Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - John Schuck
Episode Date: August 9, 2021Veteran stage and screen actor John Schuck joins Gilbert and Frank for a look back at his 6-decade career in show business and a lively conversation about turning down movie roles, guesting on game sh...ows, canoodling with Elizabeth Taylor, portraying both Herman Munster and Daddy Warbucks and working alongside icons Robert Altman, Warren Beatty, George Burns, Richard Burton and Rock Hudson. Also, Bud Cort takes flight, James Mason goes bowling, Jack Riley and Pat McCormick whistle the national anthem and John pens a love letter to Betty Grable. PLUS: "Holmes and Yoyo'! The Old Philosopher! The magnificent mind of Leonard Stern! In praise of "Dick Tracy"! And John shares memories of Richard Deacon, Jack Gilford, James Karen and Werner Klemperer! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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What happens when 20 extremely athletic Canadians
who thrive on competition
and won't settle for less than number one
find themselves on a team?
Taking on jaw-dropping obstacles all across Canada is one thing.
Working together on a team with some pretty big personalities is another.
It's a new season of Canada's Ultimate Challenge
and sparks are gonna fly.
New episodes Sundays. Watch free on CBC Gem.
Hi, this is Gilbert Gottfried, and this is Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast with my co-host Frank Santopadre.
And our guest this week is a talented, popular, and versatile actor of the stage, as well as the big and small screen.
You know his familiar face and voice from feature films like
Outrageous Fortune, Just You and Me Kid,
Finder's Keepers, Second Sight,
Butch and Sundance, The Early Years,
Dick Tracy, The Curse of the Jade Scorpion, Star Trek IV, The Voyage Home,
and Star Trek VI, The Undiscovered Country, as well as four outstanding films he made with the With the legendary Robert Altman. Rooster McCloud.
McCabe and Mrs. Miller.
Thieves like us.
And of course Mesh.
As the dentist with suicidal tendencies.
Captain Painless Waldowski.
He's also made dozens of memorable appearances on television shows like Gunsmoke, Mission Impossible, Bonanza, Roots, Fantasy Island, L.A. Law, St. Elsewhere, Law & Order, Babylon 5, NYPD Blue, Star Trek Enterprise, and Star Trek Voyager.
And of course, as the loyal Sergeant Enright on NBC's long-running Macmillan and Wife.
And we'd be remiss if we failed to mention three shows we have discussed at length on this
very podcast. The New Odd Couple, The Monsters Today, and the last but never least, Holmes and Yo-Yo.
But there's more.
He's also made a lasting mark in musicals and on Broadway
and off-Broadway stage in Annie Get Your Gun, South Pacific,
Nice Work If You Can Get It,
South Pacific, Nice Work If You Could Get It, and both the 1977 and 1997 productions of Annie in the role of Daddy Warbucks. In a career that began way back in regional theater,
he's gone on to share the stage and screen with Warren Beatty, Rock Hudson, Christopher Plummer, Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, Robert Duvall, Glenn Ford, Keith Carradine, John Astin, Lee Merriweather, Dick Van Dyke, and Treat Williams. of many gifts and a particular favorite of yours truly
for being the
first actor
to utter the word
fuck in a
major motion
picture. The charming
and talented
John Shuck.
Thank you.
Have you noticed
how my last name rhymes with that first word you used?
Yes.
Now tell us about the only reason I want you on the show.
It's a fucking good reason, I'll tell you.
Yes.
You now know the language rules of the show, John, or lack thereof.
So how did this, you know you're my hero now that you're the first one to say fuck that.
Well, it's a small claim to fame, but it is my own, so I'll have to take that.
It all happened because we were shooting the football sequence in MASH,
and we were in Griffith Park in Los Angeles.
This is where the football game was being photographed.
And Altman had finished everything that he needed to do for the day,
and he turned it over to the second unit director.
And so this guy, Andy, comes up to me and he says,
oh, by the way, we were playing with real football players,
you know, these giants, Ben Davidson from the Chicago Bears.
I remember Ben Davidson.
Yeah, I mean, and I think he went on to have a little bit
of an acting career after that.
Anyhow, I had to line up opposite Ben Davidson,
and Andy says, just say something that'll make him angry.
So I just said, all right, bub, this time your fucking head's coming right off.
And that's the last thing I remember for five minutes.
He cold cocked me.
I mean, he just knocked me backwards.
I saw stars and birds and Tweety Bird and the whole thing.
And they gave me some smelling salts and I came around
and there he was, all six, ten of this guy, saying,
I'm sorry, man, but you can't talk about my mother that way and blah, blah, blah.
So the next day we go to the dailies and that scene comes up and Altman likes it so much that Bless has already kept it in.
I love it.
Andy Sedaris, by the way.
Yes, I'm sorry.
I suppose Andy Sedaris became something of a legend.
Yes, he did.
He was like a poor man's Russ Meyer.
Shot a lot of movies with big-breasted women.
Yes.
Yes.
He got into that.
Penthouse Pets and things of that nature.
He got into that trap.
He thought that exuberance in that area would sell tickets, I guess.
exuberance in that area when they sell tickets, I guess.
I heard that
during the making of MASH
that Donald Sutherland
and Elliot Gould
at first were really
didn't like Robert Altman.
They thought he was doing a terrible job.
Right. Yeah, that's true.
They wanted to have him replaced
because Bob was working
in an unconventional manner.
And Donald was coming off a very successful film for him.
So he couldn't afford to have this next one kind of put him into the toilet.
And Elliot was in a similar place professionally.
But they tried a little minor rebellion, which lasted maybe a day, two days at the most.
And Altman took them aside and talked to them and explained how he works and all of that.
And you ended up with these wonderful performances.
And after that, they couldn't – well, Donald never worked with them again, but now he did.
No, Gould several times, though.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Absolutely.
I want to go back to when Altman saw you.
Did he see you at American Conservatory Theater in San Francisco?
I was doing a play by Jules Feiffer called Little Murders.
Oh, shades of Elliot Gould.
Shades of Elliot Gould.
Yeah.
And all I knew was that this director was coming up to see a wonderful actress, Michael Learned, who went on to play Ma Walton.
And anyhow, we were playing opposite each other.
And they'd come up to see her for the part of Lieutenant Dish, the part that Joanne Flug eventually took over with.
the part of Lieutenant Dish, the part that Joanne Flug eventually took over with.
And afterwards, we all went to the local bar and got to know each other. And he was very nice, easy to talk to.
And I went home and, you know, wishing Michael every success.
I hope that she got the part.
Well, she didn't get in the movie,
but about a week later, I received a call
asking me to look at the part of...
Oh, Skerritt's part.
Of Skerritt's part.
Yeah, yeah.
They'd offered it to a guy by the name of Burt Reynolds,
a contract player at Fox,
who turned it down.
Oh.
And so the part was open.
And I read it, and I really didn't think I was right for it, which I told him.
And he said, well, thank you very much.
And then he called back 48 hours after that and said, how about painless?
Would you like to do painless?
And I said, who's that?
He said, well, he's the guy in the army with the biggest schlong and another another gilbert gottfried connection
i i know what it feels anyway to make something long very short.
That would be mine.
In a delusion of grandeur, I took the part.
Very good.
Very good.
You were underwhelmed by the script, I heard you say?
I was.
Yeah.
Well, it had been written. First movie script you'd ever read.
It was.
I kept falling asleep, actually, to be honest.
Wow.
But that was the end of a season,
and we were doing like 10 plays at the same time,
so you'll forgive my fatigue.
But it was very episodic.
And each episode finished,
and then the next one would start.
And the initial assemblage of the film,
once it had been shot,
was as Ring had written it.
And it was a real sleeper, and nobody was happy.
And that's when Altman's genius went to work.
And he did a couple of things.
He chopped up sequence completely.
For example, at the end of When I Have Been Revived by Joanne Flug,
there's a shot of her going away in the helicopter.
Yeah.
With that beautiful smile.
Yeah.
Well, that's because she was leaving,
and that's what allowed hot lips to come in to replace her.
But you would never know that in the movie.
You think they're there at the same time.
Oh, very interesting.
So that's the type of magic that he did.
And then what was really brilliant
was he added the character of the loudspeaker.
Oh, wow.
A device used for years in the series.
Yes, exactly.
Yeah.
And so that's how that all got put together.
And the difference was magical.
They previewed it up in San Francisco,
and I flew up there and got to the theater,
and a movie called Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid
was just wrapping up before ours.
And the audience went crazy about that, and rightfully so.
So our little picture begins.
All the fox suits are there, you know, sitting behind me.
And nothing the first five minutes.
There's no reaction.
And I forget what the exact moment was, maybe when they steal the Jeep,
that all of a sudden just a subtle shift in energy.
And that grew and it grew until we got to the first operating scene.
And that's this vein that's been broken and blood is spurting out all over the place.
And I thought the woman in front of me was going to
throw up.
And then, so we had
the realism of the first operating scene.
And then,
the whole place took off. This energy
just built and built and built.
At the end of the picture, they stood up and
cheered for ten minutes. I've never seen
anything like it.
And all the suits are looking at each other like, hey, we got something pretty good here.
And your first movie, right out of the box.
Yeah.
I remember in MASH, Elliot Gould, I think he punches Robert Duvall.
Yes.
Yes, he goads him into.
After he. Oh, no, it's Donald.
Donald goads him at breakfast into. After he's. Oh, no, it's Donald. Donald goads him at breakfast into.
Right, right.
And what I remember about it, it's the first time, like, in movies, you know, people throw punches and everything.
But it's the first time it showed, like, throwing a punch can be really painful.
It was a good one and he's like
you know yeah he's in great pain after he punches yeah it clocks him on the top of the head after he
humiliates bud court he makes bud court right feel that he was responsible for the patient's death
yes yeah it's true it's terrific and a really different kind of part for Duvall, too.
Yes, he's never done another one quite like that.
No, no. And he, unfortunately, I think he was done in two weeks, maybe even less.
They did that sequence first.
But a wonderful fellow and sure enjoyed my time with him.
Yeah. Well, shout out one other podcast guest that we've had on this show who was in my time with him. Yeah.
Well, shout out one other podcast guest that we've had on this show who was in that movie with you, and that's Carl Gottlieb.
Ah, yes.
Yes.
Also known as Iron Balls McGinty.
Carl Gottlieb has this passion for Mustangs.
Does he?
The Ford kind.
At least he did then yes every time i saw him in a
over a 20-year period he had a new ford mustang convertible usually he's a fascinating guy did
you did you read uh mark harris's terrific book about mike nichols john no i did not you should
read it it's it's it's a great read but notable is that Nichols, who was obviously making Catch-22 around the same time, went to see MASH and became depressed because he realized this was the movie he should have made.
Yes.
Well, he's right.
Yeah.
We called it Catch Zero.
That Joseph Heller book was so fantastic.
Great book.
Book of books.
It's stupid.
It's just as hard to make a bad movie as it is to make a good movie.
But what a cast.
And MASH was one of those movies of like one of the first times people are talking over each other.
Yes.
One of the first times people are talking over each other.
Yes.
That was the beginning of that overlapping dialogue,
which at that time was the bane of every audio person.
You know, the little separation and all the close-ups,
you were not allowed to overlap.
That was a cardinal sin of movie making.
And that technique was then used in Brewster McLeod,
and especially in McCabe and Mrs. Miller.
Yeah, even more so.
But there was a complaint there.
People felt they couldn't hear the dialogue. Well, they could hear the dialogue, but it's like a symphony orchestra.
If you wanted to pick out the oboe, that you couldn't do.
But everybody got everything
correctly by so as a result of that for the next picture the sam marlo detective story with elliot
i believe it was he uh he had for the first time brought a sound mixer onto the set. Oh, the Long Goodbye. Right. And it only had about six knobs on it.
It was very primitive.
But that movie was mixed a lot on the set.
They'd say, bring up Elliot and this thing.
I love that picture.
Yeah.
Very, very good picture.
I mean, talk about, you're in that minority of actors that has a mega hit, and it's his first time up at bat.
Yeah.
What happened the rest of the time?
As we said, you made four excellent pictures for Altman.
Well, let's talk a little bit about jumping into Brewster McLeod, which I didn't know, and I've seen Brewster McLeod many times.
I didn't know until doing prep for you this week
that he was going for a Bergman parody of sorts.
Yes, that's when the bird craps on Stacy Keach's character in the wheelchair.
Yes.
And the Bergman one was da-do.
Da-do.
Yeah, da-do. So a parody of the parody of the Bergman movie, it was de duve. De duve. Yeah, de duve.
So a parody of the parody of the Bergman movie?
De duve?
It wasn't a parody.
It was a trarity, tertiary.
Right, right, right, right.
What a wild film.
Yes.
He and I had our first argument about the ending of that film,
in which Bud Cort is flying around the Astrodome,
and he is shot down by the police.
And I said, that's not how the movie should have ended.
The movie should have ended because Bud Cort failed.
He could no longer, you know, fly.
So we argued about that for 20-some years.
Oh, you did?
And one night at a party, he came up to me and said,
you know, I've been thinking about Brewster a lot lately.
And he said, I think you're right.
Oh, wow.
So I felt redeemed.
You were vindicated.
Is that you?
It's very hard to tell in the crowd scene.
Are you one of the cops leaping to get him in the Astrodome?
Or am I mistaken?
I don't think I was.
I mean, I remember running out in the field and seeing him actually going around.
And then there's that weird Fellini-esque La Strada ending thing where
you're the strong man.
Yes, exactly.
That is a film that is impossible
to categorize.
It is, and I think of all of his movies,
it's my favorite.
One of mine, too. I love The Long Goodbye.
And Frank and I were talking,
you did a love scene
in a movie with Elizabeth Taylor.
Did he ever?
Yes, sir.
Tell us about that.
I'm trying to think of a name of the movie.
Oh, Hammersmith is out.
Hammersmith is out.
Thank you.
Right.
Yes.
That's another wild one.
Yeah.
Sort of Faustian attempt at the Faust story.
attempt at the first story.
Well,
I was cast as a Texas oil millionaire
by the name of
Henry Joe Fitch,
I think it was.
And they were shooting it down
in Cuenavaca,
Mexico.
So,
in addition to
know that I'm going to work with Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, Peter Ustinov, and Bo Bridges is no slouch either.
No slouch.
It was very, very exciting.
I kept pinching myself.
And then you fly down to Cuernavaca, which is, if you've ever been there, it's a city behind walls.
But you go through these gates and then vistas open up.
There was a wonderful hotel there called Las Mañanitas.
And you walk through the gates and there's peacocks strutting around.
I mean, it was just an amazing, amazing place to shoot.
Anyhow, my first day of work, I had spent the night at the hotel,
and they picked me up. And I was in my dressing trailer there, and there's a knock on the door,
and Ustinov says, have you met Elizabeth? I said, no. And he says, well, are you ready
to shoot? And our first scene was the kissing scene.
It took place on a
heart-shaped bed.
And anyway, he takes me
across a quadrangle and knocks
on the door and
in there is Elizabeth
Taylor wearing my, the
same outfit. Edith Head
I guess had a, was saving money.
The same outfit. Edith Head, I guess, was saving money. The same outfit.
It was yellow silk bathrobes.
And the first word she said to me is,
would you like a mimosa?
It was 6.30 in the morning.
Wow.
And of course I said yes.
So we had a mimosa.
We talked. And Peter said, well, why don't we go to the set?
And so we did the scene. And I was aware after the first take of the kissing part that Richard Burton was lurking, peeking through curtains to see who this guy was that was kissing his wife.
Anyway, I couldn't believe it.
There you are looking into the eyes.
You're four inches away and you're getting closer and closer and closer into the most beautiful woman in the Western Hemisphere.
Even at that time, she was extraordinary.
And you're a young actor still and i was yeah i'm not nobody and um i felt bad though because i kept messing up and we had to
do that kiss over and over that movie's on youtube you can watch it i'll tell i'll tell our listeners
yeah i watched it last night.
I found it.
And it's an oddity.
I had seen it years and years ago.
It is.
Burton plays this kind of a Hannibal Lecter character.
I never knew what it was.
A maniac in a straitjacket who's let out of an institution.
And it's a black comedy.
It's a black comedy, but a very poor one.
But Ustinov was tons of fun.
He supposedly was directing the picture,
but just
before you're ready to do a scene,
he's doing imitations of a 1954
Chevy having a nervous breakdown.
Oh, because he's in it, too.
He's in it, too. Yes. Right, right,
right, right. I just have
to go back to Brewster McLeod real quick.
Gilbert, produced by Lou Adler, record producer Lou Adler, and Papa John Phillips.
Yes.
Of all people.
Did you meet Papa John?
I did at a cocktail party just prior to the shooting in Houston, Texas is where we met.
And I have to ask you if you met Margaret Hamilton too.
Yes, I did.
Yes.
And she was from Cleveland.
Oh, I'd been at the Cleveland Playhouse,
which is where I started out right out of college.
And so we knew many people.
She was a charming, charming woman
and still has not alleviated the nightmares I have about that character with the green face flying around.
Yeah, there's even a little homage.
There's a Wizard of Oz homage, a couple of them in Brewster McLeod, but one involving her death scene.
Yes.
Yeah.
People should see it.
Now, Richard Burton was one of those legendary drinkers.
Did you witness anything like that?
Yes.
I think it's safe to say I did.
He's not going to sue us, John.
I was invited to dinner.
And it was the weirdest thing.
They had this beautiful rented house,
and we had a cocktail and then went into the dining room.
Richard sat at the head.
I was to his left.
Elizabeth was to his right.
And the rest of the table was empty.
There was nobody else except members of the family and some, I don't know
what they did, about seven people were sitting in chairs up against the wall watching us eat.
It was very bizarre. He was quite drunk. Wow. And it had just been his birthday.
Wow.
And it had just been his birthday.
And all of a sudden he started chastising Liz for giving him a golf cart for their yacht.
He wanted a real car, not a golf cart.
Wow.
And he was making this known that he was unhappy with his gift.
And he kept going on and on about it. And she just sort of sat there and then finally turned to me and said,
isn't this the stupidest thing you've ever seen?
People who have yachts like we do and to want a real car on top of it
that would never be used.
Isn't that funny?
And she started laughing.
So she had some perspective on their excesses.
She was very down to earth.
That's great. Refreshing.
Yeah.
But when he was sober,
and he only worked part of the day at that point,
you know, until about 2 o'clock,
and then they sent him home.
He was the most erudite man I think I've ever met.
And they had two little Pekingese dogs that were running around.
Lovely.
They were very nice dogs, very well trained.
And I picked one of the dogs up and asked Richard,
what's this dog's name?
And he said, Inso.
I said, what?
Inso is from Shakespeare.
And then he proceeds to recite this whole thing with the word Inso.
So I'm, you know, two pushed-in people with noses pushed in me,
and this Pekingese
standing there
listening to this
great actor
with that voice
do a Shakespeare for us
it was wonderful
and because it's my job
to put
get people on the spot
Gilbert
would you like to
favor John
with a little bit of your
Richard Burton
and James Mason
and the Honeymooners
okay
Alice Honeymooners?
Alice, Norton, and I are going to bury you.
The Grand High Exalted Mystic Rulers are having a Berlin tournament.
And Richard Burton, that's Norton. I Richard Burton as Norton.
I can't go booing.
Trixie's mother is coming over.
And Jack Nicholson as Alice.
You can't fucking go bowling round.
Bravo.
Do you know I used to work in the concessions in the Broadway theaters?
Like for their fruit juices. And I would see Richard Burton every night in Equus.
Yes.
And I would see Richard Burton every night in Equus.
Yes.
And it was,
With one particular horse called Nugget, the boy embraces.
The animal digs his sweaty brow into the boy's cheek, and they stand for an hour like a necking couple.
And of all nonsensical things,
I keep thinking about the horse, not the boy.
The thoughts and what thoughts
it may be thinking.
Thoughts totally beyond propagating
its own kind or
filling its belly.
What thoughts could those be?
Not to remain a horse any longer?
Not to stay
reined up in its particular
genetic vows.
These thoughts are more than vaguely worrying.
They are, in fact, subversive.
Wow, Gil.
You retained that from Equus from 40 years ago?
Yes.
Yes.
You must have paid a lot of attention to your work.
Gil, what period was that?
Was that late 70s?
Mid 70s?
Oh, yeah, I guess so.
That would be like early 70s.
It was the 70s because I was doing Annie when I was playing.
Yeah, I was going to say, if you went down the street,
you could have seen John and Annie.
He's doing that, and I'm singing,
Yeah, NYC.
seen John and Annie. He's doing that and I'm singing, NYC,
you know, all that stuff.
Let's go back to Altman and talk,
since you mentioned McCabe and
Mrs. Miller, one of my favorites, and
Gilbert mentioned the famous Altman
overlapping dialogue. I mean, the complaints about that
film was that some of the dialogue was
incomprehensible. Yes.
But it wasn't, really. It's not.
I watched it again last night. I own it,
and it's such a wonderful movie. Yes, we shot that in British Columbia,
Vancouver, in West Van at the top of a housing development. The top of the hill was all virgin
territory with forests and had this this large clearing and that's where
we built the set and when i say built the set the set was built as we shot the movie and um
the carpenters and everybody got so into it that they threw away their power tools and started
building everything with hand tools wow and as result, the construction fell far behind.
We had to take a couple days off
while they caught up as a result,
and they weren't allowed to do that anymore.
But that was a wonderful shoot.
We had parties there.
You know that wonderful scene
where the marvelous actor Bob Fortier
does his drunken ice dance?
Well, that pond was there.
We used to skate on it at night, and it was marvelous.
Keith was here a couple of years ago.
I'm sorry, who was? Keith Carradine was here with us on the show a couple of years ago,
and he told us his very young actor.
That was Keith's first movie, wasn't it?
Yes, I believe it was.
I think so, yes.
I believe it was.
And it was your scene
where they sing the theme to mash oh back in alban yes suicide is painless you know that song
is the tune was written by johnny mandel sure who sadly just passed away recently and uh
but the lyrics were written by Altman's son,
who at that time, Bobby, was, I guess, 13 years old.
He just did it one night and showed it to his dad.
His dad said, hey, this is pretty good.
And gave it to Mandel, and that became the song.
I don't know if this is one of those bullshit things
you read on the internet,
but supposedly Altman's son made farm much more money off off of mash because of the song's residuals than Altman himself.
Oh, yes, I would imagine that's true.
Which is kind of nuts.
We will return to Gilbert Gottfried's amazing colossal podcast.
But first, a word from our sponsor.
Tell us about Warren.
You would go on to work with Warren and Dick Tracy later.
By the way, a movie Gilbert auditioned for, but we'll table that for the moment.
Okay.
I want to hear about that. Yeah, tell us about Beatty, because it's fun to know that McCabe and Mrs. Miller, which in many ways is a grim picture, was a lively, fun set.
Well, it was a lively, fun set, but not without difficulty.
I think it helped the fact that Julie Christie was starring opposite them, and they were a couple at that time.
and they were a couple at that time.
And so he was happy.
He felt good and he liked the script and he seemed to enjoy what Bob was doing.
But I do remember this one night.
It's in a scene at McCabe's
and it begins with me walking over
and picking a cat up off a table.
Oh, you picked the cat off the poker table.
Yeah, and dropping it on the ground.
And that little scene wasn't that long.
It was maybe five, six lines.
But for some reason, Warren got a bug up himself there,
and he wanted to do it over and over and over again.
And after about the ninth time, Altman said,
well, listen, it's late.
Warren, you direct the scene, and I'm going home.
And so Warren did.
And we must have done it another 10, 11 times.
Because we were there another good hour.
And I finally said, can we find another beginning?
I'm dropping this poor cat on the ground for an hour here.
You know, this is not good.
Anyhow, finally Warren said, that's it.
I'm satisfied, and we go home.
On my way out, though, I said to Vilma Sigmund, the photographer,
boy, that was a lot of film we used he said
no not too much i said what do you mean he said after bob went home i stopped putting any film
in the camera that's great i was gonna ask if you'd ever seen any examples of the famous Beatty perfectionism, but you answered the question.
That's it.
I didn't have to ask.
Yeah, I once auditioned for Dick Tracy and I auditioned for Warren Beatty.
And the talk was, oh, you're perfect for that.
Yes, yes.
You're just perfect.
You're exactly what we want. Yes, yes. and Dustin Hoffman were going neck and neck. And it's like the only way I could see my name being in the same sentence
with Dustin Hoffman would be,
I've seen Gilbert Gottfried's acting, and he's no Dustin Hoffman.
Well done, Gil.
Your story is much better than mine, but he called me and said, John, would you do me a favor?
I said, what?
He said, well, I'm doing this Dick Tracy movie, and I'd like you to be one of the reporters.
He says, it's not a big part, but it's important.
You know, that's the usual stuff.
And so I said yes.
But in a negotiation for the day's work, I couldn't get any billing.
I could, nothing.
I mean, it was, I was told it was unavailable, that there wasn't any, and no one was getting any in those roles.
and no one was getting any in those roles.
So I go to work, and it was being shot in the back lot at Warner Brothers,
or Universal, I forget which one.
I think it was Warner Brothers.
And it was hot.
I mean, it was 90-some degrees at least.
And there's Pacino with his full head of makeup, you know,
latex and wigs and glue.
Cool as a cucumber.
Well, how could you tell?
The latex doesn't sweat.
But nevertheless, he seemed to be very playing chess with one of the crew guys, you know, that type of thing.
So we're sent to the makeup trailer,
me, Alan Garfield, and a couple of other people.
Oh, the late Alan Garfield.
Yes.
Just lost him.
So they go,
but I don't think he was Alan Garfield then.
He kept changing his name.
Gorwitz.
Orwitz, that's what he was.
Yeah, Alan Gorwitz.
And so I was the last to go into the makeup trailer.
Each person going in is, you'd hear, get him a nose, get those ears, and so on like that.
I step into the trailer, the guy says, oh, you're fine. That had to hurt, John.
I don't get no respect.
I like that film.
I mean, it's got issues.
I mean, it's got issues.
And the narrative is a little bit clunky, to be kind.
But it is a beautiful-looking picture.
It is that. And the production design is stunning.
It's absolutely stunning.
Yeah.
And the costumes and the makeup.
Some great performances.
And did you have any dealings with Pacino?
No.
The only thing I said to Pacino was,
Queen's Rook to Knight Two.
He was playing the game.
No, I didn't say anything to him.
Do you think it would have been a better picture with Gilbert as Mumbles?
I do.
We could have understood him.
Do you think Midnight Cowboy would have been better with me?
I think it would have made more money.
John, before we get into the good stuff, like Holmes and Yo-Yo, let's talk about...
I want to talk about Thieves Like Us, too, which I found.
I was texting John saying I could not find it because it wasn't streaming.
Yeah.
I got a DVD.
I had it rushed to me.
Had seen it years ago.
Great part for you.
Thank you.
Great sizable part for you, and you played part for you. It was one of the leads.
He was a half-breed Indian.
Chickamaugh.
Chickamaugh Mobley.
This was a gangster picture
that had been made once before
called They Travel
by Night, I believe.
Oh yeah, it's a Nicholas Ray picture.
Nicholas Ray. Totally different
movie. I mean,
they're not even recognizable
outside of the fact that
these gangsters. We were
bank robbers.
Keith Carradine had the
male lead with
Shelley Duvall as his love interest.
Louise Fletcher was in it.
Yeah. Her husband, Jerry Bick, was one of the
producers.
And Burt Remsen, who was a former Hollywood casting director who had his body absolutely shattered by a falling crane.
Oh, I didn't know that.
And somehow got himself back together, but he walked with a limp.
Yeah.
And in the book, my character walked with a limp.
The reason being that the way he escaped from prison was he chopped his toes off
so he could slide to get the toe chains that were holding him in prison.
But so in the movie, Bert had the limp,
and I was playing this half-breed Indian who was a really mean guy.
And I loved playing it because it was a chance to do something that was totally different than I had done in any of the other Altman pictures,
or in Moonshine War, which is the only other movie I had done in any of the other Altman pictures, or in Moonshine War, which is the only other
movie I had done.
And it was a great experience.
We shot it in Mississippi, in the Kudzu, and it was just wonderful.
I loved it.
There wasn't a day that I wasn't eager to get to work.
It was my first time in the South, which even at that time still had not come into the 20th century.
In fact, there was an incident.
We were on location.
There were three cops who were looking out for us that day, guarding the highways and stuff like that.
Two white guys and a black guy.
And at this one location, second location of the day,
there's all this gunshot going on.
Bam, bam.
We couldn't finish a scene because there'd be bam, bam.
So they sent the black guy down to get the gun stuff stopped.
And then we find out from the other cops that the shots are coming from a Ku Klux Klan rifle range.
And they thought that was really funny, sending him down there to stop them shooting.
Oh, my God.
That kind of thing.
So there was a lot of work to be done there.
This is 74, right?
This is 74, yeah.
But the lushness of that countryside, the hospitality of the people and everything was terrific.
It's a good-looking picture.
And it's a beautiful, poetic movie.
Yeah, it is.
It's slow, very slow. And it was gorgeously lit by a French lighting man by the name of Jean Boufti, a photographer, rather, who did all his own lightning.
And he used, most of the time, he didn't use big Hollywood equipment.
He used small little PARs, you know, like the lights you put in your outside lights.
Yeah.
To illuminate your yard and stuff.
And he created these pictures that were rich and saturated colors.
It was just phenomenal.
Good picture.
What was it like working with George Burns?
Well, George, I loved him.
I didn't know what to expect.
The man was a perfectionist.
expect. The man was a perfectionist. He rehearsed scenes for, I don't know, 45 minutes, sometimes an hour, until he felt it was ready to shoot. It was an honor working with him. He was wonderful.
him. He was wonderful.
And then he'd say, I think
you'd do better to say
this
with a pause.
He had his
cigar.
He was great. I can't do it,
obviously, but
he was terrific.
How great you're getting timing tips from George
Burns.
That's a Just'm bringing it.
That's a just you and me kid with Brooke Shields. And notable because Gilbert also in that cast,
Key Luke and Carl Ballantyne.
Yes.
And Ray Bolger.
Ray Bolger.
Oh.
Phil Silvers.
And Burl Ives.
And Burl Ives, yeah.
Yeah.
Can you tell us anything about any of those people?
They were very good.
I can't.
I'm not hemming and hawing.
I didn't have any scenes with them.
Right.
Yeah.
So I really didn't.
I watched the shooting of maybe one.
I got to work with Burl Ives later on in a little movie shot up in Park City, Utah.
And gosh, he was a fascinating guy.
He didn't sing for us, but he did have –
He did sing for the House Un-American Activities Committee, however.
Yes, he did do that.
But he was one of those, and I'm terrible
because I can't remember anecdotes at all for the most part.
That's okay.
But he was full of them.
And then it turned out that we shared the fact
that we had a love of sailing.
And so we talked about that quite a bit.
You played the nosy neighbor.
Notable because that was written and directed
by a man who was active in your career.
Leonard Stern.
The great Leonard Stern, who would have been a wonderful guest on this show.
He would have.
What a career.
Leonard Stern wrote for all early television.
Honeymooners.
Sid Caesar, The Honeymooners.
He produced The Honeymooners.
He did a lot with Gleason.
Wrote for Bilko.
And that's right.
Yeah.
He sort of was like the hidden talent
along with Mel Brooks and other writers of that period.
Well, he developed Get Smart for television.
I mean, after Buck and Mel, I guess, came up with the concept.
But Gilbert, he also wrote Abbott and Costello movies and a Bowery Boys movie.
Bowery Boys movie, he did.
Leonard Stern.
Yeah, he was great.
And he invented Mad Libs.
Well, he owned a publishing company,
and actually it was Roger Price who invented the Mad Lib.
Oh, I have this wrong.
Yeah.
I mean, Leonard helped and encouraged all that.
Does anybody remember Droodles anymore?
I remember Droodles.
Yeah. A droodle would be something like you would draw on a piece of paper
upside, upside. And what is that?
That's a worm going upstairs. And then you would draw
that's a worm going downstairs.
That type of thing. He strikes me as a brilliant guy who did a little bit of
By the way, Gilbert, married to Julie Adams from Creature of the Black Lagoon.
That was his first wife, yes.
Leonard Stern, interesting man.
Also created Run, Buddy, Run, Gil.
And he and she.
I'm Dickens, he's Fenster.
And I'm Dickens, he's Fenster, which is why he went on to work with Aston so much.
Yeah.
Oh, God.
Mori.
Oh, yes. Why is his name jumping out of my head?, Maury. Oh, yes.
Why is his name jumping out of my head?
Marty Ingalls.
Marty Ingalls.
Marty Ingalls from John Ash.
Yeah.
But he also created a little show called Macmillan and Wife.
Well, that was, yes.
He did.
I was just finishing up McCabe and Mrs. Miller, and I got a phone call from my agent, Wally Hiller, and he said,
and Mrs. Miller, and I got a phone call from my agent, Wally Hiller, and he said,
Leonard Stern called, and he thinks you'd be very right for this NBC movie of the week with Rock Hudson. And he said, the part isn't well written, but he thinks you could do something
with it. So I read the script and said, yeah, I'd love to. Yeah. And I was shooting it in San
Francisco, my old stomping ground.
So I was more than willing to go
for a couple of weeks up there.
So we did it.
And it was called Once Upon a Dead Man.
It was almost a full length movie
that we shot in a couple of weeks.
And I had no idea that NBC was planning
or considering putting it into the mystery wheel that they
had at that time.
Sure.
The NBC mystery movie.
Movie, excuse me.
Yeah, yeah.
Those were great.
So it ended up being six wonderful years, yes.
Yeah.
And what can you tell us about Rock Hudson?
Well, Rock Hudson, you know, what a fabulous career he had.
And he was an extraordinary man.
It was so sad the way his life ended.
Yeah.
He was a better man than that and deserved more than, I mean, he did achieve the fact that AIDS,
and again with his friend Elizabeth Taylor's help, became
something to talk about and be aware of and all that.
But he, from the very first day, treated me as an equal.
He was always very well prepared as an actor.
And the thing I admired most about Roy, we called him or like to be called is that
he really wanted to become a better actor and he was not afraid to try things he did i do i do with
carol burnett on stage they threw it around the country he did a production that probably made a nickel of John Brown's body that
ran for
a couple of months.
He did...
He was in that
movie. It's really
a movie I recommend. Yes.
Oh, the Frankenheimer picture.
Good movie. Very good.
He was not a
pretty boy. He was an actor.
And then when you see what his performance was like in Giant.
Oh, yeah.
My Lord.
So he wasn't content to be a movie star.
No, no.
He wanted to improve and develop his craft.
He really wanted to be an actor.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's a shame.
I mean, for so many actors, we wanted to get Tab Hunter on this show as well.
But it's just who, I guess, was a similar journey in being closeted for so long.
Yes.
Not only the way that, as you say, he came to a sad ending, something that he didn't deserve, but also all of those years, you know, in silence, not being able to speak his truth, not being able to be who he was.
It's so unfortunate, but I suppose that's the industry.
It is the industry.
And, I mean, he even got married, for Pete's sake,
married his secretary.
Yeah, yeah.
To hide this.
But there was a whole bunch of those guys,
and when you went over to parties and stuff,
I had the honor to meet them, guys like Tab Hunter.
And it was – they're just terrific people.
They're just wonderful.
They were good parties.
And it didn't help that Doris Day would be there or Ava Gardner or that type of thing.
So that's been my only – I'm not a Hollywood person, I'm not a party person.
That just happened to be a perk that went with a wonderful experience.
We should remind our listeners that John is not living the Hollywood life.
He is in Franklin, Tennessee.
Yes.
Living the good life.
My wife and I pulled up stakes about 11 years ago.
I think we saw the handwriting on the wall or the tents on the beach or something.
Anyway, we moved to Franklin and have been very happy there.
And what a nice thing that he treated you.
Obviously, you're a second banana on that show.
And he's treating you like an equal from day one.
From day one.
But, I mean, he was that way with Susan,
who was his co-star.
Great Susan St. James.
St. James.
What?
I said the great Susan St. James.
Oh, the great.
Oh, I thought you said the late.
No.
No, no, no, no.
And the funny thing is I'm wearing my new hearing aids.
I'm taking them back in the morning.
You watch the show now, and of course, would you agree with me that sometimes you can see chemistry between the actors on the screen?
You can see people getting along?
Yes, absolutely.
I watched the second episode and the three of you were in a car and you're doing some kind of, I imagine it was scripted by Stern, some kind of bit.
It's almost like a Marx Brothers bit about barrels.
Yes.
Certain kind of barrels.
And it's very clear that you and Rock and Susan and I think Nancy Walker, too, had this kind of rapport.
Yes, I agree.
It comes across.
In fact, I think it was the success of the show.
Because the first year, we didn't do that well.
We literally were renewed on Columbo's coattails because Peter's show, Peter Falk's show, became the hit.
Yeah.
One-way hit.
Peter's show, Peter Falk's show, became the hit.
And so people started tuning in
at that time, and we were able to
pick up our audience that way by the
second season.
Shall we drop Mrs. McMillan
off at the house, sir? No, she's going with us.
She's anxious to find out if we can locate her china.
One of our barrels was missing. I see.
What have you found out, Henry?
We're off to see Mr. Buchanan, who runs the
moving company, sir.
But we've searched both kinds of barrels and storage there, and there's no barrel with a body in it.
What do you mean, both kinds of barrels?
Well, it seems there are two kinds of barrels, sir.
There are storage barrels and there are shipping barrels.
And the barrels we received are what, shipping barrels?
Right.
Now, I found it's not possible to store a shipping barrel, but a shipping barrel you can store.
I'm not sure I follow that.
Well, let me simplify things.
There are two kinds of barrels. There are shipping barrels and there are storage barrels.
A shipping barrel you can store and ship, but a storing barrel you can only ship. I mean store.
So you can ship a shipping and you can store a shipping, but for storing you can only ship. I mean store.
You mean you can ship a shipping barrel and store a storing barrel, but you can't ship a storing barrel?
No, no. You can store and ship a shipping barrel, but you can't ship a storing barrel.
No, no, you can store and ship a shipping barrel, but you can't ship a storing barrel.
Gotta ask you, Gilbert and I were on the phone talking about you and your career before,
and I went to Macmillan and Wife's IMDb page, and my God, what a list of the 20th century's greatest character actors.
Yes.
I'm talking about Richard Deacon, Murray Hamilton, Jack Guilford, William Demarest,
Werner Klemperer, Slim Pickens, Wally Cox, Keenan Wynn,
Roddy McDowell, Nehemiah Persoff.
Yes.
Even Buddy Hackett and Jack Carter, I'll throw in there.
Buddy Hackett, you know,
he wanted us to know that he carried a gun on his ankle.
There you go. And then he dealt with it.
That's come up a lot.
Do you remember any of those other character actors Frank mentioned?
Oh, absolutely.
Jackie Coogan, Michael Ansara.
That was the fun thing. I mean, you never knew who was being cast and you just couldn't believe it. Richard Deacon was great. Funny man. We both shared a love of food. And so he would have recipes. And once he invited the cast over to the house and made us a wonderful meal.
Once he invited the cast over to the house and made us a wonderful meal.
William Demarest, my God.
I mean, I grew up watching him.
What a list of people.
Oh, I'm sorry.
I'm drawing a blank.
Who played the kid in the silent picture?
Oh, Coogan. Jackie Coogan.
Yeah.
Coogan, my God.
Yeah.
I said, Jackie, you know, you were married to my first love.
And he says, who's that?
And I said, Betty Grable.
And as a kid, I had.
I'd fallen madly in love with Betty Grable.
And this is like a third grade.
And I wrote her a letter asking her to marry me.
Oh, great.
But she wrote back. And she she said that was very nice of me
and she wished she could marry me, but she already had a husband.
And it was a really lovely, lovely thing.
Fantastic.
If I could only find that letter, I would have insured it like her legs, I guess.
And Murray
Hamilton? Murray, of course,
was on every
movie and television for
30 years. Big, great career.
Oh, my Lord. It was
extraordinary. We even had 12 guests
on this podcast, John, who were on
Macmillan and Wife.
How about that? 12? Gino Conforti,
Charlotte Ray, Barbara Felden, Emmett Walsh, Jimmy Caron, Gilbert's friend,
Bernie Coppell, Barbara Barry, the great Julie Newmar, Tony Roberts, Peter Bonners, Jessica
Walter, who we just lost sadly, and John Astin.
And Johnny.
How about that?
Well, you know, we share a... Who did you say was your friend there?
Oh, James Caron.
James Caron.
James Caron sponsored me for the Friars Club.
Not the Friars Club, the Players Club.
Oh.
And we became very good friends.
I was sort of sad, but delighted that at the end of his career,
he flourished.
He had all these wonderful movies
and parts, and
finally was able to
become a very recognizable actor,
which was wonderful. Sweetest, sweet man.
And he's like you.
He knows, he had a memory
that was a steel trap, you know.
It wasn't a name you could mention or think of.
He was friends with Buster.
Huh?
He was friends with Keaton.
With Keaton, yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, he was friends with everybody.
Yeah, I remember one time I went over to James' house,
and it was a running thing that he owned
one of Keaton's hats
and he would have
his guests pose
wearing Keaton's hat
that's great
do you have a picture of that?
of course
I can't find it
it's with the Betty Grable letter
it's with my Betty Grable letter but of course I can't find it. Of course. It's with the Betty Grable letter. It's with my Betty Grable letter, yeah.
But of course I can't find it anywhere,
but I remember.
Wow.
You know, Gilbert and I get a kick out of how,
in those days,
the same actors would recur in different parts
over and over again.
Yes.
So I randomly picked two Macmillan and Wife episodes.
I picked the second episode,
which I believe was directed by our friend John Astin.
Yes, it was.
No, it was the first one of the series.
First one of the series.
Yes.
Yeah, and there's Gilbert, there's Vito Scotti.
Yes.
And Kenneth Mars.
And then I said, no, no, now I'm going to watch it with my wife.
We loved it.
Now I'm going to watch an Enright episode.
I'm going to watch a Shuck-specific episode.
And I settled on Cop of the Year, which is the one where you're framed for the murder.
Yeah, it's my ex-wife, Lorraine.
Of your ex-wife.
Sid Sheinberg's wife, Lorraine Gary.
Lorraine Gary.
Five minutes into it, there's Vito Scotti and Kenneth Mars.
That's right.
And Paul Winchell.
Oh, I forgot about that. And a cameo, Mac goes to a movie set to interview a director about how a squib works.
Because it turns out she caused her own death with a squib.
To this day, that makes no sense.
No sense whatsoever.
You know, this wonderful playwright, Oliver Haley,
was the story director before Steve Bochco came in.
And Oliver, he was a great playwright, but he's very excited.
He comes up, he says, this next episode is your episode.
He said, I felt it was time.
He said, I wanted to really write something for you.
So I was all excited when I read the script.
And I read that plot and I said,
what the hell is, this is not,
we're not going to make this, are we?
And I hid from him because every time that week he would come by, he wanted to find out
was I having a good time, did I enjoy it?
Now we can't be nice to you any longer.
Yes. Talk to us any longer. Yes.
Talk to us about Holmes and you.
Also created by Leonard Stern.
Created by Leonard Stern.
Well, it wasn't.
I must say.
All right, guys.
It was a crap show.
Come on.
It was well intended. It was an attempt by Leonard to get back to two-man comedy like Abbott and Costello,
or you name your duo.
Of course, it never turned out to be that.
But several interesting things happened.
The craftspeople that could make something funny no longer existed in Hollywood.
For instance, if you wanted to take a phone and water squirt it and some guy pours water
in at one end and it comes out and hits the other guy in the face, those gags, they didn't
know how to recreate.
How interesting.
We had a radio that was, I forget what it was.
And I remember it couldn't do things.
There were a number of things.
I'm babbling here.
Maybe that was one of the problems with the show.
But we worked hard at it.
John Astin directed most of them.
We did a lot of naughty things. We rewrote Richard Schull, a wonderful actor and an interesting man.
We worked 18, 19-hour days for that show.
And it just was definitely a dud.
Interestingly enough, the previews for it were shown on ABC during the Super Bowl.
Interestingly enough, the previews for it were shown on ABC during the Super Bowl.
And so for our first night, we had the highest rated show of the year.
Oh, interesting.
And it went quickly down.
I mean, by today's standards, we went down like from a 22 to 16, you know. I always thought of it as Leonard trying to take Dick Godier's Jaime the Robot from Get Smart and spin it off into his own series.
Although you had the $6 million man and the bionic woman were going strong at that time.
That's right.
So you could understand the thinking. I also think we made a – and here I had my argument with Leonard. In the pilot, there's an accident and I fall apart on the street and as a result, Dick Sch't know that I'm a robot. That way, there's much more conflict
about why can't I act like normal people
and blah, blah, blah, and all that kind of stuff.
But it was what it was,
and we did our 18 shows.
I did have the honor that year, though, with it,
of being the first actor to be on two national television series on two different networks.
There you go.
So that was fun.
Oh, Macmillan and Wife and Holmes and Yo-Yo.
Right.
Very good.
You know, we joke about it because it's easy to poke fun at shows.
I joke about it.
Yeah, of course.
But you have to applaud Stern for trying to bring back that kind of classic comedy form to primetime.
And, you know, we never made a pilot for it.
Jackie Cooper directed the—we had a scene, and Jackie Cooper directed it.
And we went up into Sid Sheinberg's office and moved all his furniture away, and Dick and I did the scene.
And on the basis of that performance he he let the show go
on the air so we never made a pilot which was unusual why did the why did the android have a
russian name why was he reyga yo yo novich yo yo novich why wasn't he just you know they couldn't
find the sc Scandinavian one?
You've got four partners in the hospital.
Come on, Alex.
You're a good cop.
By the way, who's my new partner? We call him Yo-Yo.
He weighs 427 pounds.
He's a completely mobile computer
specially programmed for police work.
Is he indestructible?
We think so.
Send in Holmes. This is top secret.
No one, including Holmes, must know his identity.
Alex, no, don't.
You're not a person.
You're not going to tell them?
In my book, you got to make himself a good cop.
That's what I put in my report.
One episode was directed by Jack Arnold.
I don't know if you'd remember this.
Gilbert, the director of Creature from the Black Lagoon,
Incredible Shrinking Man, and Tarantula.
He also...
Wow.
Is that trivia?
He also did The Mouth That Roared.
Did you know that movie?
I did not.
Peter Sellers.
Peter Sellers.
He was the worst director I've ever worked for.
Oh, no.
I couldn't wait until that week was over.
Oh, no.
Speaking of directors, I did want to tuck in that Macmillan and Wife episode where Mac goes to the movie set to learn about the Squibs.
There's a cameo from George Seaton, the director of Miracle on 34th Street.
Oh, my Lord.
Of all people, which got me excited.
Well, he must have done it as a favor for Rock.
He must have.
Yeah.
He must have.
Oh, and do you remember anything about Jack Albertson?
Well, Jack was in the pilot, and we became friends.
And so for years afterwards, he didn't do the series because he was working on Broadway.
I think he was doing one of the Simon plays, Neil Simon plays.
I think he was in the Sunshine Boys, Jack Albertson.
I think that's what they were doing.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think he was in the Sunshine Boys, Jack Albertson.
I think that's what they were doing.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And because I remember going to New York and running into him on the street.
And he said, what are you doing?
I said, well, what are you doing?
He said, oh, I'm doing the show tonight.
I've got to go.
I said, oh, well, that's too bad. Maybe we could have a drink afterwards or something.
He said, no, come and talk to me.
Come and talk to me.
So he invited me.
That was my first time backstage of a Broadway theater.
And a lovely guy.
That's cool.
You know, we could do a whole show with you running down those names in McMillan and Wife.
One day we'll do this.
There's like 400 wonderful actors listed there.
And actresses, too.
Edie Adams.
I mean, just
so many great people
passed through those doors.
Yeah. You know, every year,
at the end of the season, they would have
a cast party
and invite everybody who'd been on the
show that season. Wow.
It was terrifying.
Because, of course, you walk in
and there's a sea of familiar faces, but
you can't remember anybody's name.
It was terrifying.
Well, all of them were those, your classic, oh, that guy.
Gilbert, go to the IMDb page later and look at McMillan and Wife.
And, you know, for a show like this, John, and John, we want to point out, too, as a listener to the show, which we appreciate, John.
Yes, I do listen.
We're very kind.
And I'm looking at these names, and my heart is breaking.
Oh, my God, to have Jack Guilford, to have Roddy McDowell, to have just had an opportunity, a shot at Murray Hamilton and Guilford and so on, just to have a shot at these people.
Gilbert, you'll be enthralled if you go look at that list.
It was so much fun and later uh excuse me i'm got a little frog uh later um i was doing a play in the 80s in london of uh starring charlton heston and Ben Cross and myself of Kane Mutiny.
And one night as I'm coming out of the theater, there's Jack Guilford with his wife.
I said, Jack, what are you doing here?
Well, it turns out he was just down the street at another theater doing one of his shows.
Right.
And so we got to see each other a lot and see the sights of London.
A wonderful man.
Yeah, another guy.
A wonderful man of a part of theater that, of course, is gone forever.
And a unique clown.
He was a true clown.
He could make you cry in about five seconds.
I mean, he was remarkable.
Gilbert, did you meet Guilford in your travels?
Me? No.
Never met him.
Well, I'm sorry.
You would have loved him.
Oh, yeah.
We will return to Gilbert Gottfried's
Amazing Colossal Podcast after this. I got to pick one bone on McM, colossal podcast after this.
I got to pick one bone on McMillan and wife.
Okay.
Why the hell doesn't the police commissioner carry a gun?
That's an interesting question.
You're doing all the shooting.
He's jumping off towers.
He's tackling people.
Why were they?
Maybe because they knew he was a pussycat.
You know, I got to tell you one story.
Most of the time between scenes, we'd go into Roy's trailer,
and we would go over the next scene and stuff.
But sometimes we would play cards.
But this one year, Nancy Walker was a great, what do you call that, needle pointer.
Uh-huh.
And Rock said, well, I've always wanted to do that.
So she started teaching him something.
So the rest of us are sitting there, and we all learned how to do a simple cross stitch.
I was working on a belt, and somebody else was doing, Roy was doing the pianos.
And then Rosie Greer happened to guest star on the show, the L.A. Rams football player. Sure.
Oh, thank you.
Yes.
And his hobby was needle pointing.
I remember him doing it on the Tonight Show and all that stuff.
So anyhow, Rosie and Rock are sitting at the front.
And I'm at a table facing the front.
Nancy's on a little divan.
And Mark Reedall, the makeup man, is there.
And he's tatting away.
We're all doing our thing here.
And all of a sudden, the door opens.
There's a knock.
The door opens.
And in walks John Wayne, who looks at us.
Needles in the air.
And turns around saying, Jesus Christ.
Swipes the door.
And Rock goes, ooh. and great rock goes think i better think i better go after him anyhow it was hysterical fantastic
here's a question from a listener for you john uh mark scoback was john considered at any point for the MASH TV show? I was.
They came to me and asked if I would consider doing it.
And I said, well, the part's a sexual joke.
There's no real story.
I mean, what are you going to do with it?
They said, yeah, well, that's what we're looking for is some sort of sexual element.
So I said no. They hired another actor as Waltowski,
and I think it lasted maybe two episodes.
But during that period of time,
that's when they came up with Jamie Farr's character of the cross-dresser,
which was great.
It was visual.
It was funny.
It was perfect for that show.
Did being in a hit like MASH so early on in your career?
I mean, maybe it's a dumb question, an obvious question.
I mean, did it help a lot?
Yes, I think in retrospect it did.
Yeah.
It opened a lot of doors right away.
I don't – I was also a bit of a snob.
I turned down stuff I probably shouldn't have.
And so eventually, once Macmillan took over, the movie momentum sort of dwindled.
I see.
And I began to, I think there was quite a gap there between some of them.
So you were a movie snob who was turning down TV roles?
No, I was a movie snob turning down movies.
Oh.
Do you remember, or do you want to say which?
Well, there was one with Burt, excuse me,
Burt Reynolds and Liza Minnelli.
Lucky Lady.
Lucky Lady that I was...
It was George Cukor directed it.
No, it was Stanley Donnan.
Oh, it was Stanley Donnan.
Yeah.
But the idea of spending all day
in a boat rocking back and forth
with just a few lines didn't appeal to me.
Were you up for the Hackman part?
No, no.
It wasn't the lead at all.
I see.
I don't even remember.
But it was a fairly substantial role.
But I turned it down.
And in retrospect, I think it was a group of people that it would have been good to work with, with an extraordinary director.
Sure.
How could it have hurt?
Here's another one.
Stan Schwartz says,
this is not a question,
but my sister was on
$10,000 Pyramid.
This is something
you both have in common
because Gilbert did the show recently
with John Shuck and Bill Cullen
in the mid-70s.
I got to watch from the audience
at the LEC.
Am I saying that right?
The LEC Theater?
On West 58th? LEC,EC Theater? On West 58th Street.
Shame on me.
I'm a New Yorker.
I should know how to pronounce that.
A good time was hard by all, and they gave us all flashlights and batteries.
No expense was spared there.
You were a game show staple.
They then turned the lights out, and they had to use the flashlights to get out of the theater.
Very exciting.
14 babies became as a result of that.
I'll assume you did a little better on Pyramid than Gilbert fared.
Well, I was pretty good.
It's impossible to do worse.
I was pretty good until popular culture passed me by,
and I was not so good.
But I do remember that it was time to hang up my pyramid shoes
when the category was Rogers and Hammerstein musicals.
And I'm going, you know, Carousel, Sound of Music, South Pacific, nothing.
Oh, another actor of the millions of actors we mentioned.
What do you remember about Werner Klemperer?
Werner.
Werner was a good man.
He always, you know, Werner wanted to be a...
I loved him.
Did you know him?
He had this great energy.
I met him.
One time I was on, I think it was Conan O'Brien.
And I did like Hogan's Heroes bit in my act.
Of course you did.
So I found out that next door, Werner Klemperer was doing a TV show.
So I asked him after my bit if he'd walk out on stage
and he didn't. That's wonderful.
Really great. That's wonderful.
Well, he was a character
he
I don't know whether he married all
the women, but
he always had a different
girlfriend and he was always trying
to get me to move. Oh, I'm living
in this wonderful building. You must come and stay in it oh it's and then two weeks
later he'd move somewhere else or be in another city or whatever he he obviously
was very much devoted to his father the conductor Oh Otto Klemper and he was also a very close friend
of Eddie Lawrence
Oh the old philosopher
the old philosopher
Hello Bunky
you say your boy comes into your bedroom
at four in the morning
wakes you up and tells you he's going
over the falls in a
great big baggie
Oh then put your head down.
And Eddie was a dear, dear friend of mine.
I wasn't expecting that.
This is the only podcast in the world talking about Eddie Lawrence.
He was a dear, dear friend of mine.
He was a wonderful painter.
He studied with Ler after the war.
He was great.
You're trying to say something, Frank.
I can tell.
No, I'm thrilled that we got to an old philosopher reference, Gilbert.
Unbelievable.
And the idea of an imitation.
Pale as it is.
Which I wasn't expecting.
John, you're a good mimic.
Well, my wife doesn't think so.
No?
I've been trying to imitate a husband for 30 years.
You and I were on the phone, and you brought up Turnabout,
another infamous TV series created by the late, great Sam Denhoff, Bill Persky's partner.
You want to explain the premise and tell us how that happened?
Well, it was based on a little novella by Thorne Smith, and it was a couple who go out on the weekend and buy this statuette.
And they put it on their bedroom table.
And that night they're having this discussion.
I think they get into an argument.
And the last thing one of them says is,
I just wish we could change bodies,
meaning so that way you could understand me.
And then this magical thing happens.
The moon is in the right thing of phase and woo, woo, woo.
And when they wake up in the morning, they have changed bodies.
So I was playing the woman and Sharon was playing the man.
All well and good.
But it was very confusing.
Because unless Sharon had a cigar in her mouth, for some strange reason, she looked like a woman.
But you've done everything in the business. And I wasn't allowed to wear dresses or anything, and I looked like a man. it was an attempt once again at comedy
and
it was
not good because it was
never written from a women's point of view
even though we had Barbara Corday
and one
other person
as our
primary writers
but Sam was very much of the Mel Brooks style of humor,
and it just didn't work with these characters.
Talking about humor that didn't work,
I was reading an interview with you in the AV squad in The Onion.
You were talking about being Murray the Cop,
playing Murray the Cop in The New Odd Couple.
And as Gilbert and I have talked about on previous shows,
Gil, you remember this,
they recycled
some old Odd Couple scripts.
Yes, word for word.
They did,
the same people.
You know,
so it starred Ron Glass
and Demond Wilson.
Yep.
Two black guys.
Well, they were writing,
as you said,
Jewish jokes. The same Jewish jokes for these two guys. For, they were writing, as you said, Jewish jokes.
Same Jewish jokes for these two guys.
For black actors.
It was a nightmare.
Did you have fun
at any point? By the way, you're the second
actor to play Murray the Cop. We had Brad
Garrett here. Yes.
No, it was fun.
And there were a couple of scripts
that turned out not to be too bad.
Right.
You know, if you put two monkeys in a room with typewriters,
sooner or later one's going to type Hamlet.
Right, or A Tale of Two Cities.
What about the new Munsters, which I under, excuse me, Munsters Today.
The new Munsters was another version.
There were so many Munsters, which I, excuse me, Munsters Today. The new Munsters was another version. There were so many Munsters reboots. And I heard you say you're very candid, by the way,
with that in that Onion interview. And you said it was the only job you ever took for the money.
Yes. Lloyd Schwartz, a good friend of mine, was called up one night and he said,
would you like to play Herman? And he told us about it. And I was a little resistant to it,
and told us about it.
And I was a little resistant to it,
but I was going through a divorce,
and I had a young son,
and I thought, well, let's not pull some of those no, I don't want to snobby things
that I did early in my career.
I'll do it because I need the bread.
So I did.
And little thinking that it would turn out
to be 90-some episodes.
104!
Syndication package, you know.
And I had the joy of working with Lee Merriweather
and Howie Morton and Jason
Marsden. We know Jason.
So that was fun.
But the scripts were, it was battle every day.
It was not a good deal.
And you knew Fred Gwynn.
I didn't know him, really.
I met him on numerous occasions, you know, at parties in New York and stuff of that nature.
But I always apologized.
He said, no, no, no, you're very good.
You're very good.
Don't worry about it.
He would say, there's no competition.
I said to myself, you're telling me there's no competition.
He was brilliant.
But that was the problem with the show.
That was a black and white show
beautifully cast and produced and written but it was the right time period for it here we are
capitalizing on that success but we turned it into a four camera television show it's in color
we're doing it in front of a live audience well Well, we didn't the first season, but from that point on we did.
It was awful.
It was not –
And you didn't like the makeup.
Well, the makeup was –
The costume.
Fortunately, we only had to wear the makeup two days out of the week.
I see.
But I had to wear those, what they call cathernaive the elevated shoes and they were up
about four or five inches so they were dangerous you had to be real careful with them and uh the
makeup itself took about three three and a half hours to put on. But it was, and by that time, they had a wonderful makeup guy by the name of Gilbert Mosco
had developed makeups that would not take your face off
and were easily removable.
So, but the trade-off was it didn't stick that well.
So once you started perspiring,
they were constantly playing with your face.
And I've heard with that kind of makeup, like actors who are alcoholics, alcohol is a makeup remover.
So alcoholic actors would sweat alcohol.
And the makeup would fall off. Is that Cheney Jr.?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Speaking of makeup, by the way, Lee Merriweather did this show,
and Gilbert was naughty with her.
She must have loved it.
She threatened to spank him.
Oh.
Yeah.
Yes, which I thought, that's my number one sexual fantasy.
Well, there you go.
Getting spanked by cattle.
Lovely woman.
Terrific.
And if she'd worn her sash and tiara, it would be even better.
Edward McDonald, speaking of makeup, I'd be interested in hearing about the process of John putting that Klingon makeup on for the Star Trek films.
Yes.
Well, that was, again, that was about a five-hour period for the Star Trek IV.
But the hard part there was removing it.
That was just, I'm so glad I only worked a couple days because that took half my face off.
But by the time we did Star Trek VI, that movie,
the last with the original cast.
Yeah, the undiscovered country.
They had developed these makeups to be much kinder to the face,
and they had removable, they used hot towels and lotions,
and it was relatively easy.
You are such a recognizable actor
that when I was in the movies watching Star Trek 4,
and you appeared as the ambassador under all that Klingon makeup, in about nine seconds, I said,
that's John Shuck. Frank, it was the voice. The voice, too.
The voice, too.
The voice, too.
You know, The Monsters wasn't the only time that you played the Frankenstein monster or a Frankenstein monster character.
You did a TV movie called The Halloween That Almost Wasn't, which is fun, but I bring it up because of the name Jack Riley.
Yes.
Someone you knew and someone Gilbert worked with.
I love Jack Riley.
He was a wonderful guy.
And I think I might have, when we talked, Frank, I might have told you this,
that my very first day driving into Cleveland to start work at the Cleveland Playhouse,
I had the radio on, and there was this radio couple by the name of Baxter and Riley playing.
And that was Jack.
And they had this hit show in Cleveland.
Everybody stopped what they were doing to listen to this.
And it was two hours, five days a week.
Cut and dissolve.
I used to listen to the show, but I was working there. And then that summer, I worked at the Cleveland Music Carnival.
And one of the shows we did, we had Jack Riley as a guest star.
And so that's when our friendship began.
And then it turned out that he was out in Hollywood, and I looked him up.
Got to know Pat McCormick and all that crowd.
Oh, boy.
and all that crowd.
Uh-oh.
Oh, boy.
I'll tell you, when Pat McCormick is sprawled out on the stairs at 3 in the morning and you're trying to sneak out to go home,
it's very difficult.
By the way, Gilbert, John and I had a lovely phone call a few weeks ago,
and I told him the helicopter story which about pat which he
wasn't familiar with no but he said sounds like him and and i met i one time met uh tim conway
yes and and i said look i gotta ask you something if it's this is a true story or not.
And I said, with Pat, and I didn't even get to McCormick.
I said, with Pat and Tim Conway, he goes, all I can do.
And I said, yes.
And he just nodded.
Yes.
Part of the lore of this podcast.
One night, I was, actually, Michael Learned and I were having dinner in the Valley at a restaurant that's no longer there.
And we hadn't seen each other for a couple, a year and a half, I guess.
Anyhow, so it was nice to see her.
each other for a couple year and a half i guess anyhow so it's nice to see her and we look over and there at a table is pat mccormick tim conway and jack riley so jack calls us over and uh
introduces us and we sit down i i i i had to go change my underwear at least three times that night.
The upshot was that we all ended out in the kitchen because Pat wanted to tell the chef how he should really be cooking.
And he decided that all of us should make omelets.
The restaurant had closed by this point.
They're washing the dishes and that was it.
So we did.
We made omelets.
But it was out of that came a thing that we did at the comedy club a couple times called Stand Up and Blow.
We were a whistling troupe.
We would stand up and blow everything from
the National Anthem. We always began with the National Anthem.
And then we would proceed
to Beatles songs.
Fantastic.
There's a great, I think Ronnie
Schell told us that when Pat was in the
actor's home, he was rooming
with the great director Stanley Kramer.
Yes.
Oh, my.
And that Jack Reilly, I hope this is a true story, and Jack Reilly went to visit Pat, walked in, saw Stanley Kramer, and said, Pat, you finally got a meeting.
That sounds like Jack.
Here's one more for you from a listener, John, before we let you get out of here.
Maurice Shodash, or Shodash, John was Mr. Irresistible in a terrific episode of Fantasy Island.
Yes.
Which I think was written by our friend Ron Friedman, Gilbert.
Oh.
Does he have any Hervé Villachaz, did he have any interactions or any memories?
as, did he have any interactions or any memories?
Oh,
well, I guess the,
let me check my short-term
memory here.
No.
But I did enjoy,
I did enjoy that.
I did two of those things.
One with Bob Goulet, where we
went back and he was a swashbuckler Goulet, where we went back in.
He was a swashbuckler, you know, back into the 1800s.
Oh, yeah, great.
Sort of a Cyrano-type character.
That was a lot of fun.
Do I have this wrong, John, that you said that musical theater was your real love?
Yes.
When I was five, my folks took me to see Oklahoma in New York, and I knew all the songs at that point.
And I left the theater that night knowing that I wanted to be an actor.
At five?
At five.
Wow.
Or maybe it was a cowboy.
But anyhow, I pursued the acting.
And yeah, I really never let go of it.
And even though you have a little frog, and I am going to put you on the spot,
can you sing a couple of bars of NYC for us?
NYC, what is it about you?
You're big, you're loud, you're tough.
NYC, I'd go years without you.
Then I can't get enough.
Enough of cab drivers answering back, etc.
Oh, fantastic.
Were you a trained singer?
Yeah.
I studied with the wonderful singers in Los Angeles by the name of Sweetland, Lee Sweetland and Sally Sweetland,
who really made it possible for me to go into musical theater. singers in Los Angeles by the name of Sweetland, Lee Sweetland and Sally Sweetland, who
really made it possible
for me to go into musical theater,
because I had about a two-note range.
The first thing I ever
sang was during a college production.
Well, I'd sung
in high school musicals. I'd done
Billy Bigelow,
things like that, so that's
nothing to sneeze at.
And in college, we were doing good news, and they said, here's a little song.
Make up a melody, because we can't find it.
So it went something like, oh, Tate is a great little college.
Its teams seldom win, but they try.
Why, it's more like a jail compared to Harvard or Yale.
But it's handy if you live close by.
Fantastic.
Do you have any idea how many ballpark, how many performances as Daddy Warbucks?
And I know you went on the road with it.
My wife, I told you I sent you the programs.
My wife saw you 20 years apart in the park she saw you in the 70s and she saw you in the 90s
huh yeah I did it over a long period of time I don't know I was in the show a year and a half
in New York so that's eight performances times 18 months and then... So well over a thousand.
Well over a thousand.
It's probably 25, closer to three.
Wow.
And I know this was any song
and not Warbucks,
but could you treat us
with a little of Tomorrow?
No, you sing that part, Gilbert.
He'll sing.
The sun will come out tomorrow.
Bet your bottom dollar that tomorrow there'll be sun.
Just tomorrow, tomorrow.
I love you tomorrow.
You're only a day away.
Very nice.
After doing the show for 18 months,
I was doing this scene at the end of the first act,
and I'm talking to Grace,
but the problem was that when Annie came on the stage,
I couldn't think of what her name was.
I had blanked on Annie.
Oh, Jesus.
And the only thought that kept running through my head was,
if I can look at the marquee, I can get the information I need.
And that night I called my wife and I said, I'm quitting.
It's time to come home.
Did you do that with Alice Ghostly? Alice
was, yes. She was my first Miss Hannigan. Wonderful. And then
Marsha Lewis replaced her.
And that's who I've done most of them with. I've also done a lot of it
with Sally Struthers, who's extraordinary. And that's
somebody you should talk to. She's an fascinating woman. We have to get Sally Struthers, who's an extraordinary, and not somebody you should talk to.
She's an fascinating woman. We have to get Sally Struthers.
Yeah, she did Marc Maron's podcast recently.
We have to get her.
It's good timing because all in the family turned 50 this year.
By the way, McCabe and Mrs. Miller just turned 50.
I sent you a text wishing you a happy anniversary.
Thank you.
50 years.
Unbelievable.
Yeah.
I'm going to ask you a question, John,
that I haven't asked in a number of weeks, but I've
asked many, many serious actors on this show.
The man who's sitting in that
box that you're staring at, do
you think that he could
pull off a dramatic role?
Well, he certainly
has this afternoon.
Ha ha ha!
Ha ha ha!
Ha ha ha! Ha ha ha! Ha ha ha! Of course, of course.
Ed Wynn, Bert Lahr, all the great comics.
They're all serious actors at heart.
Jack Guilford.
Jack Guilford.
Look at that, Gilbert.
What a compliment.
He compared you to Ed Wynn.
Yeah.
Oh, that's wonderful.
Well, you win some, you lose some.
John, did you ever work with John MacGyver?
I did not, and I never met the man.
Okay, would you like to hear Gilbert's impression of him?
Absolutely.
And I never met the man.
Okay, would you like to hear Gilbert's impression of him?
Absolutely.
Everything in this company must be run according to schedule.
We will have no slackers here.
This is a tight ship, and I am the captain of the ship.
Bravo.
That's it. That's it.
That's it. Did you ever hear anybody do John MacGyver?
He nailed him.
Remember Milt Kamen?
Of course.
Yes.
My favorite imitation of his was bacon frying in a pan.
Did you ever see that?
Oh, I think I remember that.
And then he would do the thing.
He'd look right into the camera. He says, I'm going to that. And then he would do the thing. He'd look right into the camera.
He says, I'm going to become handsome.
And he did.
He suddenly became an adult.
A Milt Kamen.
I haven't thought of Milt Kamen in 40 years.
Or the old philosopher.
It's about time.
This is the only podcast.
Did you ever meet Joey Ross?
No, I never did.
Okay. I'm shooting wildly here, I never did. Okay.
I'm shooting wildly here, John.
Yeah.
Okay.
We want to thank some people.
How about that compliment, though, Gilbert?
He compared you to Burt Lahr and Ed Wynn.
Unbelievable.
It's the truth.
He longs to play Shylock, I think.
Yes.
Pound of flesh, huh?
Well. Somebody was on the show. Ah, pound of flesh, huh? Well.
Somebody was on the show.
Gilbert, who was it?
Well, we had a lot of character actors here.
We had Joel Bray and Griffin Dunn and a million people.
Somebody said he should play Willie Loman.
Hey, that's a good idea.
What do you think?
It's a part bigger than Hamlet.
And... Oh, Adam West was on, and he said, I would have made a great penguin.
There you go. Oh, and Dick Van Dyke said I would have been a good buddy.
Buddy Sorrell on the Dick Van Dyke show.
So those were...
I'll have to put my thinking cap on.
Oh, okay.
Well, if Gilbert plays Willie Loman,
will you play Biff, John, to his Willie Loman?
Are you kidding?
No, I'll play Mrs. Loman.
I mean, it'll be really serious then.
You are a guy we could talk to forever and ever.
And one day we will do this again and just go over.
We'll just remember old comics and go through these names.
We'll talk about Milt Kamen and Guy Marks and Shelley Berman and Corbett Monica and all of these great people.
Shelley Berman, by the way, was on Macmillan and Wife.
Yes, he was.
He also did an episode of The Munsters Today.
Oh, my gosh.
You've worked with everybody.
Did you know Al Lewis?
Huh?
Did you meet Al Lewis?
No, I've never met Al.
Okay.
I've never met Al.
But you know who used to come to our tapings all the time?
For some reason, he loved the show.
It was Jonathan Winters. Oh, Al. Okay. I've never met Al. But you know who used to come to our tapings all the time? For some reason, he loved the show. It was Jonathan Winters.
Oh, my.
Oh.
Yeah, he would come, and sometimes he'd do something for the audience, other times not.
Our warm-up man was Jason Marsden, who at that time was 12.
Yes.
And he loved performing.
He just loves it, and totally fearless, and he'd go out and tell his jokes and sing a song, and audiences loved performing. He just loves it. And totally fearless.
And he'd go out and tell his jokes and sing a song.
And audiences loved it.
Shout out to Jason, who is a fan of this podcast.
And I do communicate with him.
And he was very excited to know you were coming on.
But he did tell me, I don't think John was enjoying himself much in those days.
We want to thank our pal Barry Greenberg,
our mutual pal who helped book John.
I love that man.
He is a complicated man.
Like John Shaft.
Yes.
But adorable.
Adorable.
And thanks to our pal Jim Delacroce,
who set this up with the engineer Andrew Stewart.
John is in a famous recording studio in Nashville
where Chet Atkins
recorded. Chet Atkins
definitely recorded. So the good vibe's in that room.
So we want to thank Andrew Stewart and Eddie Gore.
Elvis.
Elvis too? And the other
studio. Yeah, we're not in B.
You're in C, right?
We're in C for Conrad.
Which is my first name.
Conrad John Shuck. I always knew you as John Shuck and and then I started doing research, and you're Conrad all over the place.
Well, one day, I was looking at the poster layout for the 20th anniversary revival, and all you could see was Nell Carter and Annie.
And I thought, I got to do something about that.
in Annie and I thought I got to do something about that so I my dad had said he wished that I'd used his name for my career and I agreed so I decided it was time
to use honor him and and and do that but I didn't realize it was going to create such problems people
wrote me nasty letters how dare you change your name, and all that. It's so strange, isn't it?
People have nothing to do but write you letters about you changing your name.
By the way, I watched that Mission Impossible episode you were in with Pernell Roberts.
Yes.
And Leonard Nimoy, who would later be directly involved in your life in more ways than one.
Yes.
And Leonard married John's ex-wife.
Yes.
We should point out.
But you do a wonderful Mexican accent.
You're in a Banana Republic in that episode.
And you're like local muscle.
Well, you say it's wonderful.
Thank you for that.
Lieutenant Jocado.
We still, my brothers and I, still call each other up.
You'll hear, your brother is dead.
We were about as authentic.
Today's political correctness, we wouldn't stand a chance with that.
I'm watching you and Pernell Roberts, who's from Georgia.
The two of you are like Alfonso Bedoya in The Treasure of the Sierra Madrig.
I remember seeing a movie where John Carradine was playing a Mexican.
That must have been interesting.
He was versatile.
That was real.
That must have been interesting.
He was versatile.
That was real.
I think Sinatra played a Mexican or a Spaniard in, what is that movie with Cary Grant, The Pride and the Passion?
Really?
Yeah.
It's not good.
It's one I've never seen.
It's not good.
I'll watch it twice.
John, this was an honor and a thrill to spend this time with you.
Well, gentlemen, I can't thank you enough for including me.
I'm a big fan of the show.
You all are terrific, and you bring the best out of your guests, except in my case.
Oh, yeah.
I think this was a perfect episode.
Nice and tight.
And we got to everybody.
We did.
We did pretty good.
Yeah.
By the way, Richard Schull, I was talking to John, by the way, who starred with Richard Schull in Holmes and Yo-Yo.
By the way, you work with Richard Schull and Richard Stahl.
Yep.
But possibly not Richard Schull, who was married to Valerie Harper.
To Valerie, yeah. Okay, but there you go.
But he told me what?
He was a throwback who drove a car from the 40s, Richard Schall?
He and his wife, Marilyn, lived in the 40s.
They bought all their clothes from the 40s at various stores.
He would write only with a fountain pen.
stores. He would write only with a fountain pen. He had a 1940 Chevy or something, a Buick or Chevy. He was a railroad aficionado, and he owned his own railroad car.
Wow.
And for the opening gift, because he knew of my affection as a kid of taking the train
from Buffalo, New York to New Jersey to see my grandparents.
And I had remarked on this doe skin type blankets that they used to have.
He gave me one of those blankets numbered so you could find out where it came from, which compartment on which train.
That's cool.
They're very thoughtful.
But he was eccentric.
And their house was all from the 40s,
all their furniture, everything.
He was like a sort of a curmudgeonly actor,
a little bit like a Matthau.
Yes.
In some ways.
Yes, he had this wonderful, unusual, mobile, rubbery face.
And very distinctive.
Loved him.
He was doing a Neil Simon play.
Went home between shows in New York for the break and never came back.
Oh.
It was a bit of a shock.
I hate to end this out with such a downer, but...
All right, then.
Sing us a little more from Annie.
Oh, my God.
Oh, we're not going to make you work that hard.
What's the other one?
Something was missing.
No, I'm not going to do that.
Together at last, together forever.
We're tying a knot.
They never can sever.
I don't need sunshine now to turn my skies to blue.
I don't need anything but you.
There you go.
I'm singing out, guys.
Charles Strauss is kind of a genius, isn't he?
He is.
He really is.
Gilbert, this man has a drive ahead of him.
Let's sign off.
Okay.
You know, it was light outside when we started.
Yeah.
You better get one of those flashlights from the game show.
These are deep dives, John.
I warned you.
This has been Gilbert Gottfried's amazing colossal podcast with my co-host Frank Santopadre and we our guest has been a guy you know yeah
he's done movies he's done TV he's done Broadway but most importantly he is the first actor to say fuck in a major motion picture.
John Chuck.
Good night, Gracie.
John, you're the best.
Thank you so much.
We'll do it again.
We'll talk soon.
Together forever.
We're tying a knot.
They never can sever.
I don't need sunshine now to turn my skies to blue. We're tying a knot, they never can sever.
I don't need sunshine now to turn my skies to blue.
I don't need anything but you.
You've wrapped me around that cute little finger.
You've made life a song, You've made me the singer. And what's that bad cop tune always?
Blah, blah, blah. Blah, blah, blah. Anything but you. Yesterday was plain awful. Awful. You can say that again. Again. Yesterday was plain awful. But that's.
Not now.
That's then.
I'm poor as a mouse.
I'm richer than Midas.
But nothing on Earth.
Could ever divide us.
And if tomorrow I'm an apple seller too, I don't need anything but you.
Hamlet needed his mother.
Woolworth needed his shop.
Orville needed his brother.
Or else he'd go ker-pop.
They're two of a kind
The happiest pair now
My friend and Adele
They're floating on air now
And what's the time of the dream
I'll just be true
I don't need anything
Anything!
Anything! I don't need anything, anything, anything.
I don't need anything but you.