Yeah, yeah, it was pretty wild.
Even in Westwood, it was pretty wild.
And what was Charles Bronson like?
He's one of my favorites.
Interesting.
Kept to himself.
That was the second film I'd done with him i had done a film before called stone killer
um same director michael winner yeah and uh which i played kind of like a hitman
a soldier ex vietnam a little bit like the guy from the massacre whose name fortunately i forgot but uh at any rate so then we do death
wish and we shot for maybe five days scenes together this that and the other thing and i
go to the airport to fly home and he walked in and introduced himself that's first time we ever met
we'd done about 25 scenes in two movies and had never been introduced the man who started out as what was it charles
buchinski oh yeah right right and gilbert and i remember him we talk about him in house of wax
with vincent price i think he was still buchinski yeah yeah no kidding when when he introduced
himself i thought this is a little crazy, but hi, how do you do?
The second thing he said to me, God's truth, is he said, you know, I grew up wearing a dress.
And what he was referring to, he had grown up in the coal mining country in Pennsylvania.
And they didn't have money to buy all their kids clothes.
So he wore hand-me-down stuff.
So I thought, that's fascinating.
So I got on the plane and the publicist had me on the plane and I told him that story.
And he said, yeah, he tells everybody that story.
Yeah, I remember reading about that. That's interesting.
That Bronson would sometimes go to school in a dress because that's the only clothes they had for him.
Yeah, yeah.
Since we're talking about classic movies, Stuart, just to start off,
and we told some fans on Facebook that we were going to have you on,
and some people were excited about it, and they said,
please ask them about Little Joe and Kelly's Heroes.
Well, it was a terrific part.
We were in Yugoslavia for a little over six months.
Spent the first three months in Serbia, then moved to the coast, northern Yugoslavia called Istria, right near the Italian border.
I had done a film, curiously enough, the year before in Yugoslavia with the Yugoslav crew.
So I knew a lot of the crew that worked on it, which was great because I got to know them and I could order beer.
So it was a wild, a wild time. All those actors, we were staying in a, when we first started on a place on the Danube called the Veriden Hotel,
which had been a castle that had repulsed the Turks back in, I believe, the 12th century.
And it was a fascinating history up there.
And across the river, which was the Danube from the hotel, was a town called Novi Sad.
And in the middle of the river was a bridge that had been blown up
but they left it there to remind
everybody what the Nazis had done
wow
it was a lot of history there
and
Kelly's heroes
and can you tell us the cast
of Kelly's heroes
well obviously Clint Don Sutherland, Kelly Savalas Can you tell us the cast of Kelly's? Great cast. Full cast.
Well, obviously, Clint, Don Sutherland, Kelly Savalas.
Mr. Rickles.
Rickles would sit in the dining room every night, and as he walked in, he would lay you open.
So he was insulting everybody. Everybody walked into the dining room every night,
whether it was breakfast or dinner.
And I remember my wife visited, my wife at the dorm,
and he said, oh, Stuart, whoa, man, I see what you mean.
That's great. He was on telly. He loved teasing telly all of them so basically with don rickles there
was like seeing don rickles on stage every night every day yeah every day
another actor in kelly's heroes worth mentioning too who became famous on TV in the 90s is Len Lesser, who played Uncle Leo.
Oh, my God. Yes.
Also, I'm just going blank.
Forgive me. All in the family.
Dead.
Oh, Carol O'Connor's in it. Of course. Right. Right.
How could we forget him?
Tons of people like that that were in the film.
And not everybody was there the whole time.
It was like we were never going to leave.
It was like, keep shooting.
And I think one day Clint said, I'm going home tomorrow.
And that was the end of the movie.
And what was Clint like?
You know, he kept himself quiet.
A gentleman, friendly enough.
But he was, you know, already a big star.
And he had, he kept quiet.
One funny thing is he had, when we moved to the West Coast, I guess you go to the West Coast,
it was in Istria, which had formerly been Italian territory, but there was a beach.
And there were some even in Tito was still alive in Yugoslavia.
And since I had been there the year before, the first assistant director of the film the year before was the Yugoslav production manager for Kelly's Heroes.
So he said, when you get to the coast, I've got a great little house for you to stay in.
Wonderful. heroes so he said when you get to the coast i've got a great little house for you to stay in wonderful so one day i walk out and there was there was two houses on the beach both obviously if you were a party member you got to stay there and clint lived in one and i had the
other one and i'm sure you never figured out how the hell did he get that you know what stays with
me from that movie that wonderful theme theme song, Burning Bridges.
Burning Bridges.
Oh, this is a weird thing that happened to me about a few months ago.
I was on some radio show, and we were talking about old TV,
and someone said, oh, who's that actor?
I can't think of his name.
He was always good at leering. And I immediately screamed out, oh, Stuart Margolin.
Because on shows like Love American Style, you had that dirty leer. Yeah, no way. You didn't have to say a word.
Yeah, I'd worked on that a long time.
It's old, I think.
Well, let's talk just a little bit. We're going all over the place, Stuart, so forgive us.
We don't have much of a chronology here.
We just kind of go as things pop into our head.
But Love American style, I was telling Gilbert, was created by your brother.
Absolutely.
Arnold Margolin and his partner, Jim Parker, created Love American style, I was telling Gilbert, was created by your brother. Absolutely. Arnold Margolin and his partner, Jim Parker, created Love American style over at Paramount for ABC.
I was getting ready to go to do Kelly's Heroes.
And I had done one little part.
It's so weird.
I did one little part of a guy drunk in jail that bumped his head against some bars.
I mean, it lasted like 10 seconds.
So then I got ready to go and got a call and said, look, we're doing this show, but we're going to do these little jokes in between.
They're going to call them like blackouts.
It was like vaudeville or burlesque or something.
Silent movies, too.
Yeah.
Well, it was crazy.
Fortunately, I was young enough.
We'd go to the beach and shoot
22 a day.
Wow.
And then
they would show them for
half a year. Then you go for another
week and do 22 a day.
And I would, in some of
those things, run,
dead run as fast as I could.
From the beach to the trailer, do new hair, new costumes, run back to the beach.
And kind of, they were written, but you'd improvise whatever worked, you know.
It was, I guess it was like burlesque is what it seemed like.
I never did burlesque, but it seemed like constantly.
So the leer was part of that.
I'm probably in a lot of trouble today.
Yeah, it was like the filthiest leer where you didn't have to say a word.
Well, they were bawdy.
You were always playing like somebody tying a girl to a railroad track. No, no. I met a lot of
people who said, no, my parents wouldn't let me watch that show.
Interesting. Go ahead, Gil. No, they would always have like, it was
one of those shows, too, that would have so many guest stars.
Right. Well, they had the regular segments that would last
anywhere from eight to 12 minutes.
Maybe one would be that long. They probably show three of them.
And then in between those shows, they do these little gags.
They may do two in a row even sometimes. But that's what they were called.
And so right before I went over to Yugoslavia, I did like a week's worth.
And when I came back, it was kind of a hit.
So I continued to do those, the gags, the blackouts.
I think the first time I saw you was in those blackouts.
And I remember James Hampton, who played Dobbs on F-Troop, was in them with you.
And an actress, Phyllis Davis?
Very, yes. Beautiful girl.. Was in him with you. And an actress, Phyllis Davis? Very, yes.
Beautiful girl.
Beautiful.
Your brother created it.
I want to talk just a little bit about Arnold for a second
because Gilbert and I, you know,
we do deep research on the show
and the things that we uncover.
And Gilbert and I are a little obsessed
with a superhero show from the 60s
called Mr. Terrific.
It was on opposite Captain
Nice. Captain Nice. Yeah. They were Batman knockoffs when Batman was such a big hit in 66.
But your brother, your brother wrote a handful of those. I had no idea. I'm learning from you.
I had no idea. And Frank tells me your brother wrote the theme song of Love American Style?
Yes, right.
He had a partner whose name escapes you right now.
I think it's Charles Fox.
Yes, good show.
Stuart, can you sing any of Love American Style?
Not well.
I don't care.
He's a composer.
He's a musician.
Yeah.
I just want to hear it if you can sing it.
Maybe the title itself.
Love American style.
I'm off beat.
I couldn't even do that.
Brighter than the red, white, and blue.
Hoo, hoo.
Love American style for me and you.
American style for me and you.
We will return to Gilbert Gottfried's amazing colossal podcast after this.
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And now back to the show.
I believe Charles Fox, if I'm not getting this wrong, also wrote the Love Boat theme.
I didn't know that.
Wow.
And you directed a bunch of those.
I did about, yeah, I forget.
I think three or four of them, anyway, for sure.
Did you direct?
I think I acted in one, too.
I think you did.
Did you direct Uncle Miltie?
Do I have this right?
Yes, I did, actually.
And Steve Allen was in the same show, in the same segment.
I think it was called Gotcha.
Man, you've got things I don't remember at all.
He was a practical joker, right?
Oh, yeah.
What do we have here?
Oh, wait a minute.
Our engineer is calling something up here.
What is that?
Oh, the love boat.
A love boat theme.
Very nice, Frank.
Okay, now, Stuart, by law on this show, I have to ask you,
have you ever seen Milton Berle's penis?
No.
I've heard about it.
It's a legend.
And I heard about it from Milton.
Milton?
What did Milton say to you about it?
He made some comment once.
I'm not going to go into a lot of detail, but I didn't need him to tell me because it was legend.
The night that I won the Emmy, the first
time I won the Emmy, I came up, I got it, got off stage, and I guess they
went to a break and Milton Berle walked in front of the stage. He said, Stuart Margolin.
That is a fun Love Boat episode, I have to say.
And you directed another one with Will Gere.
Yeah, that's right.
I did.
And also John Ritter was in one.
I directed at least a couple of scenes, I remember, because I had known John from before when he really got going.
And so he was just starting to get the career really going when he did the Love Boat.
His name comes up a lot on this show.
Speaking of Love Boat and Kelly's Heroes, the captain.
Oh, Gavin McLeod is in Kelly's Heroes.
Oh, wow.
How could we forget? Captain Stubing. Oh, Gavin McLeod is in Cully's Heroes. Oh, wow. How could we forget?
Captain Steubing.
Yeah, yeah.
But you also worked with Gavin when you directed the Mary Tyler Moore show.
Right.
I did.
So there you go.
And on the Mary Tyler Moore show, if I'm not mistaken, you once played a guy who's obsessed with Mary.
Yes, I was her.
I kind of drove her crazy.
We had a few dates, and she couldn't get away from me.
I wouldn't let her get away from me.
I think the leer was back in work again.
Being around Mary, I kept it down.
I held it down a little bit.
I remember that episode.
I'm a Mary Tyler Moore.
We had Ed Asner on this show, by the way.
Oh, great.
Who was just a wonderful guest for us.
And what I remember about that Mary Tyler Moore episode, and I'll just talk about the one you directed, too, in a second.
But the one where you were Warren, the boyfriend who wouldn't take no for an answer.
Right.
You did a Don Adams impersonation in that episode.
I did?
Yeah.
I played harmonica.
I remember doing that.
Yeah, yeah.
But that's...
And the one you directed, and Gil knows this episode too,
the one where Lou and Mary go to Washington,
and he's trying to impress her with how many people he knows in D.C.,
and they're in a hotel room, and it ends with Betty Ford on the phone.
When I originally got the call, it was going to be the president.
It was going to be President Ford.
I said, President Ford's going to be in your segment.
And I got scared.
I thought, why me?
What happened?
But then it turned out that it was his wife that did the show.
That's a fun episode.
Yeah, that was.
It was a good script.
All of those scripts were great writers, Brooks and Burns.
And I remember the episode of MASH.
Once again, Yalir came in.
Which, when he was the shrink or when he was the plastic surgeon?
Yeah, the plastic surgeon, because they said they were promising you a girl and they didn't have one.
But they said, if there's a girl who's going to have sex with somebody, this guy will find them.
Yeah.
Hot lips.
I jumped her in her room.
And then you and Alan Alda, is this true that you guys hadn't seen each other in a number of years until you did 30 Rock together?
Right.
Yeah, it had been a long time.
Been a long time.
He's a nice man.
One of the finest people I've met in L.A.
Boy, we could go all over the place
here. I'm looking at my card, Stuart. You've done
so much. And you were on
It's So Funny. So
many people that you
worked with have been on our podcast.
We had
two of the monkeys. Yeah, we had
Mike Nesmith and
Mickey Dolenz were here.
So you worked with the monkeys.
Right.
I acted in the monkeys.
It was a lot of fun.
And I remember, well, I came in when they first made that pilot.
And Bert Schneider and his partner that produced it.
Bob Rafelson.
Thank you.
They were showing it to people like, do you want to write for it, whatever.
And Nesmith and Mickey were clearly, I mean, the young English guy was a great singer.
Davy Jones.
Yeah, Davy.
But Mike Nesmith had wonderful timing and personality.
He was great.
Yeah, you played the next year's great. What's he doing?
Is he writing songs?
I heard he was directing
and they still go out on the road.
We grabbed
him at a nostalgia convention in New Jersey
and we kind of
went up to his room
and hijacked him.
He gave us a great episode.
Nice.
I'm looking at this card and so many fun things on here
that we have to ask you about, Stuart. In addition to MASH, in addition to the
monkeys, a show that Gilbert and I, and I know we're
jogging your memory here. It's been 40 years. A show Gilbert and I talk about, Land of
the Giants. Yes.
I remember so little of that.
I think you played a robot.
There you go. That's probably why I don't remember.
I didn't
really remember much about that
a week after I finished it.
Thank you for reminding
me I played a robot because I kept wondering,
why don't I remember anything about that show?
And our engineer is bringing up the theme song
for Land of the Giants.
He's trying to jog your memory.
What was the Englishman that played the lead?
Oh, gosh.
Oh, Land of the Giants.
I remember Gary Conway, I think.
There was, at the time he seemed elderly to me, Gosh. Oh. Land of the Giants. I remember Gary Conway, I think.
Yeah.
There was, at the time, he seemed elderly to me, but he was English.
He affected an English accent all his career, one or the other.
And he was one of the leads.
I feel like most of the scenes I played were with him.
We'll have to have our researcher, Paul, find that.
Paul, can you dig that out?
English guy on Land of the Giants.
Stewart's wondering who the English actor was on Land of the Giants.
Or he had done a lot of Shakespeare.
He may have been from Mississippi, but he sounded like he was English.
What about the Partridge family?
You played Snake, the motorcyclist. And yet another guest on our show, Danny Bonaduce.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, great.
Yeah, I had a wonderful time with all of them.
And it was a part originally Rob Reiner had created, the biker.
Oh, yeah.
And then when they were going to – there was a wedding.
I think I was the groom or something.
I rode in on a bike and Rob was either already doing all in the family or something.
So I got cast and I did a couple of segments of that.
And Shirley was wonderful.
And all those kids were great.
And was Danny crazy back then?
Yeah.
Little, but crazy.
And David Cassidy, he was at the height of his, like, pop sex symbol status.
Oh, the teen idol thing.
Well, he was just growing into that, and his brother...
Sean.
Sean Cassidy was actually a pretty big star at that point.
And I had known their father from New York when I really first...
Oh, Ted Cassidy.
Oh, no, Jack.
Jack Cassidy.
Ted Cassidy was Adam's family.
That's right.
And Jack was
I'll take you back
He did a show called Shangri-La
Which at the time was the most expensive flop on Broadway
I remember him in the Superman
Wasn't he in the Superman musical on Broadway?
Jack Cassidy?
Sounds right
The one that was written by the Bonnie and Clyde guys?
Oh, we have an answer to your English actor.
Land of the Giants.
Okay, now, so I got the whole cast up here.
Is Gary Conway the guy you're looking at?
No, he was American.
Okay, Don Marshall.
Also American.
Don Matheson.
And the occasional woman, Stefan Arngrim.
Now it was a guy.
Kurt Kasnar.
Kate Kasnar?
Kurt Kasnar? Kurt Kasnar?
Kurt Kasnar.
That's the whole cast that I've got here.
I wonder what, well, maybe it was one of those first names you mentioned.
Like I say, it was just a guy that worked with an English accent.
A hundred years ago.
Yeah.
So let's ask you, we'll get it out of the way,
let's ask you about Lanigan's Rabbi.
Yes.
With Art Carney.
Well, it's it was you know, I read those books and I thought, oh, this is very exciting.
And we did the show and I was pleased.
I kind of the way I felt like at the time I was playing myself more than I had in any other part.
I thought I'm not going to go for any weird character, just, you know, play the thing. And then it ended, and we saw it, and people,
yeah, they're going to do more.
And I thought, it's weird.
Me and Art Carney, and nothing's funny, you know?
Something's wrong.
Interesting.
Art Carney's funnier.
Art Carney was like the chief of police.
Police.
And you were his best friend, a rabbi. Yeah, kind of
again, you know, kind of getting in his turf all the time
and he being very patient with me.
So I made some suggestions to
Mr. Stern, Leonard Stern, about if it's possible to be
what we could do maybe perhaps to be funnier since you've got Art Carney.
And then they replaced me.
Right.
Right.
With the immortal Bruce Solomon.
So that was.
But I enjoyed doing it.
I love working with Art Carney.
Yeah.
Oh, and. Oh, yeah. Tell us what Art Carney was like to work with.
Well, he, you know, he wasn't, I remembered him from way, way back
from the Honeymooner days, from the beginning,
because that's what I watched with my folks.
And also the, oh, the movie Tonto and I, or what was it? Oh, the Mazursky movie. Yeah. Oh,
yeah. Yeah. Harry and Tonto. Yes. And, uh, so that's, you know,
it was for me,
it was just a pleasure to be able to talk to him and hear about, you know,
what it was like in the day and what he had been doing. And he was,
he was very open about all that, and I loved that.
And Frank
mentioned to me
something we're both interested in,
and that's the fact
you were in the movie S.O.B.
Oh, yeah.
The Great Blake Edwards, yeah.
Used it a couple of times.
In the scene where
Julie Andrews shows her breasts.
Yes.
I'm on set, as I recall, or else I fantasized it.
And I didn't have to leer at all.
It just came naturally.
Yeah.
Beautiful woman and beautiful figure.
And I always say that was my first screen kiss with Richard Mulligan.
Oh, yes.
Yes, yes.
Well, a couple of things.
First of all, tell us about Richard Mulligan, and then we want to ask you about Blake Edwards.
Because you did a fine mess with Richard Mulligan, too.
Right, right.
Well, Richard and I hung out together for a while.
I had known his first wife, Joan Hackett.
Oh, sure.
She had a big career.
Yeah.
And she's a terrific lady.
And she had introduced me to Richard years before.
And then we just kept bumping into each other.
And we hung around together.
He was a wonderful, wonderful guy.
And so it was great fun to be able to work with him all the time.
I don't think a lot of people know that his brother, Robert Mulligan, was the director of To Kill a Mockingbird.
Oh, geez.
And some other good films.
Yeah, yeah, some other really good films.
Yeah.
No one ever puts that together.
His dad was a cop, as I recall.
They were real New York kids.
And I believe Richard's dad was a cop.
And he didn't talk about his brother too much.
He said, yeah, my brother directs films.
Good films.
Good.
And also another guest we had on the show, Howie Mandel.
Oh, yeah, Howie and Dan.
And you guys did a fine mess.
Right, right, right.
And it was interesting.
Blake, when we started that film, as I recall, I know he was weak and he wasn't all that well.
And I think there were some questions whether he should do it.
And I think, what was that called?
The kissing disease?
What was that thing?
Mononucleosis?
He had mono when we started.
And so he got over it real quick.
But I always think that he was really under a heavy burden during that period of time physically,
trying to get the energy that came so naturally for him, like in SOB, which is my only other experience,
where he was like, he had a thousand ideas every second, you know.
You had some nice moments in SOB, too.
You have that nice scene after Julie is kind of traumatized, Julie Andrews' character is
kind of traumatized, and she takes to bed.
Right.
You guys have that nice scene together, and you have some really funny moments with the
Asian chef.
Oh, right, right.
It was actually the restaurant owner.
Right.
Mr. No, I can't think of his name.
Yeah, the restaurant Beverly Hills Forever. Was it Mr. Chow? No. No. No. owner right uh mr i know can't think of his name yeah their restaurant beverly hills forever was
it mr chow no no no uh it was even older than that more famous than that from back in the 30s maybe
even we we love blake edwards on this show we've talked about the great race and and many of his other movies. Talk about great films. Oh, yeah. Memories.
And speak about a reason to leer.
You were in class with Jacqueline Bissett.
Right.
He's got a one-track mind, Stuart.
No, no, I can dig it.
She was stunning.
Stunningly beautiful.
And all those kids were new then, you know.
Rob Lowe?
Right now.
Andrew McCarthy, John Cusack.
I don't think anybody had seen those kids until that movie.
And the director.
Oh, Virginia Madsen, I think is in that is she in
that i think so i didn't have any scenes with her she shows her breasts in the movie so i remembered
you're kidding
he would never kid about a thing like that. No, that's something important to me.
I'm going to ask my wife a question here.
Who is this actor that lived on the island?
Louis Carlino was the director.
Oh, Louis, yeah, the guy, yeah.
A great writer, a great writer.
Yeah.
And I've gone blank on his name. He made that movie Resurrection, one with, I want to say Louise Fletcher.
Was it Louise Fletcher?
Or maybe it wasn't him.
Maybe it was Ellen Burstyn.
I think it was.
I think it was. And I think the great Santini.
Yeah, that was his script.
Right.
And he directed it, too. That's right. He did.
But there's some other scripts that he wrote he didn't direct.
There was really top notch stuff.
And he was a wonderful person.
He may still be a wonderful person. I haven't talked to him.
Yeah, I wonder if he's around.
Well, after that film, a few years after that film, I lived for about 22 years on an island up in British Columbia.
And Louie got a place on another island up there, and we'd go see him or he'd come see us.
And it was fun.
You know that movie, Gilbert, The Great Santini.
Oh, yes.
Robert Duvall.
Michael O'Keefe.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Very good picture.
Good writer.
Yeah.
Really good.
Wrote some plays, too.
Yeah.
Well, this is a perfect segue for us, Stuart.
Did you, and I'm curious about this.
Did you start as a playwright?
I know you wrote some plays.
I know that's kind of how you got involved with those music guys,
with Smokey Robards and Murray McLeod and those guys.
Well, I went to high school with Murray in Scottsdale, Arizona.
And we graduated together.
We were in the same class.
And then years later, I'd written one act, and Smokey was in it.
And he said, hey, you ought to come by our offices.
McLeod, who he went to high school with, and I,
they were writing songs.
So I hung around at their offices for a long time, and that led to them writing, what do you think of these lyrics, you know.
So it was a tremendous time because it was like mid-60s, 64, 65, 66, 67.
And the music business, as I remember then, I'd done theater and I'd done film, and it was just exciting, everybody knows.
But that period right in there, 65 to 69 maybe, something like that,
the real creative excitement in the world, from my point of view,
and from I think a lot of people's point of view, was what's the newest song?
What's on the radio this week?
Whether it's the Beatles song what's on the radio this week whether it's the beatles or dylan
or the stones or that had much more uh currency than than the films in that in that specific
period it was all about who's doing what well there was a there was a hit song called sunshine
girl right that those guys did what what they call themselves the parade.
Was that the name of the group? Yeah. Yeah. It was Murray and Smokey and a guy named Jerry
Reapel. Later, Jerry and I continued to write together for years and we were still real good
friends. He lives out in Phoenix. Yeah, I did. I found a little, I found some stuff on him. He's had a prolific career. Yeah, no, he's been, he's been around from early days of rock and roll. And
he had a big, it was one of those curious things. He had a huge hit album in, I'm going to guess,
69 or 70. And in Arizona, it was the number one album for like five months in the midst of everybody
else that you can imagine putting out albums. And he continues to play there, you know, continues to
have crowds come see him. Yeah, I found his videos online. Now, Gilbert, we'll find this interesting
because this is fun trivia about you. And we had Paul Williams on the show.
I've got a part for Paul.
Next time you see him, tell him.
Okay.
We will for sure.
A sweet guy.
Yeah.
But there's another connection.
You know, we've done so many of these shows.
We've done 110 of them or something like that now.
And I was saying to my wife last night,
it's interesting how many of the guests start to intersect.
Oh my God, yes.
I can imagine.
And Roger Nichols, who wrote We've Only Just Begun with Paul.
Right.
And I think The Rainbow Connection, if I'm not mistaken,
if I have the right co-writer.
Yes.
Roger, you mean.
Yeah, Roger Nichols.
Yeah.
And you wrote something with Roger Nichols.
No, I never did.
You guys are co-credited on the song I Can See Only You.
Oh, you may have written the bridge of that.
Okay.
You know, he and Murray McLeod and Murray's sister had a group.
I'm not going to be able to think of their name.
It was real soft rock, kind of like the Carpenters.
They were on A&M Records.
Circle of Friends.
A small circle of friends, I think.
That's right, that small circle of friends.
And so it was through that that we happened.
Is this ringing a bell, Stuart?
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know that that's Roger to change those chords like that.
There you go.
That's great.
Thank you, Frankie.
Thank you, Frank.
That's Frank, our engineer. And we haven't even touched upon the Rockford files.
Well, obviously goes back.
Jim and I had done.
Oh, I want to go back to remember.
I said I did a little like 20 second bit once on on Love American Style when they maybe the second show they ever did.
They were just starting.
And I played a drunk in a jail cell. Right. Yeah. American style when they maybe the second show they ever did they were just starting in it and
I played a drunk in a jail cell right yeah so I go in they said you have a meeting with Jim Garner
and he's doing a series called Nichols over at Warner Brothers and uh so I walk in the office
and he points there's that guy he he had seen that little bit where I bumped the drunk that bumps his head against the bars.
And that's how I met Jim.
And then I ended up playing his deputy on Nichols, which is, I think, a really good show.
Frank Pearson was the head writer.
Another good writer.
Yeah, Dog Day Afternoon.
Sure. Cool, and Luke. He was a head writer. Another good writer. Yeah, Dog Day Afternoon. Sure.
Cool, and Luke.
He was the head writer, and we had all kinds of great directors that were kind of somewhat starting out at that time.
And it was a wonderful show, that the president of Chevrolet and his wife came to network and they said, this show's been on the air five weeks and the sheriff's taken five bribes every week.
They didn't want to take that.
That was a good show, Nichols.
I think it was only one season.
Do you remember Nichols?
Yeah.
Gilbert?
Vaguely.
Stewart played the deputy.
Margot Kidder.
Margot Kidder was in it.
Really good show.
Yeah, yeah.
And a bunch of wonderful people.
So anyway, that lasted one year, went off the air.
So about a year after it was
off the air I got a call from them
said we're talking about doing a new
show
and it's called the Rockford Files
and Steve Cannell
wrote this two hour
pilot script
and
I did that and they sold it
you know I only acted in five a year.
This is Jim Rockford.
At the tone, leave your name and message.
I'll get back to you.
That was the answering machine at the beginning of every Rockford file.
Oh.
There it is.
Yeah, the Rockford files would always start off with like some
funny answering machine message. Jim left a message. People leave a message for Jim.
Right, right, right. But as I'm sure you know, to talk about great writers, Cannell was in
his heyday. The second writer behind him was David Chase, who went on to do The Sopranos.
Juanita Bartlett was on the staff, and she went on and did three or four series.
It was terrific writers, terrific writers.
But I was just starting to direct then, and I went to Jim, meeta rosenberg was the executive producer and i said
i'm hoping to direct some so maybe i wouldn't be in every week and they said whenever you want to
just let us know it was the kind of thing that no one would has ever done i mean one time
they said we're going to shoot something in September with Angel.
OK. And then August rolled around and I had a chance.
I was rewriting a script on a movie that was going to Macau in China, Hong Kong and Macau.
And I called said, is there any chance?
I said, yeah, when you get back, call us and then we'll do that show.
Well, that was that's unheard of.
And kindness.ness. Yeah, sounds it. I heard that
James Garner talked about
how he was always getting beaten up
in every episode of the Rockford Files, and he had
basically sports injuries his knees
would have to be operated on.
Well, he did.
You know, some of the injuries were old.
He played football at Oklahoma, which is curious enough,
he was on the same team with Dennis Weaver.
Oh, that's so cool.
Another guy you worked with, by the way.
They were on the same team.
Then he went to Korea, and as he said, he got shot in the ass running south.
He got a purple heart for that.
And then, you know, all those movies he would do.
He was early days doing his stunts and everything. So by the time Rockford came around and they found it was a great audience pleaser
to see your hero get beaten up every week.
Well, obviously he didn't really get beaten up,
but even in faking falls or faking this,
he hurt himself.
And then one show he stepped,
he was coming down some staircase somewhere
on the back lot at Universal, and he tripped, and he took a really nasty fall, and the knees took it, and he hurt.
He hurt.
I find it's great trivia that you got that part kind of indirectly from Love American Style.
Yeah, yeah.
Never knew that.
It's a weird little thing.
Somebody sees it, and next thing you know, you're heading in another direction.
Do I have this right, too, Stuart, that you were reluctant to get tied down to a series?
To get—
To get tied down to a regular series at that time.
You said there were things you wanted to do.
Well, that was at the beginning of Rockford. I was starting to direct and I was just fortunate to be talking to Jim and Mita,
who let me do what I wanted to do. And they said, when you're available, call us and we'll put Angel
in. So it was a dream gig that way. And I've heard you say you knew guys like Angel, too. You knew those kind of street hustlers.
Yeah, in Dallas, they were called character.
Hustlers, you know.
But I'm, you know, everybody knows him.
You know, all over.
What was James Garner like?
Well, he was, I've said it so many times, but I'll say it again, and then I'll go from there.
No one treated me better, with the exception of my father, than Jim did.
I couldn't express all the wonderful things he did for me and just the friend that he was for me
in a lot of, over a long period of time.
And his wife, Lois.
We got to fortunately toward the, when we started doing the two-hour Rockford's
kind of in the mid-'90s, we had a wonderful trip.
We all took together, went up to together. I was living off the coast, and we met in Vancouver, and we all took the train up to Jasper and played golf and drove around.
It was great.
We had fun.
You worked with him so many times, and I want to recommend to our listeners too a TV movie you directed called
The Glitter Dome for HBO which I watched again last night I remembered seeing it the first time
it's very very good and and Lithgow and and Garner James Garner give great performances
yeah they were wonderful together I thought and that had a wonderful guest John Marley
yeah the legend I was going to tell Gilbert I think it's John Marley. Yeah, I was going to tell Gilbert. I think it's John Marley's last appearance. Wow.
Yeah.
Jack Waltz.
Oh, yes, yes.
And you have another Godfather connection, Stuart, which I'll get to later.
But I also want to recommend the—what is it called?
The Long Summer of George Adams.
Right.
And I believe you mentioned Joan Hackett before.
That's right, Joan Hackett. Another terrific movie.
Thank you.
I'm proud of that film.
It was from a novel that Jim had always loved and bought the rights to.
And they, you know, no one would make it as a feature.
It was kind of soft for a feature, so they did it as a TV movie.
And I had the privilege of directing it.
Shot it in East Texas.
I think even for all of the kudos and the credit that he gets in his career,
I still think in some ways he's underrated.
I agree with you.
I don't think, you know, people, because he's so at ease with whatever he does,
that they don't want to at least just be in himself or something.
at ease with whatever he does that they don't want to at least just be in himself or something but uh he had a great great voice uh just an endearing you heard the voice people knew who
that was or if they didn't even identify it immediately it was kindly to them they felt
good about whoever that was talking and And great comic timing, obviously.
Great comic timing.
And I think of movies like Murphy's Romance and The Americanization of Emily.
And also Victor Victoria.
And Victor Victoria.
Wonderful in that.
And the support your local sheriff and support your local gunfighter or a hoot.
And wasn't he the one who said, beef, it's watch for dinner?
I believe he was.
Yes.
I don't remember that.
I think he did a series of – but, you know, an underrated actor and he could do drama.
You know, and he could do comedy effortlessly.
And I don't hear him getting quite enough credit.
No, I think that – I mean, who knows what.
But I think that it all came, his work was so effortless
that people don't take it as seriously as they could.
I mean, even you go back to, you know, his other great attribute is as the rebel.
He quit Warner Brothers and got the old,
you'll never work in this town again from Warner's.
And he went, no one would touch him for a while.
He went back, he did some Broadway, went on the road with the,
not Mr. Roberts, K-Mutiny.
And then he was in Sayonara.
I don't know if you remember.
He became good friends with Brando.
He was Brando's buddy, the young officer in Sayonara.
He was wonderful.
What was that story?
That he walked away from a contract?
Well, yeah.
It was like in his fourth year of Maverick, making a fast $500 a week, and they couldn't kick it up. And
there was something in the contract, which is a good story, and I'm going to forget,
so hopefully somebody in your offices there will know that. He got an attorney,
and they found something in the contract that had been breached by Warner Brothers.
Don't ask me what it was.
But the attorney, whose name also escapes me, found it.
And they used that to get out of the contract.
And that was when You'll Never Work Again.
Now, for Jim, it was You'll Never Work Again.
For that attorney, he was hired by Warner Brothers and later ran Warner Brothers.
Wow, I never knew that story. Did you, Gil? No. He was hired by Warner Brothers and later ran Warner Brothers. Wow.
I never knew that story.
Did you, Gil?
No.
I'm trying to think of the attorney's name.
He's quite a guy.
He climbed Everest.
Wow.
He was.
He ran Warner's for a while.
Not Burt Fields.
No, no.
Now, I have to get back to another show that you had a chance to leer on
and that would be
you
acted with Linda
Carter as Wonder Woman.
No, I directed her.
You directed Linda Carter
as Wonder Woman.
I had to do my leering from behind
the camera.
I had to do my leering from behind camera.
Has anyone ever told you you were famous for leering until today, Stuart?
No, no, I never, never, never, never did that.
And I may go back to it.
I'm going to go check it out.
And you did a TV movie, The Ballad. Oh, yeah.
That's a very, well, yeah. He wrote it.
He wrote it.
Now, what strikes me about
that movie
is people have compared
it to Burt Lancaster's
The Swimmer, which
is a favorite movie of mine.
That's weird.
Why am I...
I think it's something about the style.
And the
theme song keeps repeating itself.
You know, I have to say, I watched it, I had seen
it way back in the day, and a couple
of things about it. Lee Majors is terrific
in the part. Yeah. And all good actors.
I mean, Pat Hingle, who's a favorite of ours.
Oh, wow. He was sensational.
Shows up.
Tell us about Pat Hingle.
I always liked him.
Well, I always loved him, so that was the first time I ever met him.
And fortunately, he really liked the part.
And outside of meeting him and watching him play the scene and just thinking like, yes, perfect, you know.
He was quite the gentleman.
You know, he'd had some terrible accident.
Well, I know he was missing a pinky, I think.
I don't know what exactly.
Was it some kind of elevator shaft or some weird thing?
There's a story I heard.
I certainly never discussed it with him.
But Agnes Moorhead played Joey Heather heatherton's mother yep and uh jimmy dean
jimmy dean played lee major's boss and the one of the righteous brothers uh the shorter of the two
i think it's bobby hatfield bobby hatfield played his buddy right it's an eclectic cast. Yeah. And you forgot Marvin Gaye. Well, no, I can tell you that my finest moment in life, as I look back over all these years, I was I wrote the script and Aaron Spelling was partnered with Danny Thomas at the time.
And they were just starting movies of the week.
And so it was I think it was the second one made.
And so I was supposed to be an associate producer, which basically meant stay away from everything.
Don't go on the set.
Don't go.
Don't do it.
So I was looking at him.
He said, well, why don't you do some casting for it?
Great.
Well, what about this character that he had been in Vietnam with, you know,
the African-American guy that at the end of the film is the last friend he has left,
and he goes to see him.
I said, okay.
So Aaron said, okay, here's the William Morris casting book.
It's got to come from William Morris.
Okay.
All right.
So I'm going through, and I see, well, Marvin Gaye.
I said, maybe I can meet him.
You know, I don't know if he wants that.
So anyway, he took the part.
And we met.
I was songwriting then over at A&M on La Brea.
And I shared the office with Murray McLeod and Jerry Riopelle.
And he shared the office with Murray McLeod and Jerry Riopelle.
And Marvin Gaye came over to kind of go over the dialogue to see what would be most natural for him, I would say.
And so we worked on the dialogue.
And then everybody kind of split.
And it was Marvin and I were there. And he sat down and played the piano and sang.
And I sat on the floor, my head against the wall, and I thought it is never going to get any better than this.
That's great.
It's a good movie, too.
It's a little like coming home.
Well, it was at the time, as I recall, they said it was the first film about Vietnam.
And how it came about is pretty organic in that you remember I wrote it in 67, 68.
And I was on the hanging around on the strip.
And if you remember 68 in L.A., the strip was just haywire, man.
It was crazy people all over the place.
And I saw two Marines walking down, strutting down the street who clearly had not been in the United States for a few years.
And some of the kids and the people were, they weren't making fun of them, but they were oddball.
They stuck out like crazy in the midst of what was going on in the strip.
And that's what prompted the script.
I thought, these are two guys that left this country before the revolution took place here and came back.
And it was a different country they came back to.
I think you captured it.
I think you captured the feeling.
It's a heartbreaking ending. Yeah. And you
were in an episode of Bewitched. Right.
Right. And now was this with the original Darren, Dick
York? I think I did two of them because I worked with both the original
and the actor that replaced the original.
Yeah, Dick Sargent.
Dick Sargent, yeah.
Now, Dick York, I heard, had health problems for a while.
That I don't know.
Well, at the very end, he did.
I don't know.
Go ahead.
No, no, I was just saying, I say that only because I remember
there were two different guys played that part
on the two times I
did the show you know the one one more thing that's interesting about uh about Andy Crocker
is that one of uh our favorite actors shows up uh Peter Haskell from Brackenswerth oh yes right
right yeah forgot about him he was her new her husband or her fiancé,
I think.
Yeah, he's one of the... well, the girl he
meets when he goes to the party.
That's right. He's one of the hippies that
kicks him out, that doesn't want his kind there.
And he steals his bike, I think.
Yeah. He took the
triumph from him. It's very
well made. Yeah.
It was
an exciting time for me to see it made it's good
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And as we wind, what do we got here?
As we wind down, Stuart, I want to ask you just a couple of more things about your music career.
Because Gilbert will appreciate this.
And I was saying, I was alluding to a Godfather connection before.
Do I have this right that Al Martino, who played Johnny Fontaine, covered one of your songs?
Yeah, it was uh oh god i think it's i can see only you oh i was thinking so we got covered we wrote a song
with a couple other guys called day after day which was from uh it was like a calypso day after
day more people come to la don't. Shh, don't tell anybody.
The whole place slipping away.
We set out to write a song.
We said, there's too many people in L.A.
Let's drive people away from here.
So, true.
That's true.
So we recorded this song.
And by the time, I think it was 1969 1969 the day that it hit the you know radio stations
was the beginning of an 11 day rain back in 69 and there were earth slides and all kinds of
and this and the song went to number one in la and california went to 20 in the country. It was all that. And I remember because I think at some point, some of the executives at A&M who were involved in real estate were
not thrilled with the fact that they had a hit song that was saying, move from LA.
Did you write music too for, this is again, this is Internet research, so forgive me if it's faulty.
Did you write music for the John Astin movie Evil Roy Slade?
Yes.
Oh, wow.
Well, I wrote the theme song.
Evil, evil—it's one of my favorite lyrics.
Evil Roy Slade made fun of old people.
made fun of old people.
That's a hell of a movie, by the way, with John Astin and Mickey Rooney.
Jerry Belson, Gary Marshall.
That's right.
That's right.
And we had great fun.
There was Dick.
Oh, man. He the kind of the cowboy hero
he's a wonderful comedian oh dick shawn dick shawn right and his entrance we couldn't figure
what do we do here because he was so wild looking he was all in white and everything and uh we wrote
like a beach boy song for a Western.
I was real proud of that.
I mean, with the same kind of harmonies and everything.
It was a pretty funny entrance.
You know that movie, don't you, Gil?
Oh, yeah.
Even Roy Slade and everybody and their brother turns up in it.
We got to get John Astin on this show.
We're chasing him.
Say hello to him, too.
We will if we get him.
And do I have this right, too?
Gilbert will appreciate this, that one of your songs was covered by Gary Lewis.
Oh, wow.
Jerry Lewis' son.
I don't know about that.
That's what they have you down for on there.
Gary Lewis and the Playboys.
They said that your songs were covered by Gary Lewis and R.B. Greaves, who was famous for Take a Letter, Maria.
Oh, my God.
Yes.
Well, that song that I just, day after day, the Calypso, that was done on TV by, of all weird people, Donovan.
Wow.
And Diane Ross did it one night on a show. That got covered in that time period where it was number one in LA.
So you joined after the parade had Sunshine Girl as a hit.
You joined the band.
Yeah, I was actually with them before that.
I see.
In fact, the B-side, I think of that song was one of mine with them.
I would either write with Murray or Smokey or Jerry or the four of us or two of us.
Smokey Roberts is an interesting character.
And Gilbert will appreciate the fact that he was in the original Planet of the Apes.
Oh, great.
That's right.
That's right. Yeah. He lives in, is he in Arkansas now? of the Apes. Oh, great. That's right. That's right.
Yeah.
He lives in, is he in Arkansas now, I think?
I don't know.
Nashville, one or the other.
That's the last I heard.
What an interesting group of characters.
Yeah.
Murray's still around.
Murray's married to Stephanie Edwards,
who always does the Rose Parade.
Yeah.
As for years.
Yeah, he's in a lot of stuff, Mario McLeod.
Yeah, he was doing a lot of acting then himself.
Some big John Wayne film.
I forget the name of it.
Anyway.
Yeah.
Well, I also want to tell our listeners as we wind down,
I want to tell them to look for you and Griffin Dunn
in this terrific independent film called The Discoverers.
Thank you. Yeah, and he Dunn in this terrific independent film called The Discoverers. Thank you.
Yeah, and he's wonderful in it.
I mean, he's really, really funny.
And the girl that plays his daughter is also.
The whole cast is good.
Stuart, because Gilbert hasn't seen it, Stuart plays a Lewis and Clark reenactor.
Yeah.
One of these guys that goes into the woods and tries to.
But he's mourning the loss of his wife.
And it's a lot of shades to that performance.
And it's funny and sad.
I really liked it.
Good, good.
He's a good director.
Again, I'm just going blank as I want to do.
Is it Schwartz, I think?
Yes, yes.
Now, you were in another movie that Frank and I have discussed on this show a few times.
The Big Bus. Oh, yeah. Now that's got a cast.
Written by Fred Freeman and Larry Cohen, who wrote Start the Revolution Without Me and Spies Like Us.
Start the Revolution Without Me and Spies Like Us and Big Bus.
I'm crazy about that.
With Stalker Channing.
Yeah, Joseph Bologna.
Joseph Bologna and Richard Mulligan and Sally Kellerman.
Yes.
Rene Arbeau-Jean-Moi.
Right.
Oh, yes.
Got to get him for the show. And Cyrano de Bergerac.
Oh, José Ferrer?
José Ferrer, who was in like an iron lung, and he always had a date with him in the iron lung.
What do you remember about directing a show called The Texas Wheelers with an actor named Jack Elam?
Well, I tell you what I remember.
I was looking through the lens.
I remember, I think it was, that may have been the second thing I ever directed.
But, you know, I've obviously been around.
And I was watching the kids play.
And I looked and I was watching Gary Busey, who was new.
And I thought, man, this guy is really good.
He can really act.
And he should have had a different career than he's had because he was capable of big-time work, as he showed when he played Buddy Holly.
But he had the stuff. He was He had the stuff, you know.
He was good.
That's what I remember.
You directed one of Gil's favorite actors, too, Jack Warden.
Oh, yeah.
That was great.
Oh, tell us about it.
What?
Crazy Like a Fox.
Tell us about Jack Warden.
I kind of worked with him twice, but we never had a scene together in the Problem Child movies.
theater in Dallas and Fort Worth, which is obviously where I came from. And he worked at the little theaters there. And then he worked at some other, a little bigger theaters, and he
worked his way to New York. So he came up through that odd circuit, which is local theaters around
the country, which not a whole lot of people stay in.
Usually people start in that and then they go to New York or they go to L.A. But Jack was with that a few years before he came to New York.
And so his chops were in good shape.
He's great humor, great, terrific actor.
And I heard right now he could do anything.
And I heard Jack Elam was a war hero, I think.
I don't know anything.
Jack Elam, yeah.
Yeah.
I think that's right.
Is that right?
That was a short-lived show with Mark Hamill, Gary Busey, and Jack Elam.
Right.
Texas Wheelers.
And tell us how Jose Ferrer was in person.
Well, he was, I'd have to tell this story,
but I was his brother in the big bus.
So I'd go talk to him.
So one day, as I recall, it was either her birthday
or Christmas Eve or something.
He said, you live, I lived on Beverly Glen.
You live out that way.
Can you take this?
And it was a present.
It was wrapped up, a present.
Take this and drop it.
He gave me the address.
And just, I'm going to say birthday because I guess that's what it was, Christmas.
I'm going to say birthday because I guess that's what it was, Christmas.
And so I drove over to this house in Beverly Hills, and it was Rosemary.
Clooney.
Clooney.
And I realized, oh, man, who are you?
What is this? So, well, Mr. Farrar said to drop this off here.
So I gave her her birthday present from Jose.
That's what I remember.
That's a nice story.
Yeah.
What are you working on?
We're going to wrap it up, Stuart.
What are you working on now?
Do you have a project about Jack Ruby?
Oh, yeah, I do.
I'll talk about it.
But right this minute, I'm doing on, doing, uh, on golden pond stage,
cool. Uh, doing it with Gretchen Corbett, who was also in rocker files, played his, uh, uh,
attorney. I remember her one lady and she came out, she lives in Portland, been doing rep for
a few years. So she came out, we opened up last week and had a very good opening, and we've got a few more weeks to go.
I've written a film that's going to be made, I can't believe it, shot here.
I can't tell you who the stars are.
I was hoping I'd get a call before your call,
but it'll probably be next.
But a couple of superb actors and a young director named Christopher Martini.
And it stars Max Martini as one of the stars, his older brother, who was in 13 Hours and Pacific Rim and was in the series The Unit.
Yeah.
And so anyway, that's hopefully it will start shooting the end of September or the first
week of October.
And the Jack Ruby is a musical.
A musical.
But it's really, it's not, I mean, Jack Ruby's in it.
Right.
But it's really about candy bar. Oh, it's about the's in it. Right. But it's really about candy bar.
Oh, it's about the carousel.
Because that's where I first learned to leer, by the way.
Oh, really?
You were in the actual carousel in Dallas?
Well, I was a kid then, you know, but that sign would be out front, you know, with candy in her outfit.
But that sign would be out front, you know, with Candy in her outfit.
And so anybody that was over 11 years old, you know, kind of like she was the hottest thing going. And I followed her career and I got to meet her finally in L.A. way back in probably the late 70s.
Wow.
Yeah, mid to late 70s.
And so it's about her story, which is a fantastic story.
And Ruby discovered her. And they were always friends right up until a couple of weeks. She
was in prison and he visited her. And then two weeks later, he went and killed Oswald.
And so the feds, all of them, you name a branch, they
questioned her and questioned her.
I was just going to ask you if she was questioned by the Warren Commission.
No.
Anyway,
don't get me going on that.
But she's a wonderful
character, a wonderful,
outrageous
human being that
is part of Texas lore and pretty crazy lady.
You've done everything, Stuart. You've worked with everybody.
Well, a lot of good people. I know that. I'm looking forward to,
I like writing now and I hope I continue to do that.
Well, we appreciate you, your time. We appreciate you being a part of this.
Thank you.
We're trying to piece together the story of show business in the 20th century.
Well, toward the end of it, I'm in there.
Thanks for telling your story.
We appreciate it.
And I got to ask you one dopey trivia question, because I've seen
the movie so many times.
Can you tell us
the, because I remember
this, the name
of the gunslinger
whose gun
is in Death Wish at the
gun club?
The name of the,
you mean who it had belonged
to? Yes.
No. Oh, okay.
You tell Charles Bronson,
well, this gun belonged to
a gunslinger named Candy
Dan. Oh, really?
Yeah.
You stumped Stuart Margulies.
Yeah. Candy Dan, I don't...
And I remember your scene when Bronson's leaving for the airport,
and you go, are you going to check this?
And he goes, yeah.
And you put in this, like, little box.
Oh, yeah, I do remember.
And then when Bronson gets home, he opens it, and there's like a cowboy gun.
A weapon.
Yeah.
A weapon.
Like I say, my memory goes to that night when I went to see the premiere,
and this famous critic was on the phone.
20 minutes after, I'm always taken out of every theater in the phone. I love that.
You're also in one of my favorite movies in the world, and that's Days of Heaven.
Yeah, that's one of my favorite movies.
And that's the only, I would say probably the only genius I ever met in my whole time that is Terry Malick.
What was he like? I he's he's a legendary well he was a recluse for years and then he made a comeback and he's uh he was uh he's he's brilliant
mind i mean i don't know if you know the history of you study agriculture you know a little bit
about him i'm ex at harvard and went went to South America and worked for the government and came back and at the AFI, American Film Institute, and then made Badlands, which is my favorite films ever.
And I saw that as screening.
I thought, I've got to meet this guy.
And we met and hit it off.
And I had a wonderful time up in Alberta doing that movie.
If you haven't seen that movie, Gilbert, it's a masterpiece with Richard Gere and Brooke Adams.
To look at it.
Oh, and Nestor Alamandros.
Nestor Alamandros, right.
And Sam Shepard.
Yeah.
Everything about it's great.
And see if to our listeners, try to see it on a big screen.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's so cool. Okay. So we big screen. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Okay, so we're going to... Thank you, Gilbert.
Oh, wait.
Oh, I just have to say the ending.
Thank you, Stuart.
Sure.
And okay, I'm Gilbert Gottfried.
This has been Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast
with my co-host Frank Santo Padre. And we have been talking to the very obscenely leering.
He's just a good actor.
He was convincing.
Stuart Margolin.
Acting naturally.
Yes.
And to our listeners, find the ballad of Andy Crocker and also the Discoverers.
Thank you. Thanks, Stuart. Thank you, Stuart Margolin. A treat for us.