Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - Jason Alexander
Episode Date: March 30, 2020Tony-winning actor and director Jason Alexander joins Gilbert and Frank for an in-depth conversation about network interference, working with animals, classic "Twilight Zone" episodes, Woody Allen's ...influence on George Costanza and the impact of "Seinfeld" on popular culture. Also, Robert De Niro yuks it up, Liza Minnelli lends a hand, Jason and Martin Short perform "The Odd Couple" and Gilbert warbles a tune from "Duckman"! PLUS: Joe Besser! "The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle"! The genius of Jerry Stiller! The golden age of comedy albums! And Jason gets advice from William Shatner! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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for a limited time only at participating McDonald's restaurants in Canada. hi this is gilbert godfrey this is gilbert godfrey Amazing Colossal Podcast with my co-host, Frank Santopadre.
Our guest this week is a producer, writer, director, acting teacher, children's book author,
award-winning magician, semi-pro poker player, and one of the most versatile and popular
and likable actors of his generation. You know his work from feature films
like Pretty Woman, Jacob's Ladder, Coneheads, Shallow Hal, The Hunchback of Notre Dame,
Love, Valor, and Compassion, The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle, and hit TV shows like The Simpsons, Friends, The Larry Sanders Show, Curb Your Enthusiasm, American Dad, Star Trek, Voyager, The Orville, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, as well as starring in the cult series Duckman.
And, of course, as one of the most indelible characters in the history of television,
the lovably neurotic George Costanza in the iconic show Seinfeld.
And there's more he's also starred in national tours on broadway and off broadway stage with
merrily we were all along the rink broadway bound fish in the dark and jerome robbins broadway for
which he was an awarded a tony for best actor in a musical in a career that started way back when he played a member of the Von Trump family.
Or Von Trapp family.
Von Trapp family.
Oh, Von Trump.
Yes.
This was the one that had to do with Donald Trump escaping the Nazis.
And when you hear Donald Trump sing Sound of Music, it is unbelievable.
His Edelweiss will tear your heart out.
Yes.
And this man has gone on to work with Stephen Sondheim, Mel Brooks, Hal Prince, Liza Minnelli, Harrison Ford, Robert Duvall, George Clooney, Julia Roberts, Neil Simon, Larry David, Robert De Niro, and most impressively of all, Gilbert Gottfried.
Please welcome to the show a true renaissance man
and one of our favorite performers
and a man who almost single-handedly responsible
for killing the McDonald's McDLT,
the multi-talented Jason Alexander.
Wow.
What an introduction.
And by the way, I am running out to write The Sound of Music with the Von Trump fans.
That is next season.
Screw West Side Story.
That is the new revival. That's a million-dollar idea.
Oh, God.
Now, I just watched that commercial yesterday.
Frank and I watched that.
And I remember when that was out.
It was like a styrofoam container.
The patty was on one side, the lettuce on the other.
The lettuce stays cool.
The meat stays hot.
Exactly.
Right.
the meat stays hot exactly right and and the commercial is like you like robert uh preston in uh music man you get into this town and people you grab them do you remember the song
yeah sure please i mean people shove it all the time um it's a quarter pound of cheese on the hot
hot side and the hot stays hot and lettuce of cheese on the hot hot side and the hot
stays hot and lettuce and tomato on the cool cool side and the cool stays cool
something that's in between it's a new mcdlt and then it was like a rap thing
we created rap the sandwich died but the rap genre was born so and and it's a perfectly integrated area
you know healthy happy people so excited about the loyalty yeah yeah yes our mutual friend
rupert holmes who we were talking about off mic jason says says there was something about you
there was some controversy about you not knowing a mic was
on while making that spot does that mean anything to you that's that's true i yeah um i didn't quite
understand body mics uh which of course you know we all wear now for even in the theater we wear
body mics but the mcdlt commercial being a musical commercial was all lip sync to playback so why i had a couple of spoken lines but that's
why i was body mic the the um the video village as we call it in the industry but where where the
clients and the director and everybody was sitting watching the monitors was over a block away from
where we were because it was a long street scene and we are we were now into additional days of filming and i couldn't quite understand
why it was taking so long and now we're matching we're matching something that we shot two days
earlier and they were they were pausing for an hour at a time because the clouds in the sky
didn't quite match what had happened days earlier so we did one take and we waited an hour
we did another take we waited an hour did a third take we had an hour and as far as i can tell
they've got it they've got it in abundance and i and everyone's worn out no one's being told
anything we're sweating in the sun and you know being treated like cattle the way actors usually
are and we finish another take and they go all, all right, back to number one, we'll do another one. And I, a block away, go, may I use profanity on your show?
Sure, please.
Yes, okay.
I go, oh my God, this fucking McDonald's bullshit.
They got all the fucking money in the fucking world,
and they're just going to do this over and over and over.
And I'm just complaining to myself in the wind,
and over one of the speakers I hear, oh, Jason, I'm so sorry.
And I went, oh, I'm so dead.
I'm so dead.
I'm just dead.
That spot is on YouTube.
Yeah, oh, the spot.
The commercial has lived on.
The product went right into the toilet.
The product, the McDLT.
The commercial was a hit. It tanked. into the toilet. The product, the McDLT.
The commercial was a hit.
It tanked.
How many commercials did you end up doing, Jason?
I mean, Hershey's Kiss. In my life?
A lot.
Delta Gold Chips.
Oh, yeah.
Planners Peanuts.
The one with Yogi Berra.
Oh, my God.
In my career, I've probably done, you know, 50 or 60 commercials.
You did one with Joey Faye, Gilbert.
Oh, yeah. Hershey's kisses yeah i have a vague remembrance i'm pretty sure it was you where you you're like arrested by some
in some southern town for speeding yeah it's a western union money order spot and it ran
for like four years.
Wow.
It was a huge spot.
It was in vignettes, but my little vignette was the kid who's been arrested by, you know,
the mirror-reflecting cop with the shades.
And I'm in the office.
I'm on the phone with my father, and I'm going,
Dad, is there any way you could send the cash today?
And then I get wired the money, and I actually ad-libbed in one of the takes. I handed the cash over to the police officer and I
patted him on the shoulder and went, keep in touch. And that
made it into the spot and apparently it was funny enough to run for four years.
That's what I remember. That line, keep in touch.
Keep in touch, which I stole from Woody Allen. It's a direct Woody Allen steal.
The jail cell in Annie Hall.
Yeah, yeah, Keep in Touch.
I knew, I knew it.
It's a direct steal.
And you did an out-and-out imitation of him in that.
You bet.
Keep in Touch.
Yeah, with the sputtering and the spitting and, yeah, absolutely.
The thinning red hair, I did everything I could.
And now you also, when you started Seinfeld,
was an out-and-out imitation of Woody Allen.
Well, it was certainly, the audition was, because the, and I've told, forgive me if I'm repeating myself,
the audition, there was no Larry, there was no Jerry.
They were doing everything here in L.A., but the audition for a couple of actors was in New York,
and they were just asked to put 20 actors on tape, whatever it might be.
So they only sent four pages of the original pilot script with no indication of what to do with it.
And when I read it, it read like a Woody Allen film.
So that's where I went, well, I'll use that.
So I went and got the glasses that I didn't wear at the time.
And as George, eventually I did a thick New York accent.
But for the audition, I was literally doing you know Woody Allen and you know sputtering and
pontificating and I thought well you know that's ridiculous I'll never see that again and then when
Larry called Larry and Jerry called uh to have me come out to LA to screen test they said love
everything do everything you were doing just not quite the Woody Allen sound and so I backed off
of that but the for the first season season and a half
yeah woody woody allen was my role model for the kind of nebbishy guy that i thought george was
intended to be until i realized that it was an avatar for larry and then my whole thinking about
him shifted the seinfeld chronicles as it was called as it was called in those days right yeah day i think it was day
that's for the day yeah and you at your hippest uh i guess pussy chasing time in your career
uh you were once entered magic camp oh yeah we jump around jason as you can see yeah i was at
tannins tannins magic camp well i thought i i I had no interest in being an actor when I was a kid
because I was actually pretty shy and a pretty intimidated kid,
kind of frightened little kid.
So I was a latchkey kid.
I'd come home to a mostly empty house, and I'd go in my room,
and I would screw around with magic books, you know, cards and coins
and that kind of stuff.
And, you know, if you can do a magic trick, it kind of makes you feel powerful. If you can have somebody go, Whoa, wow. Uh, and I
thought that's what I was going to do. And I was serious enough about it that I went to magic camp
when I was about 12. And I, um, uh, there was a bunch of kids there. I wanted to, again, I wanted
to be that closeup magician. And they had a wonderful magician named, his professional name
was Slidini,ini uh who was a
gorgeous close-up magician and he looked at my hands and went he was italian he went it's not
for you he's not for you he looked at my he looked at my stubby little hands and my fat little fingers
and he just went yeah no no and and he was right and so so that's sort of when I started looking around,
sniffing around for something else I might be able to do.
And the other things that you couldn't do
because of your small hands
was playing the guitar or the violin.
Oh, well, I knew, listen, when I had to,
so I don't know if this was true when you guys were growing up.
In third grade, we had to take an instrument.
There was no choice.
You had to study an instrument. Well well i would have been happy with drums but my parents refused
drums i would have been happy with piano we didn't have one uh and i had really heavy orthodonture
when i was in third grade so i couldn't play anything that was going to go in or press hard
against my mouth so that left that left things like violin,
and I went, well, come on.
They're already kicking my ass just walking down the street.
My fat little ass is being up there.
If I start carrying a violin case,
they're going to shove it up my...
So I had an uncle who played the flute,
and he was able to get me a flute for free.
And so that's how I became a flute player. I would never have played the flute, and he was able to get me a flute for free. And so that's how I became a flute player.
I would never have played the violin.
I knew that was instant death.
The flute case doesn't look like you could be carrying a weapon in there.
It doesn't give itself away.
So I bought a little time with the flute.
I appreciate the Slidini reference too, Jason.
I saw him in the Ricky Jay documentary.
Sure.
Yeah, he was famous. Oh, he was brilliant. reference too, Jason. I saw him in the Ricky Jay documentary. Sure. Yeah.
He was famous. Oh, he was brilliant.
They called him the Fred Astaire of magic.
He always wore a top hat and a tails coat and his hands
just moved beautifully. Do you remember him?
No. You'd see him on variety shows.
Yeah.
He had a career. He worked. He had a career.
And when you entered acting
school, you had some acting teacher, Mr. Spruill?
Yeah, Jim Spruill.
Oh, you did research.
Yeah.
Wow.
This is Frank Schock because I usually, usually I come on these shows and go, so you were
on Seinfeld, right?
Yeah, right.
Jason, he's worked hard for this.
This is amazing.
Yeah.
Jason, he's worked hard for this.
This is amazing.
Yeah, Jim Spruill, he reset my whole thinking about working as an actor. Having been highly influenced by charismatic performers like Ben Vereen and Bill Shatner,
I thought I was going into sort of the dramatic world.
I thought I would be the next great dramatic actor.
going into sort of the dramatic world.
I thought I would be the next great dramatic actor.
And I spent my freshman and first half of my sophomore year sort of trying to gravitate towards those roles.
Jim Spruill was African-American.
He was probably in his 50s when I was at school in the late 70s.
And he had come up through street theater,
I think in Boston or Pittsburgh,
doing this sort of rough around the edges,
real hardcore theater
to sort of change people's view of the world.
And he was a real down-to-earth guy
and he brought me into his office and he said,
here's my assessment of you.
I know that your heart and soul is Hamlet
and that you would be a profound Hamlet,
but you are never going to play Hamlet,
so you best get good at Falstaff.
And what he was saying was,
he took an accounting of me that I was too immature to take.
I was short.
I was always a minimum of 20 pounds overweight.
I had already started losing hair.
There was no way I was going to be the next Olivier.
So he kind of said, if you want a commercial career,
you've got to start thinking about comedic roles
because that's sort of your look.
And I hadn't ever really thought about it.
So he was the guy that said, think about comedy.
And that's when I did.
I started really paying attention to the comedy albums
and watching great comedic actors or comedians who performed
and trying to figure out what made funny funny and steal as much as I could.
This is fascinating.
What kind of comedy albums?
I'm interested to see what kind of education you were.
Oh, everything that was out from, yeah, everything from, you know, the singles like Cosby, Carlin.
Robert Klein.
Robert Klein, Bob Newhart,
those guys to Fireside Theater,
to, you know, to all the...
Monty Python had albums at that time.
So anything that was working as comedy,
you know, Woody Allen,
so I would listen to those routines
over and over and over,
not just for its content,
but for what they were doing in performance
that elevated it. You know, because you can take any one of those guys, over and over, not just for its content, but for what they were doing in performance that
elevated it.
You know, because you can take any one of those guys, you can take a Cosby story, a
Woody Allen story, a Newhart routine.
If they don't do it, it doesn't necessarily land.
It's not bulletproof writing.
It is written for their persona.
And so trying to understand how they were making this stuff work was what i was
really sort of focused on that's fascinating the timing and the and the structure too timing
structure musicality character you know we talk about that don't we how musical how how how comedy
is musical well because i i remember hearing mel brooks say when he auditions actors
he wants to hear them sing
because it's like when you figure
it's like you know
the Marx Brothers
Jack Benny
all these people
Henny Youngman
yeah Henny Youngman
they were all musicians
Victor Borger
sure
yeah
so how come you're so tone deaf
because you're a brilliant comedian
well you know just because I studied it didn't mean I wasn't an A student Yeah. Yeah. So how come you're so tone deaf? Because you're a brilliant comedian.
Well, you know, just because I studied it didn't mean I wasn't an A student. I was asking him.
Oh, Gilbert.
Yeah.
Gilbert has established his own melody that, you know, it's that tone right there, that melody.
It's got a note and a half And it's played on a very specific instrument
Jason, he has sung on this show with Tommy James and Jimmy Webb
And who else, Darren?
Neil Sedaka
Neil Sedaka, Tony Orlando
We'll have to send you the clips
Please, how is the album not out?
It is something to behold
He's very musical clips. Please, how is the album not out? It is something to behold. Yeah.
He's very musical. At one
point, you
were actually
trying to wear a toupee.
At one point, not
only at one point, one point after
Seinfeld had ended.
Yeah, after I had well
established that I was a bald man.
So you weren't fooling anybody.
I wasn't trying to fool anybody.
I was actually making a life statement.
So around that time that Seinfeld ended,
I was up for a couple of film roles that I was really excited about.
I really thought I'd be good.
And I didn't get them.
And one of the reasons that kept coming back to me is,
I just look so much like George.
And there's so much George.
And, you know, they just couldn't imagine.
And up until Seinfeld, really, most of my living theatrically as an actor had been being sort of a chameleon, changing the way I look, the way I sound, the way I do things.
So now all of a sudden, you know, they're meeting me in real life and they're equating me with this one single character.
And I got so tired of it that I went, okay, you know what? Bullshit. I'm going
to put on a toupee and I don't have to look like George. Watch, watch me. And I did it blatantly
in the open, not to fool anybody, but to really sort of have the industry go, oh,
oh, if you put a wig on me, it doesn't look so much like George. After two years of that,
the industry didn't give a shit, and I felt stupid.
So I took it off, and my wife said, you were such a horse's ass for two years with the toupee.
And I heard you used to, after wearing the toupee for a while, you would take like a knife or something and scrape like the goo.
Oh, no, because I didn't know that's that you may
be confusing me with guys so there are many different kinds of toupees there are kinds where
you attach them with like a surgical glue and you just wear it straight for weeks at a time you know
and when you do that oh i know what you know i know what you're talking about early early early no i get it now yeah okay so when i was still in my 20s and there was i was not really bald but i was balding and
it was neither fish nor foul and i thought um i thought you know i gotta i gotta i gotta go one
way or the other i either gotta shave until i'm really like a bald or I got to add more hair. And that was when men's club, hair club for men was a big thing. And what they do is they,
they take a toupee, they make a toupee and then using where your hairline or what passes for a
hairline is, they make a braid out of it with what is essentially fishing line. And then they sew
the toupee into that braid. So you can't take it off.
And you go for about three weeks at a time until your hair grows out a little bit.
And then they take it off and they re-sew it so it lays flat again.
But in that three-week time, you can't clean under the damn thing.
So your head is building up like a cottage cheese that just kind of sits under this thing.
And when they take it off, you just kind of, it's like scraping soap scum off the top of your head.
And it's got an odor.
I mean, it was just a, they would give you products to sort of kind of tamp it down a little bit.
It was just a freak show.
It's interesting, Jason.
I watched you in Bye in bye bye birdie yeah and i also watched and i also we do insane research on this show and i
also watch dunstan checks in yeah i don't i don't notice it two two three minutes into into into
each production i just accept of course i just accept it i'm not sitting there going oh wait a
second well sure because you're used to seeing actors play many different roles. Yeah, I just completely buy the character.
I know. I think this is
something that producers and directors
worry about more than the audience.
They're worried that when I go on screen
and anything else now, the audience is going to
go, oh, look, it's George. And they will
for about two seconds. And then if I do
my job and the audience does their job, we're on to
the next thing. But why that
hurts TV actors where
i guarantee you for a while when tom hanks came out in a movie they went oh it's forrest gump
but nobody seemed to care about that right you know it's uh it's just something that happens i
think because i played this character for so long um and and people just equate me with it so
they're they're they they cry bullshit if they see me look
like something else unless it's really really hugely different i think it's a credit to you i
mean i watched you you're the character you played in the paper too which is so different
yeah then then george or or a character who's likable and i don't i'm not sitting there going
oh it's george it's george cost I mean, you're very good at disappearing into parts.
Thank you.
Where the hell did you learn to dance like you did in Bye Bye Birdie?
You're very light, if I may say.
Well, bless your heart.
When I fell into theater shortly after that incident at Magic Camp,
I tell the story about how we moved from Maplewood, New Jersey,
to Livingston, New Jersey, and it's the girl in the pool.
So I knew nobody.
It was summer.
I wasn't even in classes yet.
And my parents had gotten me a pass to the community pool, you know, thinking I would meet people there.
And I'm standing in the pool.
I know nobody.
And this beautiful girl comes up and says, hi, do you sing?
And I was smitten so i said uh
yeah sure and they pulled me into a production of what will now be called uh the sound of music
with the von trumps but it was a but it was a community production of uh sound of music
and so uh i i was pulled in the theater and because of the camaraderie of theater, more than the performing,
I loved the instant community and friendships and bonds that, you know, casts get.
So I got kind of serious about theater and performing and acting.
And shortly after that, this group of kids would go into New York City
and we would see Broadway shows on the weekends because it was cheap if you were a student.
And we saw Pippin and I got blown away by Ben Vereen. I thought he moved like nobody
had ever seen in my life. Yeah. And I wanted to be him. So the next day I said, I've got to learn
to dance. Not realizing, A, I'm white and Jewish. B, I'm about 35 pounds overweight. You know, it just wasn't a pretty picture. And I went into tap class.
I started taking tap dancing, which is good for learning how to kind of move your feet and change
your balance. And then in college, as a theater major, we had to study ballet and modern dance.
And when I finished college, moved to New York, started doing theater, I would take dance classes
in New York all the time. But I was largely helped by wonderful dancers and wonderful choreographers so Anne
Reinking choreographed Bye Bye Birdie yeah and you know she'd throw things at me some I could do some
I couldn't and the ones that I could kind of do she'd figure out she'd kind of teach me how on my
body to make them look uh better than they should I've always had pretty good body awareness. I just,
you know, I'm just not a trained dancer in that sense. So what attracted you to theater and acting
was really like making friends. Yeah, it was community. I was, I'm not kidding when I said
when I was little, I mean, I had a couple of friends, but I was a very lonely, kind of shy, very easily intimidated, sort of frightened kid.
I did not have a community. I didn't know quite where I fit in.
And then, you know, I sort of had some magic friends growing up peripherally, but we're all geeks. All young magicians are geeks.
And then moving didn't help. But all of a sudden, I go into the first day of rehearsals on this show,
you open your mouth, you can sing a little bit and you're not a complete screw up. And everybody
goes, oh, you're so good. Oh, you're so great. And now there's cast parties and now there's
after rehearsal parties and everybody's, it's instant rapport and instant community so that's what I
fell in love with the performing was icing on the cake I came to enjoy that but what first got me
was just this notion of I suddenly have a whole group of people around me then I'm accepted and
I fit that's nice and you found that that feeling of community never went away over never did and
it extends right into the Broadway community.
That's nice.
I always tell people back in New York,
you know, I did, you know,
a good 15 years of work in New York,
and then I came out
and have lived most of my life in L.A.
There is a Hollywood community.
There's no question.
It's very big.
It's very sprawling.
We do a lot of stuff ostensibly together,
but it's really, you know,
it's a benefit here and a thing there
and a thing there and a thing
there. But there is a different feeling to the Broadway community. When I go back to New York,
when I went back to do the first show back I did was Fish in the Dark, maybe. I hadn't been on
Broadway in God knows how many years, easily 20. And I was welcomed back like, hail fellow,
well met. You are one of the guys that knows what it is to get up eight times a week
and do this thing.
You're one of us.
And they just never let you go.
It's great.
I love that.
And speaking of the community and the spirit,
tell the Cheetah Rivera story because I think Gilbert will be fascinated by that.
And that was a turning point for you.
Well, it was a big...
A lesson, a life lesson.
Yeah, it was a role model because, you know,
suddenly I met Cheetah during my second Broadway show,
which was around the time when I thought,
oh, you know, I might actually squeak a career out of this thing.
I might be working at it.
The rink.
The rink.
And so the rink, at this point, Chita Rivera was a, you know,
one of the great divas of the American musical theater.
She's a star, there's no question.
And The Rink was created by her good friends, John Kander and Fred Ebb,
who wrote the score.
It really is a vehicle for her to win a Tony.
She had not yet won her Tony,
and they wanted to write a great role for her so she'd get it.
And it became a mother-daughter story and um sort of at the last minute the daughter was cast as Liza Minnelli and the
casting of Liza was actually as you can imagine bigger news than the casting of Cheetah so all
of a sudden Cheetah was sort of in the in the sort of uh shadow of Liza and always handled it so beautifully, gracefully supported Liza,
loved Liza. You never got a glimmer of any kind of discontent or envy or anything of the kind.
But the particular story that I really took note of is there was a policy during that show because
Liza was out several times during the course of her run. She got very ill during that show.
She eventually left our show to go to Betty Ford.
But when Liza missed a show,
the policy was that the audience could get a refund,
so they didn't have to stay.
And on this one particular show,
I guess there was about 100 people stayed for the show.
And the stage management went to Chita Rivera and said, you know, look,
you just don't have, we're not going to make you do a show under these circumstances. It's, it's insulting to you. The first thing Cheetah said, so there are six men in the show,
the show with the two ladies, a little girl and the six men. And Cheetah said, if, if we don't
do the show, will the guys lose one eighth of their salary? Cause you get paid. I know it's a weekly salary, but it's prorated per performance. So if you don't do the show, will the guys lose one-eighth of their salary? Because you get paid, I know it's a weekly salary,
but it's prorated per performance.
So if you don't do a performance, you miss that part of your salary.
She said, if we don't do the show,
will the guys lose their salary for the performance?
And they went, yeah, sure.
So she said, call the guys. I want to talk to them.
So we all go down to her dressing room,
and she is basically saying, I am here for you. I don't want
you guys to miss your paycheck. There are reasons to do this show. Liza's understudy had never been
on. She said it would be a great sort of full rehearsal for the understudy. She'd really get
performance situation. And we always had a great time doing that show. We were goofy on stage. We
had little inside games that we would play we we had
a great time performing that show and she said you know if we do it we'll go out we'll have a
fantastic time we'll play we'll we'll have fun with each other it'll be great and we're all going
yeah you know what screw it we'll make our money and we'll just treat it as a lark and we're not
gonna we're gonna screw around and she probably saw that energy in us. And she said, however, the hundred people that stayed, stayed.
You have to give them our show.
Do not cheat them.
And it was at that moment that I went, the ego that this woman has, the professionalism that she has,
it is such a slap in her face that an entire audience would walk out because her performance wasn't deemed
to be enough they had come for liza and they were being um just i have no other way to say it it's
a slap in the face she didn't if she took it as that she didn't portray it as that she accepted
it her first concern was about her fellow colleagues in the
show. And her second concern was for the audience. How about that? And I just went,
if I am lucky enough to have a career in this business, I want to hold those ethics. I want
that model of how you comport yourself. What's important. I want to try and hold to that. And she really, for many reasons, that being the penultimate, just really changed the way I thought about things.
It's a great showbiz story, and it's the opposite of Gilbert's work ethic.
If they said to you, if they came to you, Gil, and they said, there's only 20 people in the house, you don't have to do a show.
I'd say, do I still get paid?
He'd blow out the door
to that degree he'd be and but you you uh it's a great story you had great admiration for liza
manelli also i did liza was fantastic liza first of all i don't think i've ever come across anybody
in my life as generous a human being not just just with, you know, her wealth. I mean, she was always taking us to dinner and gifts and parties. But with her time, with her energy, she
sat with me on a number of occasions and talked about things that I was doing in the show and,
you know, offering me tips on phrasing songs and understanding the candor and ebb
sort of feel of a song and um she was incredibly bright
uh incredibly generous uh funny and oh so talented um i mean she you really understand why
there are stars and then there are lies and manelis she She vibrates on a different level, and she shared all of it with us beautifully.
She had issues, you know, of her own, mountains that she had to climb, and sometimes
they got the best of her. So it was a mixed bag for her. It was a fantastic experience
and education for the rest of us. It's quite astounding, the people,
the giants that you were working with so early in your career.
I was incredibly-
Right out of the box, Jerome Robbins and Hal Princeton, Liza Minnelli and Chita Rivera
and Stephen Sondheim, and then you win a Tony at 29.
It just doesn't happen.
No, it doesn't.
And it messed me up for a little while because I had always held the Tony as, well, that's
the end of your days.
You know, at 70, they'll give you a Tony just for hanging in there long enough, you know? And I thought there was nothing beyond that.
And to get it at 29 and to not have it change your life necessarily. I remember, you know,
going home with my wife the night that I won it and really sitting in it for a minute and going,
you know, I'm the same guy i'm gonna wake
up tomorrow the world is not going to be different i'm awfully glad to have this thing but it hasn't
it isn't a magic wand right it didn't transform me and that was another great life lesson but it
it did kind of kick me in the head for a while a tony for a show he turned down three times. Yeah. Amazing. We will return to Gilbert Gottfried's amazing colossal podcast,
but first a word from our sponsor.
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Another story that hit me was when you did the pilot episode of seinfeld what were the notes
that well it wasn't the notes uh it wasn't notes i think what you're referring to is the
when they tested the pilot the the official nbc test results were things like and and you know
memories are tricky things so these are things
i've i've heard and experienced once or twice that i've told the story a hundred times and
hopefully i'm not augmenting it but i remember things like the lead character is not believable
as a stand-up comic the the supporting characters are obnoxious and unlikable. That I actually think they nailed right on the head.
And then they had categories of like too hip, too urban, too Jewish.
And I remember saying to Jerry, is there a kike meter somewhere?
Eight is acceptable, nine we're over the, you know, as a Jew, I'm offended too Jew-y.
What does that mean?
Is that part of why George became Italian?
I have no idea.
First of all, God bless you for saying George is Italian.
I don't know the answer to that.
I don't know.
He's got a father named Frank Costanza.
Right.
And everybody in that family is being played by a Jew.
That's fascinating.
We laugh about that.
What always strikes me
about Seinfeld is
it really is. The characters
are the most Jewish
characters you could find.
I mean, the Costanzas
were the biggest bunch of Jews
you'd ever find, but
they were somehow Italian.
Right.
But Italian with no religious... No. No crucifix on the wall, no Madonna.
I mean, you know, it was so ambiguous.
No Jew and no Italian would ever conduct themselves like this.
And Julia Louis-Dreyfus is supposed to be a total wasp somehow.
Yeah.
With the biggest head of Jew hair
you've ever seen in your life.
I mean...
You know, it's funny, Jason.
I've heard you talk about how,
you know, how fortunate you guys were,
how you can't grow a show today
the way that show was allowed to find its way.
And, you know, heroes like Rick Ludwin,
who passed away last year,
who was obviously an angel for the show.
People can read about
that uh it's it's amazing you you look back on it it's also i've heard you talk about you know
larry's bravery that larry was always willing to walk away more than willing he walked away
that he walked away several times that it that it was a lesson in letting letting
creators create absolutely but it's a lesson that it seems has not uh has not gone very far
that network television at the very least has not caught on to yeah it's still uh from my
understanding i haven't done a network show in a while but yeah it's it's creativity by committee
which doesn't really work and And Larry and Jerry proved it.
And Larry proved it again with Curb.
It is, you hire people that you believe in.
They have a vision and you support the vision.
If it works, great.
If it doesn't, you say, hey, nice try.
But you don't try and alter their vision to make it what the numbers tell you it wants.
I always talk about things like audience testing.
I think, I come from the theater, so we always do preview performances, you know, of shows.
The audience collectively and spontaneously is brilliant. If you just listen and pay attention,
they'll tell you. I'm sure Gilbert is a comic, you know. They'll tell you when something is
working and not working, but don't ask them why it's not working because they don't have that information they'll give it to you but they don't
have it you uh you have to figure out i intended this to have a result it's not having the result
what am i going to do differently all they do is hold the mirror up for you in a brilliant way but
they are not they are not um collaborators and and that's the
mistake that i think the suits make yeah it it's kind of it reminds me of like when i was on
saturday night and the reviewers would attack the show which was fine but they never knew why
like they were saying stuff like well we don't know who these people are
and it's like nobody knew belushi or akroyd of course of course of course are you familiar with
a project that the uh in which gilbert worked with larry before you did jason
are you not sure are you familiar with the famous g Gottfried, Larry David collaboration called Norman's Corner?
I am ashamed to say I am not.
Okay.
Well, fit yourself in with the majority.
They once were doing what was called a backdoor pilot.
I think it was a Cinemax comedy experiment back when they did those.
And I was a guy who worked
in New Stand and
Larry David wrote it
and then
and it was not a hit
Although Arnold Stang was in it.
Yes, I asked for Arnold Stang
and then years
later
when they were pitching Seinfeld as a series, the head of the network, one of the heads of the network said, who's going to be writing this show?
And they said, Larry David.
And he said, isn't he that guy that wrote that piece of shit for Gilbert Gottfried?
That's our boy.
So the show I did was so bad, it almost kept Seinfeld off the air.
Well, I tell you.
And nobody would have been less surprised than Larry David.
I think Larry must wake up every day and go,
what the hell happened?
How did this happen
well he has that great line that he went from a poor schmuck to a rich prick yeah exactly exactly
i also love the example too i didn't even know this that that uh until i saw an interview with
you that the episode where uh kramer just is not kramer where George just goes back to work just goes just goes back to the job
and hopes that nobody knows oh I was based on Larry quitting SNL I absolutely yeah the funny
thing is of my my conversations with Larry David which were usually horror stories about trying to get laid but so many times i'd watch a seinfeld episode and go oh i heard
that story oh yeah no so many they came out of his notebook absolutely tell us about the legendary
larry david notebook uh notebooks i mean he's got them going back I don't know how long um yeah Larry Larry keeps a daily
journal of names that he hears that he goes oh that's a good name I'm going to use that or
you know the tiniest little hint of a situation I he'll hear overhear a bit of conversation about I
couldn't go to the movie I had to walk the dog and he'll go oh a dog in a movie a dog you know
he just notes these things um passing thoughts that he has about, should I have said this
or should I have done that? And he writes them all down. And so when it came to episodes,
what, you know, initially the episodes came out of routines that Jerry had established.
He was using his material, his source material for the show. But eventually Jerry was being
forced to do stand-up
segments in the show that A, he didn't always write and B, he was not comfortable delivering
these, you know, these things. He likes, if you know Jerry, he likes to hone his material. So it
required different source material all of a sudden. And that's when I think they started going to Larry
and his notebooks. And there was just so many different things. And it also, I think, became the character of the show,
of these three and four stories floating through one episode
and somehow dovetailing at the end.
Yeah, it was brilliant.
I remembered one Larry David horror story.
He got a date with some girl, so that was already unbelievable.
And he's going to meet her in central park and they're right it's he's there right outside tavern in the green and he she hasn't
shown up yet so he sits down in central park and he sits on a pile of shit. Oh, Jesus. And then he went into Tavern on the Green,
and I think he took his pants off in the men's room
to try to clean it,
and, like, security was telling him to leave.
To get out.
He's a homeless person, yeah.
He's got Larry David stories you don't even know.
Oh, my God.
I'm amazed we haven't seen them.
I think one of the things that Gilbert and I are amused by on Seinfeld 2
is the weird Abbott and Costello motifs.
Yes.
I know.
The name of character, Sidney Fields.
Yeah.
Right.
And your friend Wayne Knight's character, Newman,
is such a strange homage.
He's Stinky Joe.
He's Stinky Joe and on one episode
we're so fond of that
Seinfeld even says to
you he says
boys boys
absolutely
Jerry has
Jerry had a couple of
not only Abinag Estella there were always things
that he would do
Stooges too
Stooges absolutely
but he
he
I stole a phrase from Jerry
I stole many things from Jerry
but I stole a phrase
that he would use all the time
that he stole
and I didn't realize
it was Tom Snyder
but it's that
alright sir
alright sir
after anything
that makes no sense
you just go alright all right, sir.
We jump around a couple of more things on Seinfeld, Jason.
And we could ask you about a lot of those wonderful actors like Len Lesser and Barney Martin.
I mean, great, great showbiz faces, great showbiz veterans.
But we have to ask you about Jerry Stiller because you were also the roast master at his Comedy Central roast.
Tell us something about Jerry, who we adore.
Well, the first thing I'll tell you is you have every right to adore him.
He, well, going from when I heard he was coming.
So Stiller is the third guy to play my father in the show.
Most people don't know that because before we ended shooting,
we went back and shot every episode, scene from every episode that he wasn't in,
where there was a Frank Costanza, and we put him in so that in syndication, it's always him.
But he was the number three guy.
When I heard he was coming, my head fell off because I grew up with Stiller and Mira on The Ed Sullivan Show.
I had seen them do Neil Simon plays off-Broadway.
I had watched Jerry Stiller in Hurley Burley on Broadway.
I knew him as a classical actor.
I knew him as a comedian.
So I was thrilled.
And when he stepped on the stage, I think Stiller came into our world at a time when his world had really started to go away.
You know, Stiller and Mira were not a thing anymore.
And I think the jobs were coming few and far between.
And all of a sudden he gets invited to this hit show where he thinks he's beholden to everybody.
And I'm going, we are so lucky to have you.
Oh, my God, I'm so excited.
How sweet.
He and I bonded very, very early and are still close to this day he is
so sweet and so kind and so unassuming he is he's just so grateful to be to have the life he's had
to work with the people that he's worked with um and he's genius and he doesn't realize that he's
genius he he he i i think he would tell you that that he is an underwhelming actor when in fact he is really a unique, talented and intelligent actor. And it could be that I kept reflecting that back to him all the time. How much joy I had being with him.
being with him you know there's there's if you look at the outtakes i think they're on youtube there's one where you can see how much a i adore him and b i can't survive him because
for some reason uh frank has had to move in with george and we do the end of the show in bed
together we're sharing a bed and he's eating a bowl of kasha varnicus and i and i just have to
sit and watch him eat this thing for like a minute
and then at the very end with me looking at him
like I want to kill him and kill myself
he takes a spoonful and offers it to me
and goes, gosh
I never got through a take
they had to cobble together
I couldn't do it
his face, his attitude, everything
it was just so great
and my favorite moment between him and me and Ben, his son,
is when Stella Ramirez got their star on the Walk of Fame.
You know, Jerry said, would you be so gracious as to be one of the speakers?
You can have one or two speakers.
Ben was not one of them, but Ben is standing right there.
And in front of the whole crowd, I go, you know, you're his actual son.
You're allowed to usurp me here if you like but um he's just great i i i hear from him a couple of times a year um you know he's he's
uh things have been tough for him since ann passed away but he uh he's got wonderful people taking
care of him and i think he is still happy and i i go to new york in april so i'm i'm hoping to catch him we watch him in anything
oh he's wonderful wonderful the best and the best you said in some interview a lot of the
frank costanza character was because he'd mess up his lines and mispronounce words. Yeah.
Sometimes he'd mispronounce, but it was more about he doubted his memory.
He always had it.
He always had it.
He knew his lines.
But he was so stressed over it that they would come to him in like two and three word fits.
And he was so frustrated that he couldn't get it all in one shot.
He wanted to be able to say,
are you telling me there's no vacancies at Del Boca Vista?
That's what he wanted to do.
But it would come to him in little things.
And the rage of Frank Costanza was the rage at himself.
So he goes, are you telling me there's no vacancies?
It's building rage because he's just so upset with himself.
It's fantastic.
I have to say, as wonderful as the ensemble of four is,
the scenes with you and Estelle and Jerry, the three of you,
just gold.
We had the best bench. The best bench in show business.
There's never been better.
And you said somewhere that you were always afraid.
You had so much fun doing that show that you were afraid they'd just find out they're paying you to have fun.
Yeah.
It's a line I use all the time.
I say, you know, we would go to work.
We would laugh our asses off for anywhere from five to eight hours, 10 hours. I do that four or five days a week, go home.
And at the end of the week, they would pay me. And I went, this is, they're going to catch on
sooner or later that A, we're overpaid and B, we'd probably do it for a lot less. It was,
it was even when things were, you know, potentially when there was grist in the oyster offstage
during, you know, times when we would be negotiating
or renegotiating, none of that ever came on stage.
When we all got onto that set
and we started playing together,
it was a love fest and a laugh fest every single day.
And it was just, for nine years,
how do you do that?
It was amazing amazing a show that
continues to make millions of people happy yeah this must feel important it's special to you that
you got to be part of that tell that wonderful story about the marines approaching you in the
restaurant oh yeah so one of the unanticipated things about simon because you i think we always
think of it as our stupid little comedy show you know
we don't we don't over inflate its importance in in the world but i meet people or i get letters
from people literally every week who say it was more than that for me i was going through some
really dark stuff either they were sick and they were being treated or they uh had lost someone
dear to them or um and they would talk about how the had lost someone dear to them.
And they would talk about how the show gave them back their laughter.
And I've heard this from a number of people in the military, but on this one occasion that you're talking about,
there's a hotel in San Francisco called the Marines Memorial Hotel.
And I believe any active service member can stay there for free.
So it's frequented by a lot of military people.
I was having dinner at the rooftop restaurant in that building.
And my back was sort of to the room.
And suddenly, towards the end of the dinner, I feel a presence behind me.
And I turn around.
And there's about 50 Marines in uniform.
And they've been drinking for a while. So it's a little bit sloppy, but the designated speaker comes forward
and he says something about, Mr. Algenor, I don't mean to interrupt your dinner, sir. I just want
to say, you know, I'm making up names. I'm Corporal Johnson. This is the 203rd platoon of the U.S.
Johnson. This is the 203rd platoon of the U.S. Marine Corps. We all served an 18-month deployment in the theater in Iraq. And in about three months, we're going to be heading out to Afghanistan. And
we really enjoy serving together. But what we wanted to say to you, sir, is that, you know,
when we're out operating in the theater, you know, we see things and we do things,
we're engaged in things that are really hard, really hard, that can strip away your sense of humanity, your sense of self.
And we would come back from those deployments, we'd get back in our barracks and we had the DVDs of your show, sir.
And we would throw them on and as a group we would sit and watch three or four episodes and slowly we'd begin to laugh together again and drink together again.
And our humanity would come back to us and we were able to sleep that night and drink together again and our humanity would come back
to us and we were able to sleep that night and go out and try and do god's work the next day
so we just want you to know sir that we think of you as the 51st member of this platoon
and with that he yells out simplify and they all snap to attention and snap out a salute to me and
i'm like man and i'm you could mop me off the floor. What a story. I just was blown away by the fact of that story,
but that these guys would come over and share that.
But that's the kind of reaction I've had,
and I'm sure all of us have had, around the world
from people that you just never expected from.
That's great.
It is an amazing thing because i've had i've experienced that too where people come over to me and break down crying
about how they used to watch it with their parents where they see me on tv with their parents or with
a family other family members who died.
You don't realize.
No.
That you touched me. And Gilbert, in your case, and I talk about this a lot,
and I only know about it really because we were both in the Aristocrats together,
but what you did at the Hefner Roast right after 9-11,
where that room was dying, there was no laughter to be had,
and you launched into the aristocrats joke and took it as far as any human being can possibly take and it was so
brave and it was so only someone who we know and i don't want to undercut the the whole comedic image that you have but only someone
that we know is as humane and loving as you are could have gotten away with that bit at that time
but man you you turned that room around i mean honestly it was the first step of a way back from
something that many people who love new y York thought there was no way back from.
And I always credit you with that.
I think that was an amazingly magical moment.
How about that, Gil?
Wow.
Thank you, Jason.
My pleasure, sir.
Launched a feature film.
And I liked your version of the aristocrats.
And your friend Peter Tilden was absolutely no help to you, by the way.
to you, by the way.
My favorite moment in my story is where
all the male members of the family
are lying on top of each other with
penises inserted in anuses
and then spinning in different directions
while orgasming like the Bellagio
Fountains. I thought that was a nice...
It was nice what you did with it.
Do you
want to talk about doing Duckman?
Do you have any memory of this man being on Duckman?
A beloved show.
Of Gilbert and Duckman.
Now, here's the problem.
We didn't record together, I'm sure.
No.
He was art to self.
I forget.
Yeah.
I was art to self.
I'm sure I saw the episode.
Uh-huh.
Sure.
And even though I only had one line of a song, I remember the you're ahead of me what was this okay i finally
made it my dreams can come true i porno cause it's just what i'm
aching to do cause i finally you finally we finally made it
bravo my friend does that ring any bells, Jason? It actually does
It actually does
Who was Art DeSalvo?
I'm trying to remember
He was like a sleazy agent
Okay
As opposed to honest agents
Yeah
Who are constantly telling the story
A departure from the normal depiction of an agent
A science fiction
What a smart, subversive show that was, Jason
Oh, it was heaven
Everybody was on that show.
I mean, everyone.
Yeah.
And amazingly, it just happened before the big wave of South Park
and those kind of deviously subversive shows in animation.
So it's a little bit of a lost gem.
We've been trying to find a market to reboot it.
I mean, everybody would love to do that again i think it would work just as well now i i remember when i
was doing it the character had to be violently throwing up and we spent like an hour they they
had a plastic bag for me to make throw-up sounds.
And then they said, well, fill up your mouth with water and make it more gurgling.
And I was spending like over an hour going.
It was so much fun.
You know, you're talking about an actor committing.
They sell the joys of it.
An actor committing every episode.
You sounded like you were putting your heart and your spleen into every one of those reads.
Oh, those sessions used to kill me.
I can imagine.
I'd come out and go, I hope I can speak tomorrow.
Because they were brutal.
I can imagine.
And another thing we sort of did together, but never did together.
Oh, Jafar.
No, yes.
That's right.
Return of Jafar. Return, Jafar. No, yes. That's right. Return of Jafar, yeah.
Return of Jafar.
Absolutely.
And the other one is I was in the first episode
of The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel.
Oh, that's right.
I think you're the first person on camera.
They kept us far apart.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Great show.
God, that show is so much fun to do.
I just want to work in quick a couple of questions from listeners, Jason, if I can.
We do this thing called Grill the Guest.
And this is about Duckman.
Jacob Reed said, I do believe there was an instance, because you talk about not recording
with the other actors.
I do believe there was an instance when you were able to record alongside Tim Curry, Nancy
Travis, your co-star, and Judith Light in an episode.
Is that the thing where you were doing the Who's Afraid of Junior Wolf?
Absolutely.
Kind of a thing?
And he wants to know what it was like.
We did it like a radio play.
Yeah.
It was great.
It took a very long time
for the very reason that they don't have people record together.
It's very rare that you nail what they want on the first read.
So it's easy when you're alone to go back
and do a piece
over and over and over,
do a line over and over and over.
When you're reading together
like a radio play,
you're kind of married
to the group performance.
So it took a while.
We did it in little chunks,
but it was great.
So much better to do it that way
because you're living off
the other voices.
We will return to
Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast after this. that way because you're living off the other voices we will return to gilbert godfrey's
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We're going to give you your choice here.
Do you want to talk about working with the great Robert Duvall?
Yeah.
Working with the great, but you found him quiet and intense, Robert De Niro.
Uh-huh.
Or something we like to talk about on this show, which is working with a monkey.
Dealer's choice.
What do you like?
I'll tell you, they were not dissimilar.
They were all...
No, I'm kidding.
That's a joke.
Well, Dunstan, I mean, it's fascinating to watch.
We've talked to people on this show who've worked with chimps.
Yes.
And with monkeys, and it's something that we remain fascinated by.
Yeah.
Dunstan was neither of those by the way.
An orangutan. And an orangutan is an
ape, not a monkey.
And I couldn't tell you the real difference between them but they
kept making a big distinction.
Apes don't
have tails. There you go.
That's exactly right.
He was an extraordinary
creature. I mean
it's one of the thrills of my life that I actually got to have a relationship
and an experience with an animal like that because, you know,
unless you're a zoologist or you work with animals, you would never have that.
And this creature was extraordinary.
If I'm remembering correctly, the trainers would say,
we really didn't have to teach him much.
We kind of talked to him and we demonstrate stuff and then he kind of does it.
And he, unlike most movie animals, will always be looking at their trainer.
So if the shot is over your shoulder, the camera would tell the story that the animal is looking at the actor.
the camera would tell the story that the that the animal is looking at the actor the animal is always looking at their trainer waiting for the signal waiting to be told what to do and then
late waiting for its reward this orangutan would deal with me and he would deal with eric lloyd
who played the little boy in the movie um it was as if he was engaging with us it is a creature
that without effort could have squashed any of us like a bug he has 20 to 30
times the strength of a man and he was so gentle and so sweet and and there were games that he and
i would play that when i saw him we had wrapped the film and now five months later we're doing
publicity and the minute he saw me he signals for those games again. I mean, it's like I lived in his memory.
And amazingly, I just got back from Australia.
I was doing a comedy tour
and I was doing a meet and greet
and a woman came up to me and she said,
I worked with, the animal's name was Sammy.
Sammy, yeah.
He said, I worked with Sammy in the wild animal park
that he went to to retire
and that he had a wonderful life,
but he actually died very young.
He was six years old when we did the film and he died around 12 years old,
which is unusual because orangutans can live to be in their eighties.
So it was a short life,
but he apparently he got some sort of a cancer or something and didn't make it.
But,
but he had a nice retirement.
He was an amazing creature.
That's a lovely story.
I mean,
we had some actors on the show who didn't have –
Dick Miller was bitten by a chimp.
Yes.
This is an ape, obviously, so it's a different situation.
And I had a part in Funky Monkey.
Yeah.
How much did you interact?
Was that an orangutan or it was a chimpanzee?
I think it was a chimp.
And chimps are – I mean, this it was a chimpanzee? I think it was a chimp. And chimps are...
I mean, this one was a nice chimp.
But there have been horror stories about chimps.
Oh, please.
They go for the groin.
They go for the fingers, the lips.
I like all of those things.
I like them where they are.
Yeah, I've always heard...
They can be erratic.
They specify...
One time there was a woman ripped to shreds by chimps.
Yes.
And then one man.
Sure, many cases.
One man, they said, you know, they bit off his fingers and mutilated his genitals.
Yes.
So they go, they're vicious creatures.
So this could have happened to you.
Strangely, that's what I did in the gun attack, but I didn't want to talk about it.
I was going to say the director, Ken Kwapis, was it?
Yes.
Got a performance out of the orangutan.
I mean, it's very, he's-
It wasn't hard to do.
Yeah.
This animal was just an extraordinary.
Yeah, really sweet.
My favorite moment is when he's
in the hotel room and he finds planet of the apes while he's uh he's channel surfing and finds
charlton heston kissing uh kim hunter i think it is yeah uh talk to about uh rocky and bullwinkle
which is which you looked like you were having the time of your life making we were having fun
i know they put you in a fat suit and shaved your eyebrows, which couldn't have been fun.
Well, that's true.
It was great fun to do.
I mean, I was basically teamed up with Renee Russo the whole time, who I adore.
She is so much fun.
For reasons I will never understand, she came to me right after we did the first reading of the script,
and she said i'm not
funny you just tell me what to do and i'll do it and i went i guarantee you after having just heard
you read this thing you are brilliant oh um and we had a great time together we kept screwing each
other up we both had to do um potsilvanian dialect lessons to sound exactly like the cartoons did. But the crazy thing is, is that the accent for Natasha and Boris in the cartoon, they
never collaborated.
So they're doing different things.
They're making different sounds.
And if I listened to her, I would do the wrong thing.
And if she listened to me, she would do the wrong thing.
So we had to keep retreating to our separate corners to get, you know, re-advised on the
dialect.
our separate corners to get you know re-advised on the uh on the dialect and then De Niro was just you know friends of mine would would keep saying you're in a De Niro movie and I'd go yeah kinda
a very different kind of De Niro movie Bob was which he also produced by the way he did and i and he was great i i had to learn
i so clearly i'm intimidated by everybody but i was very intimidated by him i didn't know
what kind of a set he liked to be on so renee and i immediately we're wackadoos we're just
goofing around all the time but when bob was on the set we thought well should we tamp it down or do we include him? Do we not include him? How do you know?
I don't know what to do here. And I don't know where it came from. After about 10 days of being
intimidated, we're we're setting up for a shot. And one of the camera guys says, hey, Bob, would
you mind taking a step to your left? And I don't know where this came from.
I started doing peshy.
And I went, wait a minute.
Hold on.
Bobby, don't move.
Who the fuck are you to tell this man to move?
Who the fuck are you?
Move your fucking camera over there, you piece of shit.
And I start going full peshy.
And Bob is laughing.
And I go, okay, I know the way in.
I start busting.
So you play with him.
And he just had a great time.
And again, another guy that you go, is he going to be gracious?
Constantly, come into the trailer, have a drink.
He's called me to do a couple other things, projects that actually did not happen,
but he would call me and fly me in to do a reading.
He's just been really lovely.
You could never tell, but it sure looks,
watching the movie, especially the dance scene,
it sure looks like he's having fun.
I think he was having fun.
I think, you know, it's so funny,
but I think Bob looks to have fun.
I think he takes his work seriously,
but I think he finds it all really fun to do.
And when you look at the full breadth of his work, you know, yeah, sure,
half the time he's strangling people or beating the shit out of them.
But when he's not, he's playing comedians.
Yeah, he turned out to be a good comedian.
I mean, if you look at performances like Midnight Run comes to mind.
We had a funny moment.
You know, this was back when I was intimidated by him.
comes to mind.
We had a funny moment,
you know,
this was back when I was intimidated by him.
So, you know,
he has a reputation
for liking to ad-lib
and be kind of
loosey-goosey in takes.
And initially,
in a couple of the scenes,
he was doing some of that
and I had nothing on this.
We had a moment
side by side
and I said,
Bob, you know,
I know you like to play with improv in I said, Bob, I, you know, I know you, uh, you, you like to play with
improv in your films, in your work. Um, and you get some great results. Do you, do you find that
that's, um, do you find that that's useful in comedy films as well? Comedy work. And what do
you mean? I said, well, you know, some writers, there's a music to how they write. So if you,
if you don't say a Neil Simon line, the way he wrote it, it won write so if you if you don't say a neil simon line the way
he wrote it it won't quite work if you don't say a woody allen line the way he wrote it it won't
won't quite work and he looked at me and he and he said uh well i'm certainly not going to debate
comedy with you and i didn't know did he just compliment me wow or ask me to go fuck myself i just i couldn't i i couldn't read it and so i i
crawled under a shelf for a little bit until i realized he was being very complimentary that's
nice of course he had that bad neil simon experience where he was he did it was a goodbye
yes yeah yeah yeah absolutely yeah because he couldn't get the panties off the shower yeah
we uh this is this is some good trivia, Gil.
We have now had two live-action actors who played Boris Badenoff on the show,
because Dave Thomas was here.
Oh, sure.
So there you go.
Yeah.
More trivia for you, Jason.
What do you have in common with Murray Hamilton from Jaws fame and Robert Redford?
What do I have in common with Murray Hamilton and Robert Redford?
Yes.
It's not a birth date.
No.
It has to do with an on-screen performance.
An on-screen performance.
Gilbert, do you know?
Murray Hamilton.
You certainly know Murray Hamilton.
Yeah.
Murray Hamilton and Robert Redford.
Do you know, Gil?
All three of you played death on The Twilight Zone.
Oh, my God, yes!
Oh, I knew that about...
Yes!
Yeah, I knew that about...
Not Murray.
Redford.
Yeah, Redford.
Murray's the one with Ed Wynn.
The one with Ed Wynn is great.
Yeah, and Redford was really young when he did it.
He plays a cop
who's shot in an alleyway
outside a woman's home
she has an apartment
she's an old woman
and she's so afraid of death
she's a shut in
she never opens her door
that's right
and she sees this young cop
get shot
and out of humanity
she allows him
to come inside
and then eventually
he reveals himself
as death
Mildred Dunnick
I think was the actress
yeah he says you just have to take my hand.
Just hold my hand.
And it's a beautiful episode.
And Gilbert and I both watched your Twilight Zone episode.
Yes.
Very good performance.
It's fun.
Yeah, it was a fun one.
Thank you.
Disturbing.
Disturbing.
Were you a fan of the original show?
We had Anne Serling here.
Loved it.
Yeah, loved it.
I remember a bunch of the original ones that kind of freaked of freaked me out and i remember with the murray hamilton one he says to edwin he says well we can
let you live if there's some important thing in your life that you haven't done yet unfinished
business and edwin says well I never rode in a helicopter.
Who else is doing Ed Wynn in this day and age, Jason?
Right?
I'll tell you.
I asked you. Court at the market on that.
Hey, Dan.
Bye, guys.
You just lost the video.
Hang on, Jason.
We're trying to get your video back.
I don't look any better, I promise.
Yeah, we're Twilight Zone fans.
Do you remember the one, the first one I ever saw was a really strange one.
It was Sebastian Cabot and Larry Blythe.
Oh, yeah, sure.
Yeah.
Where he plays the little gangster who goes to heaven and everything is too easy.
What is the name of that one?
It goes, I want to go to the other place.
And Sebastian Cabot goes, this is the other place!
Yeah, because that's where he
wins every bet
immediately,
and he doesn't like it.
Right, he wins bets, and he robs banks,
and it's too easy, he never gets caught. Yeah, the whole
shebang. Okay, I have something here from
Rupert Holmes.
You played a character named
Alan Ballinger. Yes. Who had a romance with a series, this was Rupert Holmes. You played a character named Alan Ballinger.
Yes. Who had a
romance with a series, this was a Rupert
series, Remember When. Remember When.
Yeah. He had a romance with a
series diva, Hilary Booth, whose name
was inspired by Hilary Brooke.
There we go, we're back to Abbott and Costello.
And he sent me a picture of you.
You probably can't see this.
Oh, but I remember the look.
With your widow's feet.
It's very Max Maven.
Yeah, very Max Maven.
Very much so.
Yeah.
Rupert sends love.
He's done this show a bunch of times.
Oh, that's so sweet.
I remembered another thing you said,
that you were once talking about Michael Richards,
that he was once confused about how to play Kramer.
Oh, no, no, no. If this is the story that I think it is, not that he was confused.
I think one of the secrets of Michael's success in that role is, and you'd have to check in with
Larry or Jerry about this, but in my memory the the intention
on Kramer was that he was going to be very much a secondary character you know that he was the the
the nutty neighbor across the hall and that he wouldn't play that much into storylines
and the concept was always that he's the dumbest guy in the room he's just a dummy but michael once said to me um what i did that i don't think they
expected was i play him as the smartest guy in the room and it sounds like something that would be
only perceived as a subtle shift but it actually was such a magnificent way of doing that guy that I believe Michael showed the writers how to write that
character. I feel like, certainly I, maybe Julia, I think Julia and I learned who George and Elaine
were from the writing. The writing would show up every week. It would add another piece to the
puzzle and we'd go, oh, okay, let's incorporate that. But I think with Michael's case, it went
the other way. I think Michael would do things that no one expected, no one anticipated, and in Larry's case, that no one appreciated for a while. And then they went, oh, you know what? Let's get on his bandwagon because he sort of reinvented that role.
Yeah, I mean, everybody.
Well, you know, and they're all composites, right, of people that Larry knew.
I mean, the lane is loosely based on several people, including Carol Leifer.
That's what I've heard.
And that Kramer's kind of Kenny Kramer. Kind of Kenny Kramer, but other people.
I love the moment, and people are always asking you to pick a favorite episode, and you don't.
But you do have that moment moment which is the pendant publishing scene
yeah with it with with the cleaning woman which which was a seminal moment for you why
because i started to understand um the one of the big characteristics of george was his ability to dodge his own consequences. That's true.
And I found it creative and funny and charming.
And I had nothing to do with this other than appreciate the writing.
But the moment that we're talking about is George has been having sex
with the cleaning woman in his office at Pendant Publishing,
and he's been caught.
And now he's in front of the boss
who boldly and baldly says George it's come to my understanding that you've been having sex on the
desk in your office with the cleaning woman now what do you write if you're Larry David or Jerry
Seinfeld what do you write as a response no I didn't who said that um you know I'm the victim
I'm the victim that It could have been.
There's a number of things you could go to.
But what they wrote was a long pause of consideration.
And then George going, was that wrong?
Should I not have done that?
Because I got to tell you, I've worked in a lot of offices and that kind of thing goes on all the time.
And that kind of thing goes on all the time.
It's just this whole, this such a unique way of deflecting back, you know, the ignorance of I thought that was acceptable behavior.
I just thought it was so brilliant.
It is.
It could key me into George's way of thinking.
And to that extent, I could at least be a fraction more helpful when scripts would come and I'd go, well, maybe it's this or maybe it's this, you know.
And every now and then I'd have a good idea, but only because they showed me how he thinks.
Did you like playing the physical comedy as well?
I'm thinking of you running out of the men's room in the Vandelay, trying to put your pants at your ankles.
I mean, a lot of pratfalls.
And you and Kramer sort of in certain episodes become like a mutton jeff team yeah i mean michael is listen michael's ability to simply move his body yeah i mean
there's a light years beyond what i can do but i've always loved the comedy yeah i i've always
loved um you know the the pants the fall was my idea that was something that came during rehearsals
it's great oh my god if his pants are down that would be great i i have to and i have a habit of
doing this and bringing the room to a dead halt at times but i have to ask you this if we'll even
use it on this show and that is you there was an actor who used to play your boss on this show don o'hagan i think
was his name uh he was like a husky guy and it was like will george and his boss when he worked
for the yankees yeah no no no no no no yeah. No, no, no. Yeah, it was like a... If this is the guy
that I think you're talking about,
is this the actor
who eventually committed suicide?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh, no, you're talking about...
You're talking about the guy
who was found dead recently?
No, no.
No, no, no.
This happened about
three or four years ago.
He was in that episode
where George remembers they took his clothes and threw it into the ocean.
And he used to talk like that.
He would play cops and army sergeants in movies.
Yeah.
Was his name, I thought it was something like Daniel Von Vargen or something like that.
Something like that, yeah.
Kruger?
They're telling us here it was Kruger.
Yeah, Kruger.
He played Mr. Kruger.
That's right.
And it was Kruger Industrial Smoothing was the company.
And the bit was that Kruger was a boss who was, he had no idea what the company did.
He had no idea.
It was one of those things where you couldn't screw up because there were no rules.
There was no standard of behavior or performance.
I think Daniel did, he probably did about five or six of our episodes.
Yeah.
I didn't get to know him very well.
Very sweet guy.
And I hadn't seen him for, God, I mean, since the show had wrapped.
And it was years later that he took his life.
And I, yeah, you just, I know, I know.
You know, it's kind of amazing if you do a show as long as we did
with the numbers of people that we intersected with.
The sad truth is I have, with the exception of the careers
that really went on to be kind of big careers
that either launched or were enhanced by our show.
I probably couldn't name most of the wonderful actors that were on our show. And I often wonder,
you know, when I do bump into people who did a single episode and they say things like,
I was the close talker. I was the close talker. And I go, well, how has that been for you? And
they go, it's, I can make a living off of it. Oh, that's great. You know, people go,
oh my God,
you're the close dog.
We want the close dog.
So I know a lot of good things have happened for people,
but you know,
you do wonder about what,
what is a life like that when you,
you have a great moment on something that's as big as,
and,
and well,
people like O'Hurley and Larry Thomas,
I mean,
they're still,
and,
and,
and Rennie Santoni,
I mean,
who had a career,
a big career before.
I mean,
they're still getting recognized all the time.
You bet.
You bet.
Yeah.
Thanks for bringing the show to a halt, Gil.
Yes, yes.
I always do that.
Yeah, nice.
I always do that.
Jason, a couple of quick ones.
We'll let you get out of here.
Steven Antonuccio said, you just turned 60, Jason.
What would a 60-year-old George Costanza be doing if the series were still on?
Would he be married?
Would he be employed by the Yankees? Would he
have ever matured and evolved?
Well, I can't
believe he would mature and evolve
and that's one of the reasons why I think
there's no Seinfeld reboot because
we'd be the same assholes we were
30 years ago.
Much less charming on a 60 year old.
There were two
I mean the two suggested ideas were kind of great.
One was that George is the only one who continually screwed up in jail
when he's still in there for, you know, offenses that were added to his sentence upon being jailed.
And that I'm, you know, somebody's bitch, no doubt, and running cigarettes back and forth.
The other one that Larry suggested was that George got out and created an app called the iToilet,
which would tell you where the best and cleanest men's room was anywhere around you,
and that he had made millions but invested it all with Bernie Madoff and so was destitute again.
Good answer.
That sounds like the right road.
I heard Jerry and Larry both said with the show they wanted no lessons ever learned.
No hugging.
Right.
No hugging, no learning.
No learning.
That was the motto over the writer room door.
No hugging, no learning.
Oh, and tell us your real name.
My real name?
J-A-Y Scott Greenspan.
And you said the other kids would pick on you with your name.
Well, they picked on me for many things, but Greenspan was easy fodder.
It was just green fill in the blank.
You know, green puke, green, you know, whatever it was.
And I joined my first union when I was 14, my first actor's union.
And so my name is Jay, but my mother would always call me Jason for some
reason so I thought if I ever took a stage name it would be Jason Scott my first name and my the
name my mother calls me and and my middle name and I went to AFTRA and they said would you like
a stage name and I said yes please Jason Scott and they went nope we got 15 of them in every
imaginable spelling and you cannot have it And I had never thought of anything else.
So literally in that moment going, well, I don't want Greenspan as my stage name.
And I kind of thought, well, gee, I wonder if my dad feels bad that I keep saying that.
And his first name was Alex.
So I went, how about Jason Alexander?
And they went, yep.
And that was how quick it was.
It was in the spur of that moment, not getting Jason Scott.
Love that.
And you say there is an actor named Jason Alexander.
There are several, but the one that is most notable is Jane Alexander's son,
who, because I had gotten the name, worked under the name Jace, J-A-C-E Alexander.
Right.
And was an actor and director for a while.
Didn't Britney Spears marry Jason Alexander?
That was another Jason Alexander.
Oh, I remember!
That's right!
That's right.
For like 48 hours.
Yeah.
That's great!
I came home, yeah, I who do not follow pop culture came home one day, you know, and my
phone machine had a hundred messages about, congratulations, Britney Spears!
I'm being, how is everybody in on this punk thing that they're doing?
Yeah, so that was a shock.
Quickly, we had Marsha Mason here a couple of weeks ago, Jason.
We talked all about Neil Simon, who you worked with and worked for.
And you did The Odd Couple.
Do I have this right?
You did The Odd Couple.
You did a reading with Marty Short in L.A.
But did you do it as a kid?
I did do it as a kid.
Did you play Oscar Madison in high school?
I did.
I did.
We absolutely love that.
Yeah.
I was Oscar Madison.
David Barron, my friend David Barron, was Felix.
Yeah.
Never imagining that one day you would grow up
and work with the director of the Odd Couple movie,
The Great Gene Sacks.
Absolutely. It was remarkable.
And then Marty and I did do a benefit performance of that.
I had a great time with Neil on Broadway Bound, loved him.
And then I had such a bittersweet moment with him just about a year before he passed away
where I was directing a production of Broadway Bound in Los Angeles.
And I thought it was really quite good. I really thought we did a nice production and so I called his wife Elaine and I said you know I don't know I know Neil is having you know dementia issues
he's in and out of that but he might enjoy this production and she brought him down
and he did remember me. Wow.
He said, I know you, I know you.
And I said, yes, Neil, I played your brother in one of your plays.
And he would go in and out of knowing where he was.
Like when we sat him early in the theater and the audience was coming in and he said, are these the actors?
And I said, no, this is the audience.
But at the end of the play, he wanted to meet the cast,
but he didn't quite understand that it was a show,
and he went back up on the stage with them to take a photograph,
and he was holding the woman that played his mother,
clearly as if it was his mother.
And he was crying because he knew that these people were important to him,
but also I think there was some awareness that he couldn't make sense of it and he was weeping for that it was it was a very bitter
bittersweet thing but i was i was delighted to have shared i think there was some joy in it for
him so wow what a lovely story how was how was doing the reading with with with marty
oh you were oscar he was Felix. Yeah, of course.
Not that you guys
couldn't turn it around
and do the other parts.
Some of the happiest,
my happiest moments on stage
are with Marty Short,
who I love to death.
Marty, you know,
Marty is always either
over-prepared or under-prepared.
For the reading,
under-prepared.
You know,
didn't know the lines, holding the book, playing the whole time.
The audience loves Marty when he just diverts from what he's supposed to be doing to what he, you know, is planning to do.
And we did the producers in L.A. for just shy of a year.
Marty made it his business to break me every night on that stage. And five
out of eight a week, he would succeed. And it was such a joy. He's another guy that's kind of
inspiring to me in that Marty has had a lot of tragedy in his life, a lot of pain. And yet he
always finds his way to happiness. He finds a way to make things better than they should
be um and to make events i think i love he told me a story one time about how whenever uh he's
scheduled for a colonoscopy he makes sure that steve martin and i think he said a couple other
comedian friends um they all they all schedule their colonoscopies for the same day
so they're all doing the prep and he and he said what they do is they all go i think they said to
steve martin's house because he has the most bathrooms and they play poker all night long
they never go to bed they play poker they fast they drink they crap they bet they laugh then
they all go at the same time get their colonoscopies done within two hours of each other,
and then they would all go to like Nate and Al's deli and break the fast.
Unbelievable.
I go, you made a colonoscopy a fucking party.
How do you do that?
How do you do it?
Unbelievable.
Yeah.
Will you tour with Gilbert and the Odd Couple or the Sunshine Boys, Jason?
Oh, the Sunshine Boys. That's waiting to
happen, Gil. That is
the finger!
The finger!
Give him a little of your Walter.
Yes. It's not
vintage. Knock, knock,
knock.
If I come in,
do you say enter or do you say knock, knock, knock?
If you say enter, I don't come in. If you say knock, knock, knock, I come in, do you say enter or do you say knock, knock, knock? If you say enter, I don't come in.
If you say knock, knock, knock, I come in.
It's not the Belasco Theater.
It was the Morosco Theater.
You're crazy.
The Morosco Theater was...
We could do it.
We could go on tonight.
I would love to see that.
Last question.
Patrick Izzo says, I've heard a story that at a
birth as a birthday surprise your friend jason's friends took him out to celebrate and surprised
him by having none other than william shatner appear correct they bought me william shatner
for my 35th gilbert because he can be bought he can be bought but then and now gilbert just spent an afternoon with with uh with william
shatner yeah and virginia and i never once brought up doing the podcast of course not which would be
the first thing of course we'll have jason do it for us i will tell you you want you want to hear
a nice story about uh shatner we love the man i will truncate it. It's really a great story. So
they bought him for my 35th birthday. I was a huge Star Trek nut. I loved him.
We had a great lunch and sort of towards the end of the lunch, he got really serious and he said,
I just want to share something with you. I don't know you well, but I want to share this with you.
He goes, when I did Star Trek, I was a pretty young man and it wasn't a success initially.
You know, it had diminishing
returns we were off the air in three years but I had been defined as Captain Kirk and it kept me
from doing other things and even when I got other things it was always Captain Kirk is now playing
or Captain Kirk this and he said I resented it and I resented the people who loved it people would
come up fans would come up and they would want to approach me and want to share
their experience with me. And he said, and I was terrible to them. I rejected them. I was mean to
them. I was cruel to them. And he said, he admitted that he was wrong and that he was a fool and an
ass to do it. And what he was saying to me, and he said it this specifically, he said, I know you're
a young guy, you're 35 years old, your whole career is ahead of you, but this may be the biggest thing that ever happens in your life. You are out there,
you're playing to an audience of millions, and if not hundreds of millions of people,
and you're having an effect on them that is more than just as an actor. It's more than anything
you could hope to ever achieve just as an actor. You know,
we touch, as actors, we touch an audience for the time we spend together and that's it. We walk
away. Maybe we live well in their memory, but you're doing more than that. You may never get
another one. Most of us never get one. When they come up to you and share their experience with you,
love them. Take it in. Be grateful. Never make it something for
them that's sorry that they did. And it was beautiful advice, and it was great advice.
And much like Chita Rivera, it sort of set the bar for me about how you deal with the never-ending
Seinfeld fans. And it's because of that that I get experiences like the 50 Marines. I never know
who I'm talking to or why they've been so moved by this thing.
But when they come up and share it and they go, oh, you probably hate talking about it.
I go, if you love talking about it, I'm here for you.
How nice.
Nice man.
How nice.
Again, Gilbert, the opposite of your lack of professionalism.
People come up to me and they say I love Aladdin, and I go, fuck you.
Yeah.
Oh, wait, I got to tell you my favorite new joke.
We're going to go out on a joke.
My favorite new joke.
Guy goes for a job interview.
It's going very well.
20 minutes in, the interviewer says, you know, this is terrific.
You're absolutely qualified for this job,
and you've done a wonderful job of uh articulating
all your attributes about why you'd be so good in this job hey before i let you go let's just do
something talk to me about maybe something that's kind of a negative attribute so one of the
negatives about you and the guy thinks and he goes well i'm too honest i just uh i'm relentlessly
honest and i guess that would be it and the interviewer says yeah i don't i don't really
think that's a negative attribute and the guy says i don't really give a fuck what you think
i like it right it takes a second it takes a second i like it i like it what's coming up
jason i uh you've got so many one-man shows i can't keep up there's the the broadway boy
there's the master of the Domain tour that you did.
You were just in Australia.
We did that in Australia.
I'm on a speaking tour across the East Coast in April,
and then I am directing this summer a show that looks like it is well-positioned
to be going to Broadway next year.
Great.
It is an adaptation of War of the Roses, the Michael Douglas and Kathleen Trinkman.
Sure.
We'll be doing that in
Gunkwit, Maine this summer. Warren Adler.
That's our first pre-Broadway stop. Warren Adler!
Look at you! Gotta give the writers credit.
Yes, indeed.
Yeah. So you're super busy.
It's, uh,
life is good. Life is full.
Will you ever play Tevye? Because we know how important
that was to your mom. Boy,
I hope so. I hope so.
I hope so.
Please, Jason, sing a little of If I Were a Rich Man.
Uh-huh.
If I were a rich man.
All day long.
If I were a wealthy man.
And the rest you have to pay for Let this man get back to his life
Jason this was a kick
Thank you my friends
Lovely to spend time with you
You feel like you were on
Inside the actor's studio
I feel like you did more research
Than anything I've done merits
That's my bottom line Oh that's not at all true We had plenty of things the actor's studio? I feel like you did more research than anything I've done merits.
That's my bottom line.
Oh, that's not at all true. We had plenty of things we didn't get to.
What do you think, Gil? Sunshine Boys,
you and Jason. Oh, yes.
Let me tell you something. If Sarah,
Jessica, and Matthew score in Plaza
Suite, we do it next season.
It's a shoe-in.
I think me and Jasonason should do driving miss daisy
or the gin game yeah or night mother you know
something light Something light. This episode had everything.
Thanks, Jason.
My pleasure, guys.
Oh, we have to, even after I say goodnight, we have to keep you around for one more thing.
Sure.
But this has been Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast with my co-host Frank Santopadre the terrific jason alexander a very entertaining man
thank you jason this was fun thank you
i sell a line of plastics And I travel on the road
And I have a case of samples
Which, believe me, is a load
Every night a strange cafe
A strange cafe, a strange hotel
And then early in the morning
I am on the road again
When the season's over
And my lonesome journey ends.
That's the only time I see my family and my friends.
I drive up Ocean Parkway.
And before I stop the car,
my ma leans out the window
and she hollers, I am...
...a...
...che...
...ke...
...ke...
...ke...
That's what your uncle Max, my boy, and here is your sister, Shoy
And here is your cousin, Isabel
That's how you've's all this girl.
And you'll remember the Tishman, Fins, Gerald, and Jerome.
We all came out to greet you and to wish you a welcome home.
Me!
Merowitz, Berowitz, Handelman, Shendelman,
Berber and Gerber and Steiner and Stone,
Boscovitz, Lubowitz, Aaronson, Berenson,
Kleinman and Feynman and Friedman and Kohn,
Smolovitz, Volovitz, Teitelbaum, Mendelbaum, Levin, Levinsky, Levine and Levi.
Brumburger, Schlumberger, Minkus and Pinkus and Stein with an E-I and Stein bit of I.
Shakehead, your uncle sold, my boy, and here is your brother Sid.
And here is your cousin Yedda, who expects another kid.
And here is your cousin Yara who expects another kid Whenever you're on the road, my boy, wherever you may roam
We'll all be here when you come back
To wish you welcome home
You look thin