Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - Peter Marshall Encore

Episode Date: August 19, 2024

GGACP bids a fond farewell to actor, singer and former “Hollywood Squares” host Peter Marshall by presenting this ENCORE presentation of a candid interview from 2016. In this episode, Peter regal...es Gilbert and Frank with irresistible stories about Redd Foxx, the mob, Glenn Ford, Uncle Miltie’s “apparatus” and Charlie Weaver’s (and Vincent Price’s!) sexual proclivities. Also, Peter croons with Bing, tours with Bob Hope, gets roasted by Orson Welles and runs afoul of John Wayne. PLUS: Al Jolson schmoozes! Phil Silvers does “Who’s on First”! Gilbert ticks off Marlon Brando! Peter and Nanette Fabray hit a nudie bar! And the definitive version of the Paul Lynde-Golddiggers story! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:45 exclusively on FanDuel Casino, where winning is undefeated. 19 plus and physically located in Ontario. Gambling problem? Call 1-866-531-2600 or visit kinexontario.ca. Please play responsibly. Hi, I'm Gilbert Gottfried and this is Gilbert Gottfried's amazing, colossal podcast. I'm here with my co-host, Frank Santopadre, and we're once again at Nutmeg Post with our engineer Frank Fertorosa.
Starting point is 00:01:41 Our guest this week is a singer, comedian, writer, and actor, and Emmy-winning game show host, who's been working in the business for an impressive seven decades. He starred on the Broadway stage and in movies and appeared on dozens of TV shows, including the Ed Sullivan show, Rowan and Martin's Laughin', 77 Sunset Strip, Love American Style, The Love Boat, Lou Grant, WKRP in Cincinnati, In Living Color, Mad TV, and Sabrina the Teenage Witch, to name a few. In his long career, he's worked with everyone, from Bob Hope to Dean Martin to Buddy Hackett
Starting point is 00:02:34 to Lucille Ball to Groucho Marx to Vincent Price. He hosted one of the most popular and highly rated game shows in television history, Hollywood Squares, for which he took home five Emmys. But perhaps most importantly, he once guest starred on a show we've been obsessing about on this podcast. most importantly, he once guest starred on a show we've been obsessing about on this podcast, Lanigan's Rabbi. Please welcome the versatile and multi-talented Peter Marshall. Well thank you guys, thank you very much. I should have a bigger house after all that stuff. I didn't do that. I did well, didn't I? Oh, it's an impressive resume, Peter.
Starting point is 00:03:34 Now, we met once. We did something. There was a bunch of it. There was Gene Rayburn and I think Bob Eubanks and Wink Martindale and a bunch of us. You were doing some kind of a show and we went over and did something with you. I wonder if that was up all night. It could very well be. It's quite a long time ago. I'm 90 years old so what do you want from me? I have trouble with yesterday. Happy birthday.
Starting point is 00:04:05 We saw pictures of your birthday on Facebook. It was really lovely. They, at the Paley Center here, they had a little do for me and about 260 lovely friends showed up and we had, they showed film of me from 1940, what was it, 1949, I had a show on ABC called, what the heck was it, 1949, I had a show on ABC called, what the heck was it called, anyway, it was the first show ever filmed back, they set back to New York, and I had never seen it. And we did 11 of them, and we had the Neil Hefty Orchestra,
Starting point is 00:04:36 big orchestra, Dale... Oh, Neil Hefty, wow. Yeah, and it starred Tommy Noonan and Pete Marshall. And we were working a little place here called The Band Box, and we were getting 250 a week, and they asked us to do the show and we were the stars and we got 45 dollars a week. Now this is 49 but I thought they were all gone. They found three other shows at the Television Academy. They showed that and then I had never seen, I had done Gordon Jenkins' Manhattan Tower in 1954 which was an hour and a half live.
Starting point is 00:05:07 And I had never seen that. And there it was. Stuff I had that, me singing with Dinah, me singing with Dionne Warwick, me singing with all these different people. Bob, you know, it was just an amazing evening. This guy knocked himself, his name is Jimmy Pearson. He does all my stuff for PBS. I don't know if you've watched my big band stuff on PBS,
Starting point is 00:05:25 but he puts all that stuff together and he's just an amazing guy. So it was a thrill for me and a lot of people showed up and a lot of dear, dear friends and it was a lovely birthday. Who were some of the people who showed up? Let me see. We had Bobby Morris and we had Barbara Eden and we had Lonnie Anderson and we had... Joanne Worley was there. I saw her on Facebook. Joanne Worley and there, I saw her on Facebook. Joanne Worley and Artie Johnson and yeah, Alex Trebek and just people, you know, people I've
Starting point is 00:05:51 worked with and I've known all my life. And Neil Hefty, that's... He was my roommate at one time at the Forest Hotel. Really? Wow! Odd couple theme. I was 15. And Batman. Yeah, yeah. I mean, we were, he was, then we were living at the Forest Hotel and he was playing trumpet with Muggsy Spander, I think, at the old Arcadia Ballroom. And I was, I was a page at the time. I had been a, at 14 I was an usher at the Paramount Theatre. And at 15 I was a page boy at NBC. I was the youngest page.
Starting point is 00:06:21 It was, it's a long story. I won't bore you how his little nepotism got me the job but i was living with the with the only would write arrangements for the jury wall band or sonny dunham and play it for ten bucks and uh... i was dating blossom deary you're ever hear of your area short great pianist they can write before we're all kids together and uh... so when i got this tv think they were looking for a band i thought i got the
Starting point is 00:06:44 guy and and that was the old first big band, and I said, I got the guy. And that was Neil's first big band thing he ever did. That was in 1949. He's come up on this show. I'm sorry? I said his name has come up on this show. We mentioned it. Oh, I'm sure it has.
Starting point is 00:06:56 He also did the music for How to Murder Your Wife with Jack Lemmon. The Odd Couple. Yeah. They did a lot of TV. And also Batman. Bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum,
Starting point is 00:07:08 bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, bum, Whoopi Goldberg and Henry Winkler. Right. And now we had fun on Hollywood Squares, but I heard that your period of Hollywood Squares, there was like kind of fun in a bottle. Oh, we had. You must remember it was very familial. Charlie Weaver, Cliff Harkat, I've known since I'm 18. Wally Cox, I went to P.S. 165 at 109th Street. He was a year ahead of me. I've known since I'm 18. Wally Cox, I went to PS165 at 109th Street. He was a year ahead of me.
Starting point is 00:07:47 I've known Rosemary all my life. Vinnie Price, I've known since I'm 18. I mean, so we were all kind of family and it was fun and I was imbibing a tad in those days. I haven't had to drink in about 45 years, but I wouldn't drink on the show, but we would do three shows and we'd have a big sumptuous dinner and there was wine and Paul Lind and whomever. And so the third season Friday shows were quite wonderful.
Starting point is 00:08:17 You know, we never rehearsed. I just would walk in, who's on the show? And it was amazing, there would be Ginger Rogers or Gloria Swanson or so, and you know, Walter Matha, I would be so excited. And just, we would just wing the whole thing. It was just a, it was a very loving bunch of people, the production staff, and we were on for 16 years and it was a love fest. It was really a lot of fun. Why were the Thursday and Friday shows in particular the looser? Well, there was wine and dinner, that's why.
Starting point is 00:08:51 So by the Thursday and Friday show, they were blasted. Well, some of us were. Not me. No, I never drank on the show. I had too many words. So, no, I was a good boy on the show, but I would see some people just, you were talking about Glenn Ford a little earlier. Yeah. He had Thursday and Friday, we'd have to carry him in. They'd put him on his chair and then go from there. But he loved doing the show.
Starting point is 00:09:22 He was a very sweet man. But he had somebody with him at all times to drive him here and to there and back. And it was amazing. You know, I walked in one night, and George Saunders was on the show. I said, George Saunders was on the show. I was so excited. Anyway, it was a wonderful experience for me because it took me four and a half hours a week to do the show. So I got to work Vegas or we'd get ten weeks ahead and I would go out and do the Music Man or you know, Guys and Dolls or whatever. So it was a blessed job and they paid me wonderfully, I must say.
Starting point is 00:09:58 Now I heard Paul Lynn, when he got blasted, he was more than a handful. He could be grumpy. There's some good stories in your book about him, Peter. Oh, yeah. You know, the book, they said, why don't you do your life story? I said, my life story? Nobody remembers the people. I, you know, like Neil F. Nobody remembers Neil.
Starting point is 00:10:22 I said, nobody will remember anybody. And you talk about Jolson who got me my first job. No, but kids don't remember Al Jolson. Al Jolson got you your first job? He did. I was 14. My sister was in a show called Hold On To Your Hats. My sister was the actress Joanne Drew.
Starting point is 00:10:41 Joanne Drew from Red River and All the King's Men? Red River and All the King's Men, Yeah, and she wore a yellow ribbon. Sure. And her name was Joanna Letitia Lecoque. I'm Ralph Pierre Lecoque. I think our parents wanted us to know how to get along with people, so they gave us these names to show us that life was not easy. So that was a difficult upbringing with those names.
Starting point is 00:11:04 But she went to New York. Our dad had died when she was 14 and I was 10. We were from West Virginia, mom took her to New York and she became, John Robert Powers, the model guy, he gave her the name Joanne Marshall. And so when I got my first name, I was Pete Marshall. I wanted to use my mother's maiden name. But they laughed, they said, well, that would be simple. I would have been Peter Frampton. Wow. Oh wow. That's said, well, that would be simple. I would have been Peter Frampton. Pete Wow. Oh wow.
Starting point is 00:11:25 Pete Isn't that strange? But anyway, he was in love with my sister and he would come, we were living on 93rd Street in West End, Abaddon. He would come up there, my mother couldn't stand him. And he was, my sister was probably 18 to 19 at the time, and there was this old guy. And so, he had Schmooze Mother, and I was sitting there one day, and I was in Usher at the old Riviera Theater. I don't know if it's still there, 96th Street and Broadway. And he said, Hey, are you kidding? What do you want to do?
Starting point is 00:11:54 I said, I want to be in Usher at the Paramount Theater. He says, No kidding. He said, Give me the phone. He dials it. Hello, give me Bobby Whiteman. Bobby's like, Give me Bobby Shapiro. Hello, Bobby. Go over here.
Starting point is 00:12:04 Yeah, I got a favor. Yeah, you got it. Hello, give me Bobby Whiteman. Bobby's not here, give me Bobby Shapiro. Hello, Bobby, Joe here. Yeah, uh-huh, yeah, I got a favor. Yeah, you got it, yeah, yeah. Start Friday. And that's how I got my first job around the business. I was 14, I was 6'3", and weighed about 104 pounds. And I was there for almost, oh gosh, until I got the gig at the NBC,
Starting point is 00:12:21 until I got the page board job, yeah. And one, oh. And what, oh, go ahead. One question I'm supposed to ask you that I've told a couple of times on this show, but I think you are there. Might've been. And that's when you and Paul Lin went into the Gold Diggers. Uh, they were those famous sexy girl dancers. For the D-Mart show. Yeah. for the show yeah yeah well go ahead the story's been told on the show several times but we were told that you what yeah you we were told you had the
Starting point is 00:12:56 definitive versions no actually I was not there Wally Cox was there okay Wally Cox was there. Wally tells the story. Oh, because the way I heard it was that Paul Lin was brought into the Gold Diggers dressing room. That was these sexy girls that would dance in the Dean Martin show. And Paul Lin looked around disgustedly and said, this place smells like cunt. No he didn't say that. He said pussy. See you've been corrected. He said this place smells like pussy and then there was a pause and then he said I think. What made me laugh was the I think. Now the truth can be told. The truth can be told. That's great. We finally got it cleared up.
Starting point is 00:13:54 It's an educational program. You can say anything you want here, Peter. It's just on the internet. I can see that. But tell us about Jolson. You were starting to tell us about Jolson giving you a... He got me that job. You know, and actually us about Jolson giving you a... Well, he got me that job. He, you know, and actually, Joni was in love with a bass player.
Starting point is 00:14:08 I think his name was Artie Bernstein with the Benny Goodman band. But can you imagine? I remember when I went to New York, it was 1938. There was bands everywhere. I mean, you know, at the New York, there was Glenn Miller, Astor Rovabee, the Harry James. You got the Strand, the Capitol, Louis State, and then you had the Rosalind Ballroom, you got, I mean, and music, it was Rodgers and Hart, it was Gershwin, it was cool. The first show I ever saw, I told this at my birthday party, was the thing called Leave
Starting point is 00:14:37 It To Me with Gaxson and Moore. Now, nobody remembers William Gaxson and Victor Moore, but Victor Moore was really a great comedy actor. And there was a little girl in the show who did a strip tease. Now I'm 12 years old. And she went down to Broad Paddies and Cole Porter wrote this song called My Heart Belongs to Daddy. That was Mary Martin. That was my first show. Then I saw Buddy Epson and his sister in a show. And then I saw... My sister took me to the Roxy Theatre when I was 12. And I had no idea, but it was the most glorious theatre I think I'd ever seen. And 12 years later, I'm headlining it. Can you believe that? Little did I know. But New York was
Starting point is 00:15:19 just the most wonderful place because first of all, was run by the mob and so it was clean and nobody bothered you. It was safe. Your sister Joanne Drew married the singer Dick Ames. Dick Ames, right. And that helped you get a leg up in the business. Do I have that right? Well, yeah. I always wanted to be a singer and he was, it was, I had lost, as I mentioned, I had lost my dad. So he was sort of my big brother or father figure, and he was just the greatest singer you ever heard in your life. And they met at the Paramount when she was one of the Copa dancers, and he was singing
Starting point is 00:15:51 with the Harry James band. I think he was making $50 a week, and Joni was making $75. And he's about, oh, about eight months after they got married, he teamed up with a guy by the name of Billy Burton, a manager. And within about three months he was making $25,000 a week. I mean, he had hit record after hit record. Nobody realized that he was bigger than Frank Sinatra at one time. He was the highest paid American for two years in a row.
Starting point is 00:16:16 Dick Ames. Yeah. And who were some of the big gangsters back then? Well, I worked for Frank Costello at the Old Martin Inc. in 1950, and I worked in Chicago. I worked for Dingy and Donjo at the Chez Paris, and I worked for the Fetida Brothers down in Galveston, and every town had this. And I've heard that from every performer says they loved working with the mob. Well, Moe Dalitz was like a surrogate father, and Monty Prozer, it was Monty Prozer's Copacabana,
Starting point is 00:16:50 it wasn't Jack and Trotter's. When Monty had it, Jack and Trotter was the doorman, okay? And Monty Prozer, I met when I was 14 because my sister was a dancer, one of the Copa darlings. And I worked for Moe Dalitz. I knew him in the Marshall. We opened the desert inn in 1950, and Moe was so wonderful to me. And I knew him into his 90s. And he was, in fact, they said, he worked for one of these days, they're going to ask you a favor. I said, really? Do you think so? Anyway, I got this call. This is what I'm doing well. And it's from Moe. He said, Hey, I got a favor to ask. Oh my god. What's he going to ask? He said, would you host the Joe DiMaggio golf tournament?
Starting point is 00:17:34 That was the favor he asked. Not so bad. years ago like there was Rowan and Martins laughing. Right. And I hear you and their straight man, Dan Rowan, you didn't have a high opinion of him. Well, it's not that I didn't have a high opinion, it's not, let me give you, I'll tell you the story. Dan was selling used cars and Dick was a bartender.
Starting point is 00:18:03 They did not know each other. They were not friends and they both wanted to be in show business and they were both very close to Tommy Noonan. Tommy, you know, he passed at 48. He was just a brilliant comic. Your ex, we should tell our listeners, your ex partner, your ex comedy partner. We were new to the Marshalls at one time. We were really the hot guys. In 1950 at the Martinique, we took over New York. We were really, especially on the West Coast, we were huge. But anyway, he had these two friends, I knew Dick, I didn't know Dan, and he said, let's put them together for an act. I said, why ruin their life? He said,
Starting point is 00:18:38 they want to be in show business. So, we wrote their act, we got them an agent, So we wrote their act, we got them an agent, Joe Rollo was a guy who was a very big agent out here in California. We even got them their first job. We were working at a joint in Palm Springs called the Cheechee and Erwin Schuman owned it and we booked ourselves in and then cancelled and we called Erwin and said, we got an act for you. And that's how they started. And over the years they did wonderfully well.
Starting point is 00:19:07 And when Tommy was dying, he was at the motion picture home. He was out there for eight months. So I said to Dan, I said to Dan and Dick, I said, go out and visit Tommy, you know, tell him how to talk about his life. It was, it's going to be okay. And be encouraging. Dick would go out all the time and send money and think, Dan never once went out. And that's, I was, so he was off my list. I just thought he was terrible for that. And Dan was not the nicest guy in the world anyway. He alienated everybody. He would alienate St. Francis, you know, and the Pope, you know. Gosh. Anyway, Saint Francis, you know, and the Pope, you know, I, gosh. Anyway, I, no, I didn't like him, and,
Starting point is 00:19:54 and his children, his son is a very big lawyer out here, and they don't speak to me, of course, and I don't blame them, because I've said nasty things about their father, but I think I'm in the right to do it. And, and then, Frank was telling me that when he, originally originally it was Dan Rowan. Well, you mean for Hollywood Squares? Yeah. I was doing a show in New York called Skyscraper. It was the only musical Julie Harris ever did. I was her leading man and Charles Nelson Reilly and the music was written by Sammy Conn and Jimmy Van Huse and some wonderful songs. I'll only miss her when I think of her. Great song. And it ran about a year and it closed.
Starting point is 00:20:28 They usually give you two weeks notice, but another show called Bejour was coming in. So it's amazing how timing is so important. They gave, I got back to California a week earlier than I should have and the day after I got home I got a call from Bob Quigley. And he said, we're doing a game show. We'd like to talk to you. In those days, I was doing the Kellogg's commercials.
Starting point is 00:20:52 And they were kind of cute. I had like 30 of them running. And his wife remembered me from Noonan and Marshall. And they were looking for this straight. So I walked in, and I saw this pilot they had done a year earlier at CBS with Bert Parks. In fact, I said, he's awfully good. Why aren't you using him? And they said, we're looking for a complete nonentity.
Starting point is 00:21:11 I said, oh really? I'd been in the business 25 years. So they didn't have it. California has no idea what New York is doing. Do you realize that? Yeah, sure. But anyway, I was going to go back and do breakfast at Tiffany's. Abe Burroughs asked me what I like to do with this.
Starting point is 00:21:28 Oh, with Mary Tyler Moore. Yeah. Right. And so they offered me this game show. Well, they talked to me about it and I said to my agent, I said, I want to go back to New York. I was in love with the dancer and I wanted this, yeah, I grew up in New York. I went, yeah. Anyway, I wanted to go back. And so I go back to New York and they called me.
Starting point is 00:21:49 My agent, they said, they want you to do this show called Hollywood Squares for 13 weeks. I said, tell them I'm not really interested. And they said, well, okay, but if you won't do it, Dan Ruhn's going to do it. I said, really? I said, to screw Dan Ruhn, I did the 13 weeks. Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha I said, what do you mean? They went Richard Chamberlain. Well, they never even opened in New York. They did previews, but they never opened the show. So you never know. You take a left, you take a right, you take a shot, then who knows what's going to happen. I don't know. Well, had Dan Rowan become the host of Hollywood Squares, perhaps Rowan and
Starting point is 00:22:35 Martin's laugh-in never comes to be. Well, I'll tell you what kind of a guy he was. It was before laugh-in. Dick never knew this, by the way. I said to Dick, I said, Dick, did you ever know that Dan was up for Hollywood Squares? He said, no. I said, well, there you ever know that Dan was up for Hollywood Squares? He said, no. I said, well, there you go. Never told him. Never told him, yeah.
Starting point is 00:22:50 Yeah, and the Breakfast at Tiffany's turned out to be, as you said, also, a non-starter. Yeah, they'd closed in previews, I think. So the biggest show of your career is cause you wanted to screw over Dan Rowe. That's about right. That's good stuff. That's why I got the big house here.
Starting point is 00:23:12 That's paid for. Was there a second pilot, Peter, of Hollywood Squares with Sandy Barron? Sandy did a pilot. I don't know if he did a pilot. Sandy was a friend of mine, by the way. Yeah, funny guy. Yeah, he was a cute guy. I think he did a run through. I think he did some run throughs. I don't know if they shot... they may have shot a pilot, I don't know. But I don't think so. The only pilot I ever saw was Bert Parks. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:23:35 And now, uh, Rosanne Arquette and, uh, David Arquette. David Arquette, sure. Their grandfather. Was Cliff Arquette, their grandfather. Was Cliff Arquette, yeah. Cliff Arquette, who was known on Hollywood Squares as? Charlie Weaver. Charlie Weaver. Well, he was known throughout his career as Charlie Weaver.
Starting point is 00:23:56 I met him when I was 18. There was a radio show called The Otter Light Show, and he would play Dick Hames' mother. And he would do the radio show in drag. And he was maybe one of the cutest devils you ever met. There was a, I don't know if I put it in the book, I may have, he was single for many, many years and there used to be, what do they call it, a key club? Oh yeah, it's in the book that he would go to key parties.
Starting point is 00:24:27 I did put it in the book. That he was a swinger. Yeah, they would go to all these different housewives. They would all get together. And the husband, he would hire a hooker and take her to this thing. And so it was supposed to be his wife. It was the wives of these guys. So they'd throw the key in the pot. And then he said, I screwed about every cute girl in Redondo Beach or wherever the
Starting point is 00:24:53 heck it was, but he would take a hooker as his wife. So- Pete Slauson It's a page out of Joey Ross. Joe Boudreaux Yeah. Pete Slauson He was the cutest guy you ever wanted to meet and he was a very funny man. I met all the Arquette kids, they did a thing over at the Wilshire Hotel, they asked me to host it for Cliff and I did it. I met Patricia and David and Roseanne who gave me the sweetest hug. She was just, I'm telling you, I don't know her, I don't don't know any of the arc, but that's a sweet girl. You can tell yeah, and and it's so funny because Charlie Weaver
Starting point is 00:25:32 That character of Charlie Weaver right was like this sweet little bumpkin. Oh absolutely He was he was a devil baby of the world let me tell you He had a it was a Civil War of the world, let me tell you. You know, he was a Civil War buff, and he had this, I don't know what it was, back in some place in the East, in Pennsylvania, had all these memorabilia, and he would spend a lot of time back there. He was really into that, yeah. He was just a lovely man. There's a piece in your book, Peter, about him leaving the radio show in drag and then hanging out on Hollywood Boulevard.
Starting point is 00:26:08 Yeah, well, you've got to remember, in the old radio, you'd have to do the show twice. If it were 8 o'clock in New York, that meant you did it at 5 o'clock here for 8 o'clock in New York. And then you'd have to repeat it at eight o'clock in California. So you did the show twice. They didn't record those days. And so he had like three hours, and he used to drink and he would go out in front of CBS in drag and try to pick up sailors, just big facetious, you know. And they would get these reports about this old lady, and the cops would say, it's Cliff, it's Cliff, leave him alone.
Starting point is 00:26:49 But he was a cute guy, let me tell you. Tell us a little bit about Wally Cox, who you also knew as a kid. I loved Wally Cox. Do you know how he got into show business? Well, that's in your book, so that's how I know it. But tell our listeners. Do you know how he got into show business? Well, that's in your book. That's the, so that's how I know it. Tell our listeners. Well, his best friend, they grew up together, was Marlon Brando.
Starting point is 00:27:10 And the funny thing is between the two of them, Marlon was a pipsqueak. You know, Wally was a, he wrote, he was built like, you know, a middleweight fighter, by the way. And he was, had a motorcycle. And he'd say, hey Marlon, let's go look at the flowers. You know, it'd be that springtime. Marlon go, I don't know, he got you, get in the bike, I got away. So he ran the show, believe it or not. And I first met them in New York when I was working with Tommy, probably about 1950, I guess. And they were rooming together and Marlon and I were sort of dating the same girl, Shirley Ballard. And so they would come up to the apartment. That's when I first met Marlon, but I knew Wally. And throughout, he was
Starting point is 00:27:53 never wanted to be in show business. He was a jeweler really. He could build, he could do anything. He was just so clever and he made jewelry. And how they became, they were in military school together, they grew up together in Omaha. And then as I said, I knew him at PS 165 when he was probably about 14 or 13 maybe. Anyway, he would tell these stories from the war. And this one story is about Dupho. He said, I got this guy Dupho. And he did this whole thing on do foo. And they told these stories and they said, why don't you go to the Village Vanguard and do a show? Well, they went down to the Village for one night and in the audience was Irving, what was his name? Greenbaum and, can't think of the other guy. They were developing a show called Mr. Peepers. Oh, Greenbaum and Fritzl.
Starting point is 00:28:44 Fritzl. Yeah, Fritzl. Yeah. yeah, the Fritzl. Yeah, Greenbomb and Fritzl. And they were there that night and they had been looking for Mr. Peepers. Right. And out he came. They said that's the guy. And that was his first job in the business and that's how he got into show business. Incredible. And it's funny because there again, Wally Cox on camera always looked like the ultimate nebbish. Oh, he was, and talk about it, a ladies man. He was really a ladies man. And he, I tell you,
Starting point is 00:29:23 yeah, but he was so sweet and he was so extremely bright. He knew nothing about show business everything about show business. You know, I say Gregory Peck That was Gregory Peck. So one night we gave him up and so everybody knew what he said Gregory Peck It was wrong. So one night we gave him where the answer was Gregory Peck and he said it was Gregory Peck The possessor said no, that's not right It was of course the guy like $800 or something. He, of course, was the voice of underdog. Sure. Mr. Peepers and underdog. There's something in your book, too, Peter, about how when they were kids together that
Starting point is 00:29:53 Marlin would come over to play with Wally and Wally wasn't so into playing with Marlin that he would, that's what you put in the book, that he would pretend he wasn't home. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, sure. I wrote the book, what, ten years ago, so I would have to, you know, look at my notes and things like that. But incidentally, it's a pretty good book. It's sold out immediately. Yes.
Starting point is 00:30:16 And I'm going to take a moment to plug it. It's called Backstage with the Original Hollywood Square. And you can't really find it. I guess you can find it on Amazon. You found it on Amazon. I got it on Amazon, but we're going to plug the Kindle version. Yeah, the Kindle. I get checks every few months from Kindle. It's a fun read full of stories and great pictures. Aren't they wonderful pictures? You know, it got reviews like the most definitive game show book ever written.
Starting point is 00:30:40 It got wonderful reviews. I wrote it with Adrian Armstrong whose husband was Bill Armstrong who was the one of the original producers of Squares who wrote all the great jokes and unfortunately he drank a little too much and he passed early but I missed him terribly. We became very close. And one person you talk about that his name has popped up before on the podcast, all with the same explanation. Hysterically funny on stage, but everyone hated him in person. And that's Jackie Mason. Yeah. I don't really know Jackie Mason, but
Starting point is 00:31:22 we had, you know, we did almost 6 000 shows in 16 years and i think i ask the guys please uh don't invite him back i think i did that twice out of all the hundreds of stars we ever had i tell you why uh he was very good on the show by the the way, but he brought the panel down. You know, one guy could bring the panel. You had nine stars. And if you talk over questions and if you, you know, interrupt people, it just disrupts the whole show. And that's unfortunately what happened with Jack. He, you know, you ever see him on Broadway? He's phenomenal. Oh terrific. Very funny man.
Starting point is 00:32:02 Very funny man. But for some reason, he just didn't work on Squares. No, Paul wasn't on the show for the first year. And then he was in different cubicles and then he became the star of the show. He got much more male than I did. He got love letters and things and you know, I was pretty cute those days. But Paul got all, you know but Paul got all the stuff. Now, I remember watching Hollywood Squares and seeing Groucho Marx. He was on the show. I came in one night and there was Groucho Marx.
Starting point is 00:32:37 And he did that work for him. I tell you how the show works. And Henny Young, I finally got Henny on the show. And we were shooting in Vegas. I did the last year of Squares in Riviera. And Goble was my closest friend on the show. I've known George. We were in Vaudeville. We go back so many years when nobody knew who he was
Starting point is 00:32:58 or who I was. And we loved each other. He was my neighbor. He lived around the corner. And it took me two years to get him on the show. I finally got him on the show and of course he never left. And so we had, we roomed together on the bottom floor of the Riviera and Henny had bad leg. I said, stay with us. Dress with us. Cause you do five shows. And I think he, actually,
Starting point is 00:33:18 I think he was there for maybe 10 shows, whatever. And he came in, he said, how's your show work? I said, here is how the show works i'll ask you a question uh... if you don't have a joke just go to the or if you have a joke like uh... it did you know how many men on the hockey team about half you know whatever the joke is and uh... just as it's but up but up he said i got it the the the the the the 1928, whatever the question was, four guys, he said, these two guys went duck hunting
Starting point is 00:33:52 and they came to us, a duck here, they went home. Yeah, I mean, you know, I mean, and then I said, and I repeated, I said, 1928, he went to another joke. Well, George fell off his chair. I couldn't get him to answer the question. And I finally had to stop tape, which was very rare because he would have done a half hour. But he's one of those guys that, man, he made me laugh. Henny Youngman, you know, I was so lucky. I got to work with Harry Ritz the funniest man
Starting point is 00:34:25 I think I ever saw Harry Ritz everybody copied Harry Ritz yeah you say in the in the book that Jerry Lewis copied a lot from Harry Ritz everybody copied Harry Ritz he was the funniest man around but I got to work with Joe Frisco you probably never heard of Joe Frisco he was just one of the great comics and and I but anyway my life has been, you know, I've worked with Duranty, I've worked with Sinatra, I've worked, I've gotten to work with everybody that I know and I'd love, I worked with Jack Benny, we did a show in 1950 together. You know, I toured with Bob Hope, I've had this blessed life and it's, I got to sing with
Starting point is 00:35:04 Bing Crosby they showed all the stuff the other night of me singing with Dinah Shore was with Dionne Ward with Crosby you know it they found all this wonderful old tape I've been in show business 75 years 90 years now not bad for a kid from West Virginia not a poor kid from West Virginia a poor kid for West Virginia you got it yeah but did Groucho work out on Hollywood Squares? Did his comedy? No, it didn't work for him at all. And after the show, I was so excited, I said, Mr. Marks, I can't tell you what a pleasure it was. I said, I hope we work together. I hope you
Starting point is 00:35:41 enjoyed yourself and I hope you come back. He said, kid, the next time we'll ever get together, we'll have to be socially. He didn't enjoy himself. He did not enjoy himself. But at least he sat there for five shows. A lot of guys didn't work on the show. Great comics. Hackett was good on the show, but Hackett was better than the show. Shecky, who is like family to me. We were kids together. He's from Chicago. His first job was, I was at the Chase Hotel in St. Louis with this headlining, and there
Starting point is 00:36:13 was a little room called the Zodiac Room. As for the time I met him, he did three one-hour shows a night for like $2.50 a week. And that's when I fell in love with that crazy person. But he didn't really work as well. But I think after a while, Shecky would have worked on the show, but he was not happy. But it's the show where you get a question, and you got to, that's why Paul, you know, why do motorcyclists wear leather? Because chiffon wrinkles. I mean, that's the show.
Starting point is 00:36:44 It's got to be bopping up and up. chiffon wrinkles. I mean that's the show. Let's get back to it. Go back to your friend George Goble for a second because there's good stuff about him in the book and I didn't know this there actually was a spooky old Alice. Oh she was. I was out doing, after Squares I did another show called Fantasy with Leslie Elligot. Then I went back to Broadway. I did La Cajua Fall for three years. I did the National Company. Then I did the Palace for a year. And then I did the Neil Simon's Rumors. And I'm at, I'm, where am I? I'm Kansas State. And it was a one-nighter. And we're there and it's sold out. And I get a call from Alice that George had passed and they wanted me to be the, what they never called it, the lead whatever. And I said,
Starting point is 00:37:28 you know something, I cannot do this to the promoter. I cannot walk out of the full house. I said, and the one guy that would know that is George, because he wouldn't have done it either. So I never even got to go to his funeral. But I loved him. He was like, oh, what a wonderful man. got to go to his funeral. But I loved him. He was like, oh, what a wonderful man. He was so funny. He was so original. Noon on the Marshall, we were regulars on his variety show. He was a funny man, George Goebel. There's that wonderful clip of him on the Carson show. You know the clip I'm talking about? Oh, yeah. With Dino and Bob Hope. When they put out the cigarette and it's drink. Yeah, and and he says he makes the joke about the socks. Really funny man.
Starting point is 00:38:08 And he was original by the way. He didn't copy anybody. And nobody was like him before or after. While we wait for Gilbert to find the men's room, we promise we'll come back to the show after a word from our sponsor. Don't go away. FanDuel Casino's exclusive live dealer studio has your chance at the number one feeling, winning, which beats even the 27th best feeling saying I do. Who wants his last parachute? I do.
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Starting point is 00:39:18 Shop Old Spice Total Body Deodorant now. And now back to the show. Did you say interview Dick Van Dyke? We did. We had him a couple of weeks ago. Noter it now. Now back to the show. Did you say interview Dick Van Dyke? We did. We had him a couple of weeks ago. Wasn't he cute? Great.
Starting point is 00:39:32 I mean, we're the same age. He's a little, I think he turned 90 about two months before. He also has a young wife. I have a young, beautiful wife. I met 30 years ago when I was 60 and she was 25. That's embarrassing. I've always hated old guys with young girls and here I am. Good work if you can get it, buddy.
Starting point is 00:39:51 I think Dick, when his last wife passed, I think he kept saying, you know, Pete may have a good idea here. And he married this lovely girl who I don't really know her, I've met her. Arlene. Yeah. And we have so many similarities, yet we're not close friends or anything, we know each other. But during the war, I was in Italy during the war, and I was a disc jockey. And during the war, he was a disc jockey.
Starting point is 00:40:17 And after the war, I was with Noonan and Marshall, and after the war, he did an act with three guys. And then he did Bye Bye Birdie in New York with Cheetah Rivera, and I did Bye Bye Birdie in London with Cheetah Rivera. And then he got a hit TV series, I had a hit TV series. Then he did all these wonderful big movies, and I did all these terrible movies. But I'm doing the Frank Sinatra one year, and we used to do an after show, a bunch of us. And Frankie Randall, who passed this past year, broke my heart. He was my closest friend.
Starting point is 00:40:49 And he was playing the piano. And I said, you know, there's a guy in the audience, we're similar. We're not that close, but we're similar. And I'd love to do, put on a happy face with him. He got up. I would love to have a film of Van Dyke and myself doing put on a happy face. Oh gosh. That'd be a gift. On the podcast, I got Dick to sing Put on a Happy Face
Starting point is 00:41:09 with me in a duet. There you go. But as I said, I'm a huge fan. He is just so delightful and so talented. And I don't think he has a clue how good he is. I really have no idea. Interesting. I don't think he does really not know how wonderful he is, but he's wonderful.
Starting point is 00:41:28 And you worked with Phil Silvers. I did. I worked with... Phil Silvers to me was the greatest straight man that ever lived. We talked about George Burns who was quite wonderful. And Jack Benny actually was a straight man. He was straight to all those great comics. But the greatest straight man I ever saw work, you've got to remember that's how he started in Burlesque. He was a straight man with Rags Raglan. And if you ever saw Phil Silvers and Rags Raglan, there's some film on them, by the way, doing Who's on First? Long before Abbott and Gestalt. Really? Interesting. Wow.
Starting point is 00:42:06 Oh, who's on first is Noel Berlesquett. Yeah. Yeah. And the first film ever done on who's on first is Phil and Rags. And it's out there somewhere. And it's just, you know, one night we're at the Lord Tarleton Hotel floor, we're working somewhere, and Tommy used to drink a lot, and I wouldn't drink too much, I never drank too much. And Phil is doing, he's on, and it's a benefit, and he's hosting it,
Starting point is 00:42:31 and he's brilliant. And Tommy keeps interrupting him. And so he got Tommy up with him, and Tommy didn't say a word, and Tommy's never been funnier. And that's when I said to myself, I'm, maybe I'm not that good, you know, because it was, it was all Phil Silvers. What he did with Tommy was brilliant. He was great. And, you know, he was a gambler. He had worked Vegas and all the money he made on television and that hike, you know, at the show, the Bilko show. He blew in Vegas and Reno and wherever and oh my god. But I loved him very much. Yeah, you know, as I said, that was a great era there and everybody was sort of available and I got to work with a lot of wonderful people in my life. And tell us about knowing Uncle Mildy. You've known him since he was, since you were a kid.
Starting point is 00:43:23 When I was a page boy, I first met him. His wife was in Hold On To Your Hats with my sister and Al Jolson and Martha Ray and Jinx Falkenberg. I'm trying to think of her name. It'll come to me in a second. She divorced Milton and then married Billy Rose and then divorced Billy Rose and remarried Milton. So I've known Milton since I'm maybe 14, 15 years old. And he was always very, very kind to me. I used to do a show at the old Vanderbilt Theater. I paged the Fred Waring show. And it was like on a Thursday night. And they would do the broadcast and they'd do it. And then he and I just had our name in the first. He and his wife would pick me up and take me out to dinner. And Milton was wonderful
Starting point is 00:44:06 to me all my life. I've known him all my life. And he did squares. Yeah, he did a lot in fact. And your book, he complained, you said he complained about his dressing room. Oh, that's one of my favorite stories. It was like the second week of the show. And they came to me and said, Milton Berle is very unhappy. I said, why? They said, he doesn't like his dressing room and he's going to leave. What are we going to do? I said, Milton Berle is very unhappy. I said, why? They said, he doesn't like his restroom and he's going to leave. What are we going to do? I said, I'll handle it.
Starting point is 00:44:30 So I go back and I said, Milton, now we did five shows, so he's got five jackets hung up. I said, Milton, go home. This is a dumb game show. You're Milton Berle. There's no way you should be doing this show. Go home, don't worry about it. I could call Toluca Lake, I could get Joanne Worley, I could get Abby Dalton,
Starting point is 00:44:51 I could, Milton, go home. He said, what are you talking about? I said, I know you're unhappy with your dressing room. He said, I built the studio, you know, this is a lousy dressing room. I said, you're absolutely right, and Milton, go home. He said, I'm not going to go home, I've got these five jackets, and I've never quit a job in my life. He said, Ed, I said, you're absolutely right and Milton, go home. He said, I'm not going to go home. I got these five jackets and I've never quit a job in my life. He said, I'm doing the show. I said, okay. So I walk in, they said, what's going on? I said, let's not talk about it.
Starting point is 00:45:13 It's going to be okay. That was it. And now I can't let Milton Berle's name be mentioned. Uh oh, Peter. On the show without talk about his famous apparatus. Yes. He I never saw it I won't give you some trivia about Milton. I bet you don't know Very few people know this he had the leavened toes Yeah, so it made a bit of an addendum I have no idea extra foot
Starting point is 00:45:44 So so there were several physical abnormalities. He and Forrest Tucker and a couple of other guys were very famous for their apparatus, yeah. I knew him well but not that well. Thanks for not dodging the question Peter. I heard Forrest Tucker once hit a golf ball. I mean he had to get on his knees. I don't die. That can't be. No, no. I played golf a lot with Forrest Tucker on a calabasas. You know, I used to play, this is true, I'd play with Forrest Tucker and Mickey Rooney, two of the craziest people I ever knew in my whole life. Oh gosh. As long as we're talking about the old days, let's talk a little bit about Newton and Marshall and Gilbert was talking about your movie, The Rookie.
Starting point is 00:46:32 You know, they just showed it the other day, so I got a couple of calls. We did a movie, it cost $158,000 to do this movie. Fox was dead, Fox was dying. They, Cleopatra, there was a show about a guy on a boat, I can't think of that show, and it was one, I think Jerry Wald had an office over there. Anyway, they said they would do this movie, and Tommy, George O'Hanlon wrote it. Remember George O'Hanlon? He was the voice of George Jetson. Yeah, George Jetson.
Starting point is 00:47:07 That's right. And he was also the guy behind the eight ball, the old shorts. Remember that? Oh, you two, you guys are too young. In movies, they would have shorts after the movie and they had like a 10 minute little- What, these like the Pete Smith? Yeah, yeah. And it was called The Man Behind the Eight Balls. He was always falling off a roof or something. Anyway, George wrote this thing and Tommy and he sold it to Fox.
Starting point is 00:47:34 And we did this movie in about, I don't know, three weeks, whatever it was. And there was nobody there. It was just, Julie Numhmar was in it. She was long before she was famous. And we did this dumb movie. And it was a smash hit. You know, for years they would have a cult in New York where they would show the movie once a year
Starting point is 00:47:58 and people would come to see this movie. I just saw it recently. It was okay. The scenes I like, we played two Japanese guys that are two men, some of them capture ourselves. That was kind of fun. But this movie, the head of the studio called because we did a movie after it was awful, that didn't do very well at all. He said, you know, your little movie kept the studio open for a year. He said, thank God for your movie because that's how the studio stayed open. Yeah, the rookie did very well. It was a big,
Starting point is 00:48:29 big hit. With Joe Besser. Joe Besser. I love Joe Besser. You know, I can tell you stories about Joe Besser. You know that Lou Costello copied Joe Besser. Yeah, it was just, we read an interview with Cliff Nester often. It was very interesting that you said that. He put Cliff Nesteroff, he put Joe Besser on a contract. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:48:48 He wouldn't let him work. He paid him so he wouldn't work. Costello. Yeah. Oh, just so he could hide the fact. That Joe Besser was much funnier than Lusa Stelho. Wow. Interesting. And then your second movie was Double Trouble, which was originally written for Martin and Lewis?
Starting point is 00:49:07 I think so, and it wasn't very good. I didn't see it because after the movie finished, I was offered this job in London, and I said, Tommy, you know, I don't want to do the act anymore. And we'd broken up once before and became Marshall and Farrell for about four years. We were signed to do Gentlemen Prefer Preferred Blondes, he opposite Marilyn Monroe and me opposite Jane Russell. And Darrell Zanuck was in New York and saw a guy, what the heck was his name? I can't think of it. Anyway, he signed him to do the, so they paid me off and Tommy played opposite. That's, if you go see Gentleman Preferred Blondes, that's my partner. Tommy Noonan played Gus opposite Marilyn Monroe. And he got hot after that and he really couldn't do the act.
Starting point is 00:49:50 So we broke up and I teamed up with Tommy Farrell and then I got back with Tommy when they opened the Tropicana. We went in there for almost a year in a book show called Monty Proser Loved Us. And then we did the movies and I was offered Bye Bye Birdie in London. I said, Tommy, I'd love to do this. He said, as your partner, it's gonna screw me up, and as your friend, you're nuts if you don't. And we never had an argument,
Starting point is 00:50:16 we were, but that's what broke up Noonan and Marshall. I went to London, and then I went to Vegas with it, and you know, I was out of my own for the first time. And it was quite wonderful. But Tommy died at 48. He was a brilliant comic and he would make a million dollars. He did a thing called Promises Promises, not the Broadway show. Long before the Broadway show with Jane Mansfield.
Starting point is 00:50:42 And it was just awful, but she's nude through the whole thing and nobody had ever done that and and they couldn't get a release on it and anyway his wife called me poke he called me one night and said think about these pictures in Playboy magazine of Tommy and Jane Mansfield nude all over the place I said honey go to bed you're gonna get a release and that's exactly what happened Tom made a fortune that he went to Europe and bought all these terrible movies he went broke again they did another movie and when he got sick he wasn't doing well but he was this one what I called him the Irish Mike Todd up and down up and down but he was fun did you guys do a pilot for Jackie Gleason I did Marshall and
Starting point is 00:51:22 Farrell Marshall and Farrell without Tommy yeah. Marshall and Farrell. Marshall and Farrell without Tommy. Yeah, Marshall and Farrell. That was Cafe Mardi Gras. You could buy it by the way. They showed it the other night at my birthday party. They showed a portion of it. What is it called? It's called Cafe Mardi Gras. He loved the way I sang. I used to work the Billy Gray's Bad Box with Tommy and he always come in. He was doing The Life of Riley. People don't remember Jackie Gleason doing The Life of Riley. Oh yeah, sure. But he did it. Skinny. Jackie Gleason doing The Life of Riley. Oh yeah, sure. But he did it, yeah. Skinny and Dick.
Starting point is 00:51:47 And Jackie Gleason. And when I'd work in New York, he'd always be there. He said, Pally, I'm going to do a pilot. Pally and Tommy would get excited. Tommy Farrell. I said, he's drunk, don't worry about it. He came in, he said, we're doing a pilot. They shot one of the most expensive pilots ever done at that color studio up on Broadway. I had the Paul Whiteman Orchestra. Paul Whiteman. I had as guest Sammy Davis, Hilda Gard. I had all the dancers.
Starting point is 00:52:13 I had the seven Ashton. And we did this wonderful pilot that they showed at Toot Shores on a big screen. It was glorious. And he gave me, he said, go buy yourself a Jaguar. I said, could you lend me four bucks to get to the East Side, you know? And the next day I'm wandering around MCA or William Morris and they're all looking at it on a small screen. And it looked like an old MGM movie. And I said, this will never sell because it's too big. It was huge. We had 28 dancers.
Starting point is 00:52:45 never sell because it's too big. It was huge. We had 28 dancers. We had, and that's when the screen was small, you know. So it never sold, but it was a good pilot. And I think it's called Cafe Mardi Gras. Cafe Mardi Gras. We'll look for that. We'll definitely look for it. I read an odd story of some hotel you worked at where the owner of the hotel did jail time for I think you along. Yes, I could talk about it. I'm not going to mention names. Only because it's a long time ago, but I'm sure there's some offshoots. A guy I knew very well, only after he got out of jail, went to jail for nine years. And when he got out of jail, they gave him the Roosevelt Hotel in New Orleans. And that was his hotel, Lock, Stock and Barrel. And he was just one of the most genteel, nice men I knew and we used to work it all the time yeah I worked the Roosevelt Hotel in New
Starting point is 00:53:48 Orleans you mean he was instructed to take the fall for Huey Long and I don't know if he I don't know how it worked out but I see the fall for Huey Long yeah nine years yeah but he did the jail time for nine. Wow. Yeah, but he had a beautiful hotel when he came out. What do you remember about your Dean Martin roast, Peter? I was looking at some of it today on YouTube, and it's fascinating to see Foster Brooks and Orson Welles and Joey Bishop and your friend Vincent Price, and everybody giving you the business. I was so busy in those days. I was working in Vegas about 27 weeks a year. I was doing Hollywood Squares. I was doing specials and I get a call from Greg Garrison. That was
Starting point is 00:54:37 his show. He was the producer. He said, Hey, Kitty, I go back to the old Kate Smith show when he was directing that. He said, hey, we want to roast you on the Dean Martin show. I said, I don't have time. And he said, it's 35,000 and it takes you about two hours. I said, I'll be there. And I had turned it down, but Greg, I went there and I did the show and it was, and what's
Starting point is 00:55:08 his name? The guy that used to write for Burl, what the heck was his name? He wrote for years, it was just the worst material in the world. So I called a couple of guys and they wrote me some nice jokes. You know, Jaja's nice, they have you sitting up, you know. Her name is Rosemary, the reason being her family didn't want her to have a last name. They did, you know, some cute stuff. But I had a great joke. I said, Orson, it's so good to see Orson again. I was stationed on him in World War II.
Starting point is 00:55:35 They cut that joke. But these guys wrote me some real cute stuff, you know, and if I could do anything, I could do that kind of stuff. And it was wonderful. I got all these wonderful reactions and I have it. I have it, which is so nice. I have a lot of old stuff, you know, that they showed the other night. They showed a lot of stuff the other night, things I never saw. Yeah, it was really fun. It was a wonderful party they threw me. And you were talking about Tony Randall? Tony Randall, you know what his real name was? Leonard Rosenberg. You got it. Yeah. But there's a piece in your book about him not being terribly cooperative on the squares and you called him out on the air?
Starting point is 00:56:26 I did and he was very upset and he said, you know, that was very unprofessional. And I said to him, I said, you know something Tony, you're a pain in the ass, but you're dead right, that wasn't professional. And he was right, I should never have done it on the show. But he kept interrupting and kept going and I finally said, I said, Tony, if I got you're a pain in the butt. And he was very taken back. But he came back. He kept doing the show.
Starting point is 00:56:51 He was, and I liked him so much, you know, but he could be a pain. Yeah. But he, you know, he, he was very good to Klugman. I don't think Klugman had a piece of odd couple. And when the show was over, I know that Tony gave him a piece. And Clugman didn't have to work for the rest of his life, I think. He did, but he didn't have to. That's nice. So Tony Randall helped support Clugman.
Starting point is 00:57:16 Yeah. He was very nice to Clugman, yeah, because it was his deal. Here's some more stuff about Squares, Peter, that's the fun stuff in the book. I mean, can you tell us what the locks box was? The lock, oh yeah, it was the square on the bottom, the three squares, the one in the middle because it rarely got called upon. So if somebody was really dull, we would put them there. Locks, L-O-X. That was the locks box.
Starting point is 00:57:42 Right, right. And there's a story about Red Fox giving a hard time, like kind of harassing. Oh, Sandy Duncan. She said, yeah, I'm doing the show. I'm doing the show and Sandy Duncan is going, oh, oh, oh. I said, what the heck's going on? Well, he was saying to her, hey, have you ever seen a black one? I'm going to show you a black one right here. And he was doing all this terrible stuff to Sandy Duncan. So after the show she was
Starting point is 00:58:11 crying and they said, what are we going to do? And I said, don't worry about it. We put her up where Tony was. Oh, God. Fun. You want to talk about fun? That was fun. And another time a contestant showed up, I'm going to see if you remember this story, and Pat Butram, who was one of the celebrities, recognized the contestant. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:58:39 We couldn't use her, right? Because she was a... Yeah. Yeah. A courtesan. Yeah, a lady of the evening. Yeah. Talk about Pat Butrom. He wrote jokes for everybody, you know, for nothing. He was one of the best joke writers that ever lived. Mr. Haney from Greenacres. Yeah. The last thing he ever did was with me in Linton, Indiana for Phil Harris.
Starting point is 00:59:05 Phil Harris was a very close friend. I know Phil all my life because of my sister. It's too long a story. I've known him since I'm a teenager. And I just loved him to death. And I would go back to Linton with Roy Clark and other people and do shows for his birthday. And we'd play golf or whatever. And the last time he went back,
Starting point is 00:59:28 he went back with me, and the last time Pat ever worked was with me in Linton. It was Roy Clark, Pat Buttermann, myself. My goodness. And he got sick, but he would write jokes for every, he was one of the great joke writers and one of the funniest men you ever Want to know yeah
Starting point is 00:59:47 He was very close to Gary Owens Gary's gone now. Yeah, we we were wanted to have Gary on this show in the worst way Yeah, he was terrific and they my neighbor live right around a quarter from me here Yeah, what do you remember about Gary Owens who for our audience? Was the announcer of 11? And many other things. Yeah, but Gary was one of the top radio guys. I'm on Music of Your Life.
Starting point is 01:00:11 I've been doing Music of Your Life for over 20 years. You can catch me in New York. I have two stations in New York. I used to have 208 AM stages. Now we're down to 36, but I'm like you guys. I'm on the internet. Just go to musicofyourlife.com. I'm on at 9 o'clock on the West Coast every day for two hours and at noon, I guess, in
Starting point is 01:00:30 New York. And I don't listen to the show. It's radio, and I tape it right around the corner. In fact, it's Tito Jackson's old studio. It's his mansion right here in Encino. But Gary was on Music of Your Life and Wig Martindale and all, and he was just, and he taught me an awful lot about radio. And I play all big band music and all the great singers. My thing is all 40s, 50s music, you know, and I, I know everybody I talk about. I've worked
Starting point is 01:00:59 with most of the people and I tell stories and play this music and it's been very successful actually for 20-some years. But Gary was one of the people and i tell stories and and play this music and has been very successful actually from twenty some years but gary was one of the top radio guys in the country yeah a versatile talent and he did voice he did cartoon voice services original ghost voice of space ghost he and what's his name uh... stan uh... well not stan stan stan freberg yeah but the other guy
Starting point is 01:01:23 the little tiny guy Well, anyway, they were big voiceover guys, yes, Dan Irwin no, no, no Your audience wouldn't even know him. I guess you guys would know you know how he first met him I was doing the millionaire remember the millionaire. Oh, yes. Yeah, it gave away a million dollars a year I was getting i think seven hundred fifty dollars working the whole week and the first shot we're all getting makeup the first shot this rolls royce picks up that pulls up this little tiny guys paul freese paul freese oh very freese the most famous of all sure the busiest of all greatest all he gets out of this rolls he's in a suit, they go, he sits in a chair,
Starting point is 01:02:06 they make up his hand. They make up his hand! And he's got a script in front of him, he's like, well today's the recipient of the millionaire. And he reads it, gives Marvin Miller the envelope, and he gets in the rolls and he leaves. He was paid like $2,500. I said, that's what I want to do. But Paul, he was the millionaire, but you never saw him. All you saw was the hand, the hand in the envelope. Oh, he did millions of movies. Paul Freese, yeah. He was so big that he wouldn't go to a studio. You would have to go, he finally lived up in San Francisco. You would have to fly to his studio to record him. That's how big he was. You know Orson Welles didn't want to do the wine commercial so he did it and he
Starting point is 01:02:50 sounded just like Orson Welles. Wow, he looped Orson Welles. He was on radio. That's great. He was on radio and so something before it's time, remember that? Paul Masson. Yeah. He had no wine before it's time. Finally, he wound up, Orson Welles started doing it himself because he's out of all this money. But Paul Freese could do anybody. He was brilliant.
Starting point is 01:03:16 Yeah. We will return to Gilbert Gottfried's amazing colossal podcast, but first a word from our sponsor. Tell us about, I was telling Gilbert this from the book and it's a fun story and I believe you have this framed in your house. Is it a letter from John Wayne? A threatening letter. He's going to beat me up.
Starting point is 01:03:35 I love this. Yeah, I got this letter from John Wayne and it goes on and on. The question was, according to Rona Barrett, what did John Wayne's children call him? And the answer was, sir. Well, he took umbrage to that and wrote me this, he's going to beat me up and I have to do it on the air to apologize and if not, I've got the, it's one of my prized possessions. Yeah. I have it in my house and I have it framed with John's picture and guns all around it. I don't have a recording unfortunately, but I once did a joke about Marlon Brando on Hollywood
Starting point is 01:04:15 Squares and Whoopi Goldberg received an angry phone call from Marlon Brando. There you go. people watch the show yes uh... i got i also have to ask you about uh... uh... another another fun squares question that's in the uh... that's in the book peter did you rosemary paul lincaron valentine and then that that break all go to a topless bar we did uh...
Starting point is 01:04:42 it was the topless bar it was a nude place. I mean everybody was nude. A nude bar, excuse me. It just opened in Van Nuys and now we're doing squares and I said, hey this nude place is just open and let's all go. So it was Rosemarie and Paul and I was very close to Charles Nelson Riley. It was Charlie, Nanette Fabreenette Fabre, all of us, we went. And they had not only new 18 year old new dancers, they had these graphic movies showing on the wall. And after about eight minutes, I said, you know, something isn't really, it was boring. So we left.
Starting point is 01:05:21 About three minutes after we left, it was rated. Nice. Oh. It would have been wonderful to have us all in jail. Oh my God. Paul in, in jail, in a nude bar, and Rosemary and Karen Valentine and Nanette Fatt. I was, oh, I laughed so hard. I said, that would have been so much fun. It was rated about three minutes after we left. Yeah. I love that one.
Starting point is 01:05:43 Yeah, we had a lot of fun on that show. And then some. Now I was surprised to hear that the great character actor Sid Gould. Sid Gould? Did you love Sid Gould? Do you know that he once did an act with Ralph Young? Remember Sandler and Young sure oh, yes Yeah, we saw that on Cliff Nester off's website. We still want to get what's Tony Young on this show I know the Ralph Young and Tony Sandler Tony Sandler Yeah, we want to get him on this show. No you get Tony Let me know I'd love to see him again
Starting point is 01:06:32 He was my production singer at the I used to play the Latin Quarter, maybe for 15 years in New York. I had to play with Noonan and Marshall and Marshall and Farrell. We'd play it up a couple of months a year. I don't know if it's in the book. Did I ever tell you the Sophie Tucker story? Oh, no. We were going to ask you about it. It's on my card. You did the Sullivan show with Sophie Tucker, didn't you? No, I was working the Latin Quarter. Oh, the Latin Quarter. Yeah, and I was there three months where they said Sophie Tucker and Noonan and Marshall or maybe could have been Marshall and whatever, Marshall and Farah. Anyway, in the three months all she ever said to me was, that was about it. She was just mean and she was, I tell you, well, I don't know what the, one of the dancers did something. He may have done a crossover in front of her, but she tried to get him fired. And Ed Rissian, who ran the Latin quarter, wouldn't do it, of course.
Starting point is 01:07:21 But she had him, I don't know what, but he was very upset. This is a true story. He came in the next night with a Sophie Tucker doll. He made a voodoo doll. And in front of all of us, in front of all of us, this is true, he took a needle and he stuck it into her left hip. Now, not a week later, not three months, an hour later, she's coming down to steps at the Latin Quarter, she falls and breaks her left hip, and I go, never screw with a dancer at the show. Wow. Never cross a dancer, never with the gypsies leave them alone. That's a true story. I was
Starting point is 01:08:01 there, I saw that. That's my Sophie Tucker story. Wow. And then she would go after the thing. She would sell books, you know, for charity. Of course, she kept all the money. She was something. There's so many people we could ask you about, Peter, as we wind this down. And there's so many questions. And we could talk to you for hours. And you're such a great sport. I don't know what to ask you about. Sammy, Jonathan Winters, your buddy that... Sammy started, that was our opening act, the Will Mastintrio. Paid him $7.50 a week. New
Starting point is 01:08:35 England Marshall's opening act, yeah. How about that, Gil? Yeah. Will Mastintrio? You know what they used to give Sammy? Will, they'd give him $8 a week. And his teeth were going bad. So I took him to my dentist, Dr. Gamble, and got his teeth fixed. Yeah, I go back a long time. You know, when he became famous, it was a long time he didn't speak to me, and I couldn't figure out why. And now I'm in London. There's this wonderful private club that all the actors
Starting point is 01:09:01 belong to, and I'm with Cheetah and with cheetah and bunch of us and at the bar and he comes over to me he's living in london at the time he comes over to be a say a man i'm sorry and i looked at a race that you little shit you should be sorry i don't know why he didn't talk to me i have no idea
Starting point is 01:09:20 how strange never do anything to you i loved him he was uh... like family do anything. I loved him. He was like family to me. I just loved him. So Sammy Davis, you helped out. You fixed his teeth. Everybody, hey, there are many people that helped me out. In the old days, that's what we did. We each helped everybody. We wouldn't steal material. If we were in a club and say we're at Eddie's in Kansas City, we say we'd say to the Eddie brothers Hey, there's a great act, you know
Starting point is 01:09:48 We plug each other. We helped each other. It was a family affair in the old days yeah, not as crazy as it is today, I wouldn't want to be young and and Trying to fight the battle today and what was Vincent Price like the best? I knew him since I was 18. As I said, I, you know, Dick Haynes was the number one guy over at Fox and he was on the contract of Fox. And I first met Vincent when I was 18. And he was, he was another devil baby. And he was just, we took cruises together, you know? He and Carol, Coral Brown, he married this wonderful English actress, and we took cruises together and we, yeah, we were close.
Starting point is 01:10:31 We were, yeah. He was a wonderful man. There's a salacious story in your book, and can I bring it up? Of course. With your ex-wife and Coral Brown and Vinnie, and Vincent Price said to you? Oh yes, we were on a cruise. And it was Coral, I think, that said to Sally, she said, you know, you, Vinnie and myself,
Starting point is 01:10:55 would make a lovely trio. And Sally laughed a lot. To his wife. To his wife. She gave action. I've had a wonderful offer. Now, did you ever work with Jerry Lewis? I've opened for Jerry many times, yeah.
Starting point is 01:11:12 When I put my act together in 1977, I put an act with five kids very successfully. We worked continually for about 11 years, called the Chapter Five. Monica Mancini was my lead singer. I needed a break-in date, and Joey Stabiel, Dick Stabiel's brother, was his manager. And I needed a break-in date because we had a date at the Flamingo, we went in for four weeks, for Bill Miller, a wonderful man. And Jerry heard about it, and he called and said, I'm here at the South Door Theater, I'll be here a week, I need an opening act. I've only got 9,000, but you are welcome to come.
Starting point is 01:11:48 And we came in, it was, what a great break because we broke in the act, we opened the Flamingo, and got a five year deal with Summa, you know, with Howard Chooses. Jerry, I opened for at the Sahara many times and other places, and he was wonderful to me. You hear these stories, he was wonderful to my singers. I don't have a bad thing to say about Jerry Lewis.
Starting point is 01:12:14 Wow, that's good to hear. And you made a movie with Art Carney and Lucy. I did. Yeah. You could probably get that on, it was a television movie called Happy Anniversary and Goodbye. Right. And we talk about Art Carney on this show, he's a favorite of Gilbert's and mine. What can you tell us about him?
Starting point is 01:12:35 Well, I was offered the movie and I turned it down. I had worked with Lucy on The Lucy Show. I played her brother-in-law with the great Janet Waldo, the great radio actress, played my wife. And it was the time of the Cuban crisis and I have four kids, I'm just worried about where we're going to hide them. And they're worried about the show and Lucy wasn't very nice to me. In fact, she was awful to me.
Starting point is 01:13:01 And well, I must say after the show, she knocked on my door. She said, you were wonderful on this show. And they offered me 13 shows. Uh, and I turned it down and I needed the job. I just didn't want to work with her. So many years later, I'm doing squares and I'm kind of hot. And, uh, they, they called me and said, Hey, they want you, Lucy wants you for this movie called happy anniversary and goodbye. I said, I don't want to do this movie. I don't want to work with that woman. So, they called me back about, oh gosh, two days later and her husband at the time said, are you nuts? Everybody in this town, every young guy wants this part. I said, I don't want to work with your wife. And he said, you don't have any scenes with my wife.
Starting point is 01:13:47 All your scenes are with Art Carney. I said, I'll do it for scale, you know? And I had met Art Carney, but I never worked with him. And I got to work with Art Carney. Now we're doing the read through, you know, you do a read through. I said, have you ever worked with Lucille Ball before? He said, no. He said, I'm real excited about it. I said, you'll quit. He said, I'm not going to quit. Well, we're doing the read through. She said, that's a terrible
Starting point is 01:14:14 reading. He thought she was kidding. And she starts criticizing his read. Well, he quits. So I grab him and I said, you can't do this to me. Alright, the only reason I'm doing this damn thing is because of you. It's the only reason I'm doing it. Well the next day, so he came back the next day, Nanette Fabre, she quits. Now Art and I are after Nanette Fabre. Actually, he became very close to Lucy. She was strange. I guess socially, I was never socially with her.
Starting point is 01:14:48 They say she was lovely. But to work with her, she was a tough old broad. But people adore her, and she has such nice kids. I mean, Lucy, young Lucy is just wonderful. I don't know her son too well. Didn't she show up on the set of squares complaining? Yes, she wanted more things and she wanted him to have his own square. Then he was Desi and Bobby and Fred, I don't know what they were. Desi, Dino and Billy. There you go. She wanted his own square.
Starting point is 01:15:19 They were all in one square. They were all in one square. But she was there every show. While she came, boy, she was there. She was a good mama. And yeah, but that was my story with, but I can remember, Arnold Schwarzenegger, it's his first part. Oh, that's right. I've seen the clip. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:15:38 The first thing he ever did. He's a masseuse. He's a masseuse. Right. And he comes in, he's as big as a house, and he has one line or something. And Art Cardy ad lib this. We did it in front of an audience. You know, you do it live.
Starting point is 01:15:51 He walks in, and he sees this guy, and then he leaves, and then he says goodbye to Lucille Schwarzenegger does. And Art just looks, he says, ete brut. There's one story in the book. I know you wrote the book over 13 years ago, Peter, but I'm going to jog your memory on this one. Diana Doors. Do you know the story I'm referring to? A real name? Yeah. Yeah. Oh, that's it. You know, I just did a thing with her son.
Starting point is 01:16:22 We just shot a thing with Alex Trebek. He's the special for Canada. And he did a special on all the game show hosts. And his son is the director. And Diane is Dickie Dawson. Right, she was Richard Dawson's wife. And I said, who's your mom? He said, Diane Adores. And there's a story that goes, I wasn't there, but the story is her real name is Diana Fluck. That's her real name, Diane Fluck. That's her real name. And a guy, it was in England, the guy was very nervous about Fluck. he said that here she is Diane Clunt.
Starting point is 01:17:08 Now I don't know if that's a true story but it's a funny story. I find that one in the book. It's too good. I took a post-it and put it right on that story. I said Gilbert will like that one. Hey Gilbert, you got to read the book. It's a good read. Yeah and there's one story here that we have to shoehorn in here that Glenn Ford when he was on the show one of the questions had to do with silk stockings.
Starting point is 01:17:41 Yeah. And I think you do you remember what Glenford said? I think, I think we told it, did we? No, we were off mic then. Oh yeah. We were off mic. We're going to repeat it. Yeah, you repeat the story though. Well, you had said in the book that you always tried, he was afraid of looking, he was insecure and he was afraid of looking dumb. So you always asked him questions about things he knew. you always played to his strengths yes that's true questions about guns in the military and Westerns yeah but at one point you asked him about a question about women's stockings oh yeah if it should they be kept in the freezer correct yeah and he said oh go ahead I
Starting point is 01:18:22 forget it he said how the hell should i know all uh... as vincent price as sees a room arrow sees a uh... is a hellishly as sees a room arrow uh... god sees a room arrows name is popped up several times in this podcast there's another sweet man i'd fact uh... you know how old he would have been today. He said to me once, he was very, he was so sad. I said, what's wrong with you? He said, I'm
Starting point is 01:18:52 going to be 60 today. He said, I'm 60 years old today. I said, what's wrong with that? You look great. He said, yeah, but in 10 years, I'm going to be 70. We played played a I did a fantasy island where we were I was married to Jane Powell and She was having an affair with Caesar Butch that's what we all call the butch and a nicer man never lived I tell you the old guys they were the old guys, they were the best. I think we all came out of poverty and we just appreciate what we had. You've had a charmed run, Peter. You've had a wonderful...the people you've worked with. It's my 75th year doing this stuff.
Starting point is 01:19:37 Yeah, congratulations. The book is terrific. Thank you. I wish you could buy it. I wish I could get some kind of a royalty out of it. Our fans will find it. And you're still working. I am. I've still got the music of your life. Oh, one cute story. I just worked at Cerritos, which is a beautiful performing arts center. I do big band concerts. I just work with the Tex Medici band. Tex is no longer with us, the band is and i did we did very well so my manager of uh... she's only been with me sixty some years
Starting point is 01:20:11 gloria burke we've been together forever and she's her birthday is next week she's going to be 90 anyway she called she's hey the serenity wants you back and they want you with the benny goodman band in march this is like six weeks ago i I said, well, hey, that's pretty good That's really soon. She said no March 2017. I Said if I can remember my name or a lyric I'll show up, you know You look great to us you look like you're in fine fettle. I am in fine fettle and I do I still work I still garden I still goo. I got the most wonderful wife in the world. I am in fine fettle and I still work, I still garden, I still go.
Starting point is 01:20:45 I got the most wonderful wife in the world. I got 12 grandkids, I got 7 great grandkids and my life is just about as good as you can get. This is something I was going to say. It's like anyone listening to this show knows your voice sounds exactly the same. Yeah. We grew up on the squares and your voice hasn't changed at all. No it hasn't. I'm singing better than I've ever sung in my life. Don't ask me why. The other night
Starting point is 01:21:11 when they had my birthday, they had me singing, you know, with Dionne Warwick, they had me sing with Dinah and from the Gordon Jenkins thing and then other stuff. And I, you know, I never would watch myself. I would them and this sounds awful, but I said, that's pretty good. That's pretty good. And I gotta say, we're both looking at you now. And we're not looking at a 90-year-old man. We're looking at Peter Marshall.
Starting point is 01:21:40 Oh, well, thank you. You look the same. You look terrific. We're not blowing smoke up your skirt. Well, good. You can buy my CDs. My terrific. We're not blowing smoke up your skirt. Yeah. Well, good. You can buy my CDs, my CDs, just for sale. Go ahead and plug them.
Starting point is 01:21:49 Go ahead. I just did a CD that's kind of nice. It's called Let's Be Fright With a Touch of Tommy, where I recreated the Pied Pipers, Joe Stafford, but taking all the old songs and redoing them completely, doing them as they might have been done today. So it's called Let's Be Frank with a Touch. Then I have a CD that did really well. It's still out there. It's called Boy Singer. What are you guys reading? You're reading something. We got a note and we're going to put you on the spot since we're talking about your singing.
Starting point is 01:22:20 We're going to ask you if you could just croon a couple of bars of something for us, maybe from Bye Bye Bird birdie your choice grace guys are going to clear up put on a happy face brush off the clouds and cheer up hey you put on a happy face take off that gloomy mask of tragedy it's not your style there you go i love it
Starting point is 01:22:42 wow he sounds great not your study ago i love it but i don't know so not only is your speaking voice the same but you're singing voice is is exactly the same i looked at the other night and i'd like to laugh i said my god that was forty years ago well that's the and the last thing we're gonna ask and this is completely off the reservation okay talk about somebody on this show he was better known by the name crazy
Starting point is 01:23:06 guggenheim all you know it's frankly you want a new we were with frankie fontaine we work the bruh billy grays band box that's over our first big job yeah i paulie bergen got us the job paulie bergen was will see you know joint used to be very proud hackett worked it uh... go everybody worked billy Bambocks, what a beautiful
Starting point is 01:23:25 little club. It was a Jewish club and we were about as goyim as you could get, you know. And Polly said, there was an opening and she said to Max Gold, she said, hey, these two guys are working down on Slauson. They would be a big hit here. And we went in for one night and stayed 16 weeks. Wow. And that was the beginning. poly poly got a set job and uh... she was a country singer those that budgeted her old ex-wife how long can tell can hold the token i'm just how i think she was a country
Starting point is 01:23:54 singer i remember polyberg and you know that you know now that i can't be said i never in cape fear all right uh... you want to live with she was really very close to Rex Reed. I'm close to Rex and they were like brother and sister really. He adored her. But Frankie Fontaine came in with us. They would use, there would be like six acts. It would be Robert Maxwell who wrote Eptide and Shangri-La. He played the harp and I'd be thee. This is a true story. This is when Reagan became president. I was a little anxious about it. I used to emcee the show and Tommy would heckle me and I would say that now ladies and gentlemen, and he was a you're a damn good-looking fellow
Starting point is 01:24:38 I mean you're damn good-looking. I said, thank you very much, sir, and I would go on and then he'd say I He would do other stuff, but he kept, you're damn good looking. Well, finally, after about three acts, it was our turn, and I would say something about Pittsburgh. I knew a bass player. He said, I'm from Pittsburgh. I'm from Pittsburgh. And he got up and he walked up on stage and the guy sitting in the front grabbed him and said, young man, I've taken just about enough of this I could take this man has been working hard all night and you and it was Ronald Reagan Wow oh my god oh he was the only guy that didn't know so when he became president I went okay all right all right. Good stuff.
Starting point is 01:25:25 But the funny thing is he and Noonan became very close friends. Reagan and Noonan. Well, this is, you're one of those guests that we could go another 20 hours with and not touch upon. You're also one of those guests that makes the interview easy because you do all the work. Oh, yes. So this has been Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal podcast with my co-host Frank Santo Padre at Nutmeg Post with our engineer Frank Verderosa. Thank you Frankie. And the great Peter Marshall.
Starting point is 01:26:05 Well thank you guys. Peter, it's been a treat. Give us your plugs one more time. The radio show. Radio show, music of your life. Just I'm on two hours in the morning and they repeat it at night. Nine on the west, so I guess it's twelve in the east. And a boy singer you can get, no happy endings, something called Let's Be Frank with a Touch
Starting point is 01:26:22 of Tommy. You can buy them all through Emma and they're pretty good guys. They're really We're gonna get them and listen. Well, if you like Dick Hames or Sinatra or Bob Eberly that whole era I think you'll like what I do and once more the book backstage with the original Hollywood Square and it comes I must say This is interesting. It comes with a CD. It does With a CD of your favorite jokes from the show, your favorite zingers. You'll hear, everybody ever heard on those zingers.
Starting point is 01:26:50 That was a big, that record sold a fortune, but I didn't know that that was Heda Quigley who gave me the permission to put it in the book. We barely scratched the surface of this man's career. And as someone who is a later regular on Hollywood Squares, in the 2000 years, I bow down to you, sir. Oh, thank you, Gilbert. That's so sweet of you.
Starting point is 01:27:12 And I love your work. I really do. Oh, thank you. Well, Peter, there's a clip online of Gilbert you should check out of him on the most recent version of Hollywood Squares. Oh, really? Just look up Gilbert Gottfried Hollywood Squares and you fool. You fool. Yes. Gilbert Gottfried Hollywood Squares and you fool. You fool.
Starting point is 01:27:25 Yes. Gilbert Gottfried Hollywood Squares, you fool? You fool. Yes. You'll love it. Okay, we'll do that right now. Yeah, it's going to be a good laugh for you. And thanks so much, buddy.
Starting point is 01:27:34 Thank you, Peter Marshall. My pleasure. Good luck, guys. Thank you, Peter Marshall.

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