Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - Sally Struthers Part 1
Episode Date: January 10, 2022In the first part of a two-part episode, Emmy-winning actress Sally Struthers joins Gilbert and Frank for a fascinating and laugh-filled conversation about the aloofness of Rudy Vallee, the eccentrici...ties of Sam Peckinpah, the versatility of Bill Dana, the unexplainable existence of "The Phynx" and the recent 50th anniversary of "All in the Family." Also, Jack Nicholson shops at Tiffany's, Steve McQueen romances Ali MacGraw, Rod Steiger gives Sally the heebie-jeebies and Bob Hope visits the “Planet of the Shapes." PLUS: Jack Benny! Ned Glass! "Five Easy Pieces"! "The Tim Conway Comedy Hour"! The many faces of Sammy Davis Jr! And Sally remembers friends and co-stars Carroll O'Connor and Jean Stapleton! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Your teen requested a ride, but this time, not from you.
It's through their Uber Teen account.
It's an Uber account that allows your teen to request a ride under your supervision
with live trip tracking and highly rated drivers.
Add your teen to your Uber account today.
You'll flip for $4 pancakes at A&W.
Wake up to a stack of three light and fluffy pancakes topped with syrup.
Only $4 on now.
Dine-in only until 11 a.m. at A&W's in Ontario.
Gifting dad can sometimes hit the wrong note.
Oh.
Instead, gift the Glenlivet, the single malt whiskey that started it all, for a balanced
flavor and smooth finish.
Just sit back and listen to the music.
Ooh.
This single malt scotch whiskey is guaranteed to impress Dad this Father's Day.
The Glenlivet.
Live original.
Please enjoy our products responsibly.
Hi, this is Gilbert Gottfried, and this is Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast with my co-host, Frank Santopadre.
Our guest this week is a prolific, versatile, and much-loved actress of stage and screen.
You've seen her familiar face in feature films like Five Easy Pieces and the Steve McQueen vehicle,
The Getaway, as well as the critically praised TV movies, The Great Houdini and Your Name
is Jonah and Intimate Strangers, along with popular TV shows including Love American Style,
The Smothers Brothers, Comedy Hour, Ironside, 9 to 5, Murder, She Wrote, Dinosaurs,
American Dad, and Still Standing.
And, of course, has the lovable, eccentric Babette on the long-running Gilmore Girls.
She's also starred on the Broadway stage in regional theater and touring companies
in well-received productions of The Odd Couple, Grease, Chicago, Annie, Hello Dolly, Spamalot, and Young Frankenstein.
Showing off her versatility by playing everyone from Florence Unger to Miss Hannigan to Frau Blucher.
Frau Blucher!
Blucher! I knew I said it wrong.
I knew it.
You want to take it back?
So now we'll never get Mel Brooks on the show.
Just invite him to dinner.
He just wants to come over for dinner. Showing off her versatility by playing everyone from Florence Unger to Miss Hannigan to Flou-Bloo-cher.
Floucher.
Looker.
Looker.
Ah, skip it. Showing off her versatility by playing everyone from Florence Unger to Miss Hannigan to Frau Blucher.
Okay, close enough.
Frau Blucher.
It's Frau Blucher.
Frau Blucher.
Yes.
Frau Blucher.
You got it.
But she'll forever be admired and appreciated by audiences the world over as Archie Bunker's only child and frequent antagonist Gloria Stivic.
On an iconic program that turned 50 this year, CBS is all in the family. In a long professional career that began way back when she auditioned for a Pond's cold cream commercial, this lady has gone on to share the screen
with everyone from Bob Hope to Sammy Davis Jr. to Joan Crawford to Jack Nicholson to her hero, Ruth Gordon.
Frank and I are thrilled to welcome to the show a multiple Emmy winner and one of our favorite performers and personalities, and a woman who once single-handedly impersonated
old 16 of the June Taylor dancers,
the talented and delightful Sally Struthers.
Wow, you know something?
You make me sound good.
And interesting
and versatile
and gifted. Wow.
Well, I did.
I was all of the June Taylor dancers
in one.
With Art Metrano
on the Tim Conway Comedy Hour.
And the producers of that show,
Sam Bobrick and Ron Clark,
decided they wanted this time around with Tim Conway
to make the show look like it had no budget.
So the show started, and the camera panned across an empty soundstage
and went over to a man in a tuxedo sitting at a music stand with the music
but no instrument because the show couldn't afford to buy him an instrument.
So that was Art Metranoano and he had to hum the opening
thing some.
And then at some point they'd say,
and now...
And they'd say,
the Tim Conway
dancer
instead of the June Taylor dancers
of which there were like 30 and they could lay on the
floor and look like sea anemones
and swastikas and whatever they were.
And I just laid on the floor and opened and closed my arms and legs
and waved at my mother.
And the suits about five weeks in said,
that girl you got at the front of the show, the dancer,
you got to let her go.
She makes the show look cheap.
Wait a minute.
But wasn't cheap the joke they were going for?
Exactly.
And Bo Brick and Clark said, that's the point.
And they said, let her go.
And it's funny how that works out.
Because if I hadn't been let go, I wouldn't have been available to read for the part of Gloria on All in the Family.
So there's a big old window opening after door closed.
Door closes, open window.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And one credit that shamefully was left off your list of credits.
I know where you're going.
Where are you going with this?
Most people remember you for.
And that's the Sphinx.
Oh, the Sphinx. Oh, my God. Did anyone ever that's the Sphinx. Oh, the Sphinx.
Oh, my God.
Did anyone ever even see the Sphinx?
That was my first movie.
Yes.
Oh, come on.
Frank, you saw that movie?
I have it.
I own it on DVD.
I saw it.
It's a terrible movie.
Yeah.
Oh, it's frightening.
But what a cast.
It's a cast. What a cast?
It's a cast.
It's supposed to be that old Hollywood people all got kidnapped.
And it's like Johnny Weissmuller, Leo Garcia and Hunts Hall.
Rudy Valli.
Rudy Valli.
Jesse, George Jessel.
Yes.
And Rudy Valli. And Rudy Valli.
And Rudy Valli, right.
And a young Richard Pryor.
I was so excited.
And I think Joey Lewis is in it.
Joe Lewis.
Joe Lewis, the boxer.
Yes.
Yeah.
I went up to Rudy Valli on the set, and I just thought this is a great conversation starter.
And I think I was 19, And I said, Mr. Valley.
And he said, yes.
I said, Mr. Valley, you and I have the same birthday.
He said, that's nice.
And he turned around and walked away.
The cheapest man in Hollywood, Rudy Valley.
Yes.
He brought in all of his clothes to the wardrobe department
and wanted them all cleaned and everything that was missing a button.
He wanted buttons sewn on, new hems sewn sewn in and they were his personal clothes from home
now that's cheap how did you get the finks in the first place sally they have you on imdb listed as
uncredited and and and the finks it's like the monkeys were an imitation of the Beatles,
and the Finks was like an imitation.
It was like an overlong, horribly written monkeys episode. That's a good description.
It was, and I'm glad that I'm not given any credit in that film.
You're the only people that have ever brought it up to me,
and I'm trying not to blush and be ashamed and cry right now.
Yeah, you might have dodged a bullet with
that one. And the people
in it, a lot of them look
like they had already died and were
dug up. Well, there's
that. Yes.
Oh my God.
But they did love the craft service
table. How did you
end up in that, Sally? I mean, you're a young
actress. I mean, it's your first
screen, well, on credit, but your first time to appear on a movie screen. I must have read for it.
I don't remember reading for it. That was 53 years ago. I just remember that I only had a day
or maybe two days on the set. And then I saw a piece of it somewhere and I just thought that I only had a day or maybe two days on the set.
Yeah.
And then I saw a piece of it somewhere, and I just thought, well, this is a piece of crap.
Wow, what a start. Did you interact with anybody other than Rudy Valli?
I don't remember talking to anybody else.
They hung me.
If you saw it, Frank, did you see that I was hanging on a swing outside of a hotel balcony?
Yeah.
It's a quick shot.
Yeah.
Making an absolute horse's ass of myself.
Listen, it's showbiz.
It is.
Tell Gilbert, though, this is interesting, too.
And we'll talk about your childhood in Portland and being the daughter of a doctor and all this fun stuff.
But your decision to become an actor directly or kind of indirectly involves Raymond Burr.
It does.
It does.
God love Raymond Burr.
Didn't we all love him on the Perry Mason show and then Old Ironsides?
Yeah.
He – I had the same experience with him.
I guessed it on his, nevermind.
We'll go get to that in a second.
I want to be a doctor like my father
because I felt really sorry for him
because he didn't have any sons.
He had two daughters and, you know, no Struthers brothers.
So I thought, well, I'll just follow in my father's footsteps.
And then one day I realized I literally emotionally and physically
couldn't do it and had a breakdown. I was 17 and my mom couldn't get me to stop crying. And my
father came home and shot me full of some drug that put me to sleep for 15 hours. And I woke up
crying. And finally, my mother sat me on the floor. You've got to tell me what it is. And I said,
I can't do it. She said, can't do what? I can't be a doctor. She said, well, who told you
you had to be? I said, I did. She said, well, why can't you? You're doing well in school. You're on
the honor roll. Science, you love it. What's the problem? I said, I threw up when we had to operate,
I threw up when we had to operate, dissect a cow's eye in biology class. And then a few months later, we all had to dissect a frog.
And I passed out.
How am I going to work on a cadaver for a year in medical school?
And my mother said, well, why don't you be an actor?
And I said, well, why would I do that?
She said, look at you.
You're so dramatic. She says,
you've been entertaining the family since you can walk and talk. She says, you could do it.
Well, where will I go? What do I do? I'll find a school for you. She's thumbing through one day
her McCall's magazine, which I'm waiting for her to finish so I can cut the Betsy McCall paper
dolls out of the back pages. And she finds an ad with Raymond Burr pointing out like an Uncle Sam poster.
It says, you too can become an actor at the Pasadena Playhouse College of Theater Arts.
She says, we're going to apply there.
They're going to take you.
You're going to go.
It'll be great.
And she was right.
All because of Raymond Burr.
Yeah, Raymond Burr.
You worked with an actor whose name popped up on this podcast a bunch of times, and that's Rod Steiger.
Oh my God, yeah.
What a kind of quirky, could be a serial killer kind of odd, interesting, intelligent, really off-center man.
He enjoyed my sense of humor, but I didn't want to be alone in a room with him.
Let's put it that way, because I didn't know what he was thinking.
Oh, how interesting.
He was a very odd man.
Have you heard Gilbert's Rod Steiger impression, Sally?
No.
Can you do it?
Oh, okay.
Oh, Rod Steiger in, oh, well, Porn Broker.
Okay.
You want to learn, oh, my people, you want to learn the secret of our success, all right, I tell you.
First you wake up with nothing, nothing to call your own, no homeland. And then you buy a
piece of cloth for a penny and you rip that cloth in two pieces and sell it for a penny profit.
And then you go out and you find another piece of cloth and you rip that cloth in three pieces.
And never must you think of buying an extra loaf of bread for the table or a toy for your child.
Oh no, you must keep going on and on.
And then all of a sudden you discover something.
You have a mercantile heritage.
You are a sheeny, a mucky, and a kike.
Oh, God!
Bravo.
That was so good, and it sounds just like my character of Frau Blucher in Young Frankenstein.
Oh, my God.
I can't believe you memorized that whole speech.
And then remember when he pushed his hand down on the male spike?
Yeah.
Oh, gosh.
That was.
But I've heard he was.
He was.
Oh, what?
Our another guest and a friend of mine, James Caron, worked with him and he he didn't have anything good to say about Steiger.
Well, I'm not saying anything bad. I'm just making an observation as a as a as a small woman.
He seemed formidable and he he seemed like he always had something twisted maybe going on in his brain.
And I didn't really know what to talk about with him.
So I just kept singing him silly songs, which he seemed to like.
Songs like my father taught me when I was five. Yeah. I met him once on backstage at, what was Bill Maher?
Oh, Politically Incorrect.
Now, I could say Rod Steiger was nice to me in the very short time we spoke.
That movie was called A Month of Sundays.
Yes, A Month of Sundays
With our friend Dee Wallace too, Gil
Yes
As well as Sally
I just watched Dee Wallace two nights ago
My cousin Jenny was visiting me from Spokane, Washington
And we looked up Close Encounters of the Third Kind
And we were watching that
Wasn't she the mom in
No, that was Melinda Dillon
I thought that was Dee Wallace
She's the mom in E.T. She's the mom in E.T.
She was the mom in E.T.
Ah.
Well, close encounters, E.T., same thing.
Yeah, same thing.
An easy mistake to make.
Tell Gilbert, though, Sally, how you found an agent in the Yellow Pages.
Oh, my roommate did.
And you wound up at the Nina Blanchard agency because it's a fun story.
I needed an agent, my roommate said. And you wound up at the Nina Blanchard agency because it's a fun story. I needed an agent, my roommate said.
She wasn't an actress.
I was living at the Hollywood Studio Club for Girls run by the YWCA.
And she said, you're an actress and I don't see you getting any work.
And I said, I know.
I don't know how to do that.
She said, well, you need an agent.
I said, well, how do you get an agent?
She says, we're going to go look in the yellow pages in the hall by the payphone. So she looked up theatrical agents
and she found a name and she called and said, I represent Sally Struthers and she would like to
take a meeting with you next week. And so I went the next week. I walked there. I walked three
miles from the studio club in my little red dress and my white knee socks and my little black patent leather shoes and my curly hair.
And I opened the door to this agency and it was opening the door to the land of tall people.
Everyone in there was tall and they looked over at the door at about a six foot five look.
And then they're all their heads looked down at the same time.
And I don't think they'd ever seen a diminutive person walk in that office.
I didn't understand why.
And then I went to the desk and the girl said incredulously,
can I help you?
And I said, yes, I have an appointment with Ms. Blanchard.
She said, you do?
I said, yes. She said, well, what's your name? I said yes I have an appointment with Miss Blanchard she said you do I said yes she said well what's your name I said Sally Struthers she said well yes you do have an
appointment Miss Blanchard we'll see you in a moment and I went in again I opened the door to
her office and she was looking a foot above my head and then her face went down looking at me
and she said hello and I said hi I came to see if I could get you to be my agent.
And she said, honey, I'm a modeling agency.
I don't take anybody under 5'7".
I said, oh, okay.
Well, could I do my impressions for you before I leave?
She said, she looked like the R.C. Victor dog,
her head tilted to the side.
She said, impressions?
Who do you do an impression of?
I said, oh, not people, inanimate objects.
She said, okay.
What did you do, a clam?
I did a clam for her that changes into an oyster,
and then my pièce de résistance was I did a clam for her that changes into an oyster. And then my piece de resistance was I did a Spanish Mediterranean home.
You did an impression of an adobe.
An adobe home, yes.
And then she said, you know what?
There's a casting agency down the hall that's casting for a Pond's cold cream commercial.
I'm going to send you down there.
And if you get it, I'll be your agent.
And I got it.
She called me on the pay phone at Studio Club a few days later and said,
You landed the commercial. I'm your agent.
You've got to go this week over to Paramount Studios.
And have a costume fitting for the commercial. So your imitation of a Spanish home started your career? Yes.
Well, didn't you also stand up? What was it? You stood on your head and you sang,
I'm sitting on top of the world? Yeah. Oh my God. You know everything,
Frank. What have you been doing? Looking in looking in my window yes how did that go over well that set she sent me down for the ponds commercial so right
and i when she called me and told me i got it i i i couldn't get my dimes out fast enough and
drop them in the pay phone i'll call my aunt my mother and my other aunt in Portland, Oregon and tell them I was the Ponds girl. I'm the Ponds girl!
And then... And you also worked with the beloved Fritz Feld.
Did you ever meet him?
She worked with him in The Finks,
but she doesn't remember anybody else in The Finks.
I don't...
You know, they hung me on a swing outside of a balcony
nine floors up. I didn't, you know, they hung me on a swing outside of a balcony nine floors up.
I don't,
I didn't meet anyone
on the ground.
Well, you worked
with another person
who both Frank
and I are fans of
and that's Nate Gilles.
Well, now,
you remember being
in that commercial
where you're on
the dunking stool?
Oh, gosh, yes.
What was it?
Dunking,
not dunking Sally. Is it dunking sally yeah dunk the
dolly with net glass from west side story as long as we're talking about commercials
well i just remember that they didn't understand that i have a horrible aversion to water
oh god and it was a it was a very difficult day for me pretending to be a good sport
about being dropped in the water several times
when I so
feel like I can't breathe when I
even look at water.
It was a commercial
for a clothes dryer
with Ned Glass from
West Side Story, and we'll explain. People can
find it on YouTube, but Sally is on a dunking
stool at a carnival. Yeah, like dunk the clown. Yeah, and we'll explain. People can find it on YouTube, but Sally is on a dunking stool at a carnival. Yeah, like
Dunk the Clown. Yeah, and Ned
Glass is the carnival barker,
and her clothes get wet, and
they go into the efficient dryer.
So you must have done that around the time you
did the Ponds commercial? Yes.
Nina Blanchard got me
15 or 20 television commercials
within the first year.
Test your eye! test your skill,
pay your quarter and dump her in the water.
You there with the muscle,
hit the bullseye and drop the little lady in the drink.
Three phones for a quarter.
Hey, look at that, a million.
There we go again.
This is it.
Look at that, a million.
Here we go again.
Don't go away, folks.
It won't be long.
She's gone to dry her things in a Speed Queen gas dryer with a long-life stainless steel drum.
It's the smooth drum.
Easy on me, ladies.
Plymouth and press.
Nobody has it but Speed Queen.
Monica. Monica. it but Speed Queen. Monica!
Monica!
I'm hurrying.
Wow.
Of being with her. So she was
working for you and you were under 5'7".
Yeah. How did you get
to the Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour?
I went
and auditioned for them
and I'd like to think they hired me because I made them laugh,
but I think they just liked the sound of Sally Struthers on this Mother's Brothers show.
People thought you were making it up, that it wasn't your real name?
They did.
Well, you know, I was told when I got to Hollywood that people,
when they joined the Screen Actors Guild and AFTRA, which is for television artists,
that they come up with a very Hollywood-sounding name for themselves.
And I thought, nobody's going to spell Struthers right.
They're not going to say it right.
I've been called everything from Struggles to Smoothers to Strithers.
I better pick a different name.
And thank God some smart person talked me out of it
because I was going to change my last name to Mander.
Sally Mander.
But correct me if I'm wrong, Sally.
It's Norwegian, isn't it?
I'm 50% Norwegian from my mom, but Struthers is from my dad, and he was English and Scottish.
Struthers is from Scotland.
Yeah.
And Frank and I were talking that you showed your boobs
in some movie.
In the Jack Nicholson movie.
Oh, Five Easy Pieces.
Five Easy Pieces.
Very subtle, by the way, Gilbert.
You like the way he does
those subtle segues?
Well, you know,
anybody that can read
Fifty Shades of gray out loud can say
something like that it's just fine with me you said someone uh one of your relatives was listening
to that oh my my nephew and his wife live with me and his wife is from bogota columbia catalina
and cat as i was leaving to come here I said I'm gonna go do the podcast for Gilbert Gottfried
and she said in her darling Spanish accent a little bit Spanish you know where would I know
him from so I quickly showed him all her all these things that you did and I said oh there's
something here I'm not even aware of so I went to YouTube and looked you up with Fifty Shades of
Grey and I started playing it and she didn't want me to stop and leave.
She said, before you leave the house to go do the show, send me the link so I can keep listening to him read the book.
I said, Catalina.
Sorry, Gilbert, so she's going to give you a pass on the boobs question.
So back to your boobs.
Oh, my boobs.
That scene was not in the script.
And the producer director came to me and said,
we want to do just the end of a sex scene with you and Jack.
And I said, I don't think so.
He says, oh, come on.
His name is Bob Rafelson.
He says, I'm just going to have, you can stay dressed from the waist down.
I want you to put your legs around his waist.
You can hide your chest because you'll be hugging him with your arms kind of around his neck.
He'll be twirling around and around in a room, and he'll work his way to the bedroom,
and he'll be on top of you, and you'll be on the bed, and then he'll rise up off you,
and the camera will follow him, and he'll have that Jack Nicholson grin on his face and his t-shirt is a motorcycle t-shirt that says triumph and and and it'll be a
great shot what they didn't tell me was as the camera went to be up on Jack Nicholson it first
scanned across my chest and I when the movie came out I went went to Portland, Oregon to visit my mom, and she said,
your Aunt June and I are going to see your movie tonight, and I said, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, you're not going. She said, yes, we're very excited to see you in your first big movie. I said,
please, please don't go, and she said, what's wrong? I said, I was talked into doing something in the film that I will never live down,
and you're not going to like it, and you're going to be ashamed of me.
Please don't go see it.
She said, I'm going to see it.
And I said, well, when you come home, please don't say anything to me if you're ashamed of me
or you're mad at me because it's already on celluloid.
It's already in movie theaters.
I can't take it back.
She dressed like a spy.
She put on a trench coat, a bandana, and dark glasses and went to the movies.
And when she came home, she walked right past me and into her bedroom and shut the door.
So that was worth a thousand words.
I knew she was ashamed of me.
Did you ever discuss it after that moment?
No.
I rewatched it the other night.
It's a movie I know well.
It's barely a glimpse.
If you're that person's mother,
you're not happy.
I guess that's true.
I guess that's true.
And that's such a respected film.
Yeah.
Yeah, that was Jack Nicholson's
first big break after Easy Rider.
And what was it like to work with Nicholson?
Oh, my God.
He's such a nice man.
You know, he lost his balance when he was twirling around with me,
and I was bare-chested pressed against him.
We fell through a plate glass window.
Oh, my God.
He cut his arm open, and he just said,
Get the medic in here to butterfly tape my arm shut.
We've got to keep filming.
So he didn't go to the hospital and get stitches until after we got the shot.
Did you run into him years later?
I did.
I ran into him in Tiffany's.
Who shops at Tiffany's?
Not me.
I like cross-dress for less.
I like to go to Marshall's.
And I like to go to Burlington Coat Factory.
And I like to go to thrift shops.
But my hairdresser's from Japan,
and they like all things Tiffany.
So he said, I want you to get me box from Tiffany.
Look like a gift box.
He says, it's blue and white.
It's made out of porcelain.
I want that for Christmas.
So I'm in there buying it with my best friend Pamela.
She nudges me.
She said, look what's over there at that other counter.
Jack Nicholson, go say hello to him.
I said, no.
I said, that movie was 20 years ago.
He won't even remember me.
I'm not going over there.
She says, go say hi.
I said, no.
Leave me alone.
So I was paying for the box for Hakuto and I feel a pat on my shoulder.
I turn around and there's that big shit-eating grin
on Jack Nicholson's face.
Hi, Sally. It's Jack.
How are you?
Oh, my God.
Hi, Jack Nicholson.
Well, that's sweet. Yeah.
I couldn't believe he remembered me.
That was really nice.
That is. I love that little dialogue
you have, too, when you're on the couch and you're talking
about the dimple in your chin.
Oh, yeah, that was a real story.
God's assembly line.
That was a real story in my life, and I had told that the night before at dinner, and they made me say it in that scene.
Oh, that came from your own life.
Yeah.
And Peckinpah was a strange director.
What do you remember about him?
Oh, my Lord.
The getaway.
Gilbert. Gilbert. What do you remember about him? Oh my lord. Gilbert. Gilbert.
He was a
potpourri of insanity
and alcoholism.
He was drunk by
8 o'clock in the morning on the set
and Al Atiri, who played
the heavy in the movie, would drink right along.
They were both gone.
They were so drunk.
We were shooting in El Paso, Texas,
and he went over the border one night
when we stopped shooting for the night
with the script girl, and he married her,
and he came back the next day,
and now the script girl was Mrs. Peckinpah.
That lasted a week.
Then he sent her home and got divorced.
And he said,
Sally, you want to come to the dailies tonight? I said, what's the dailies,
Mr. Peckinpah? He said, well, I send the film to Hollywood. It gets processed. They send it back
to me to make sure I like the way it all looks and the processing. And if maybe I want to shoot
something else or reshoot that scene because I didn't like the lighting. Anyway, it's all printed and processed and ready to see,
and we run it in the hotel in a boardroom,
and you want to come tonight?
And I said, sure.
So we'd only been watching for about 10 minutes,
and he'd been drunk all day,
and he didn't like the way something looked.
He said, everybody looks green.
They look like Martians.
Oh, my God.
And he went over to the screen, and he unzipped his fly,
and he urinated on the screen.
And I said, is it?
You know, I'd be disappointed if Sam Peckinpah did any less.
Wouldn't you, Gilbert?
Yes.
And when you said Alatiri, one of my favorite lines in The Godfather
is when he says to Pacino, you think too much of me, Michael.
I am the hunted one.
I'm telling you.
I'm not that clever, kid.
Yes.
He was terrific in that.
He was, but he was very scary.
Did you get that audition because you got Peckinpah to teach you how to throw darts?
Was that something clever that you did to kind of make yourself stand out?
I had a friend who gave me a piece of advice that I always give to young hopefuls who want to go into acting.
She said to me, don't do what everyone else does when you walk in the room.
what everyone else does when you walk in the room. When you walk in a room, if you see two chairs in front of a desk and the person is going to interview you or audition you is on the other
side of the desk and maybe across the room is a chair in a corner. Everyone goes in and sits in
a chair across from the other person at the desk. Go sit in the corner and make them look in a
different direction. They won't realize later why they remember you, but they'll remember you
because you did something different and always sound busy. So one time somebody called me to talk to me on the phone
and I had dishes and glasses in the sink and had the water running and I just kept moving them
around and they said, what are you doing? And I said, well, I'm very busy. I'm doing my dishes
because I was told by this person to always sound busy. The only thing I could think to do was to sound busy doing dishes.
But anyway, I went in to meet Sam Peckinpah, and there he was,
and right behind him on the wall was a dartboard.
So I said, is that your dartboard, Mr. Peckinpah?
He says, yes, it is.
I said, are you a good player?
He says, yeah.
Do you play?
I said, no, will you teach me?
And for 30 minutes he taught me to throw darts.
And I barely got home
and my phone was ringing and saying, you got the
part in the movie. Well, that was very smart
of you. Very creative.
Well, it's the advice
I was given and it seems to work
to do something different than everyone else
does. Did McQueen actually clock
you in that scene in the motel?
He didn't mean to,
but by the time I had already slammed against the wall
and slid down it to the floor a couple of times
pretending to be hit,
I was a little woozy.
The third take we did on it,
I stepped into his slug
instead of turning my head with his arm slugging me.
So I really did get hit.
And of course, that's the one they use in the film.
And what was Steve McQueen like to work with?
Oh, another really, really lovely man.
I watched him fall in love with Ali McGraw
while we were making that film.
And I watched her fall in love with him.
And she was famously married to Robert Evans at the time.
I know, but I don't think she could have been very happy.
No, probably not.
Or she wouldn't have been fooling around with Steve McQueen.
But they were such a sweet couple and very kind to everyone else on the set.
But also he was Steve McQueen when we were on a 10-minute break
because the cameras were being turned around and the lights were being reset, he'd go outside of this hotel in El Paso and hop on his motorcycle and race straight up a dirt mountain that was almost perpendicular.
And Peckinpah was screaming, get him off the motorcycle.
We don't have enough insurance.
He can't.
He's going to break his arm and we can't finish the film. God damn it. Get the queen off the motorcycle. We don't have enough insurance. He can't. He's going to break his arm and we can't finish the film.
God damn it.
Get the queen off the motorcycle.
But he was a daredevil.
He really was.
I'm with you, by the way, Sally.
By the way, that movie is about to turn 50, The Getaway.
And you said, I heard you say that when you get together with Ali or when you see her,
you guys kind of bond over the fact that you're the last of the Mohicans there's nobody really left from that picture no Dub Taylor is gone
Jack Alateri's gone Jack Dodson is gone Sam Peckinpah's gone Steve McQueen is gone Slim
Pickens Slim Pickens yeah yeah it's Ali and Sally they're still. Yeah. And Frank sent me a clip of something where I thought, I mean, you look very cute in it
and you are good in it, but it was one of those weird Bob Hope specials.
Oh, God.
Sally, have you noticed we bounce around a lot?
Yeah, that's good, though.
You're keeping me on my toes.
I think on my toes I might look five foot one.
The show has ADD.
Yes, I showed Gilbert the clip of you and Bob Hope in a special from 1971, 50 years ago, and you're on the moon.
I think it was called Planet of the Shapes.
And it was a planet.
Bob is an astronaut on a planet entirely inhabited by women.
And that title lets you know the level of the humor in that thing.
And, you know, I thought, is this what it's like to be a big star?
Because I had to memorize all my lines to do this skit with him, but he was reading off of cue cards.
Oh, he, Bob Hope he was infamous with that it's like when you'd
watch his even in his movies you could just see him looking there reading you know not looking at
the other people it's disconcerting when someone reads yeah he reads hi s Sally, off the cue card, but he's saying hi, Sally, to the cue card.
He's not saying it to my face, and I'm kind of nudging around trying to get to where he's looking.
But another nice man, a very nice man.
Oh, you liked him?
I did, and I tried picking him up because I pick people up.
I'm unnaturally strong for someone that's only five feet tall.
I think I could lift a Volkswagen off you if I needed to.
Wow.
Keep that in mind.
I went to the hospital straight from the set because I was pretty sure I had popped, torn an intestine or something.
Wait a minute.
From trying to physically lift Bob Hope?
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah.
Did you interact?
By the way, it was called
A Celebration of Bob's 22 Years on NBC, Gilbert.
Yes.
And it co-started,
it was an all-star roster of women.
Jill St. John, Phyllis Diller, Martha Ray,
the great Edie Adams, Zsa Zsa, Imogene Coca.
Did you interact with these legends? Or did you just have your isolated time with Bob?
Who was the gal that was next to me that was the other woman from the planet?
Oh, yes.
I forgot her name.
Edie Williams?
Edie Williams.
Edie Williams.
Very good, Gilbert.
Yeah, no, I didn't get to interact with the other gals.
Yeah, no, I didn't get to interact with the other gals.
You worked again with Bob in 1982 in Women I Love, Beautiful But Funny.
I did?
Yeah.
You know, it might have been a clip show.
It says that Liz Taylor and Barbara Streisand were on it, which is hard to fathom.
It had to be a clip show.
But you liked him.
I mean, we've heard conflicting things about the man.
Oh, I liked him.
I thought he was interesting.
He was so Bob Hope, you know.
I'd seen him my whole life, and now I'm standing next to him, and he was every bit what I thought he would be.
Mr. Raconteur Bon Vivant doesn doesn't really look at you, but laughs a lot, has a nose you want to ski jump off of.
You're probably the first co-star that ever tried to physically lift him.
Yeah.
You're putting me on a whole planet with nothing but women?
I hope Medicare covers ecstasy.
We've decided.
We're going to forget you were here.
Now, go back where you came from.
Oh, just a minute.
Did you say there are nothing but women up here?
That's right.
Now go.
Oh, no.
Richard Burton would never forgive me. Here, take me to your jail. You haven't done anything wrong. Well, give
me a chance. I just got here. I'll tell you, I could get 20 years for what I'm thinking.
You are under arrest. Well, what's the charge?
Assault with a dead weapon.
And you were on the Jerry Lewis telethon?
She was.
Yeah, a few times.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I would go on there and pretend to be a singer.
And what dealings would you have with Jerry?
Well, he never sat down and talked to me because I didn't have muscular dystrophy.
I was just the hired help, you know.
But he would, you know, he would wave across the set and say, nice job, Sally.
Thanks, Jerry.
I didn't really know him.
There's a clip on YouTube of you singing on there.
You're holding your own.
Thanks, Frank.
That's a rock number.
Pretty ambitious.
We will return to Gilbert Gottfried's amazing, colossal podcast.
But first, a word from our sponsor.
Take control of your phone plan with Chatter Mobile.
Score big with nationwide prepaid plans from only $15 a month
on Canada's number one prepaid mobile provider, Chatter Mobile.
Visit ChatterMobile.com for details.
provider chatter mobile visit chattermobile.com for details 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 episode Sundays.
Watch free on CBC Gem. And you work with Jack Benny? I did. I worked with Jack Benny, but I ran into Jack and Mary Benny in London, England.
We were in the lobby of the Dorchester Hotel and they said, Sally, and I said, Mr. and Mrs. Benny.
They said, are you staying here? I said, yes. Are you staying here? And they said, yes.
They said, want to come up to our room for a little while Mary Benny said
I'm gonna iron Jack's shirt and then we're going out to dinner but come up to our room and visit
with us so we we were talking and pretty soon I started to say something and then um
I said a word and she said oh oh, we don't like that word.
We don't like that F word.
Oh.
And I said, well, I wasn't going to say that.
I was just saying fart.
She said, oh, we don't like that.
She said, fuck is fine, but don't say fart.
Jack does not like fart.
Mary Livingston.
All right. As long as we're talking about comedy legends,
you were in a show called NBC Follies in 1973 with Sammy.
You worked with Sammy several times.
Yeah.
Mickey Rooney and Uncle Miltie.
Any memories at all of this trio?
Well, I know Sammy's a whole separate deal
because Sammy was on All in the Family.
of this trio?
Well, I know Sammy's a whole separate deal because Sammy was on All in the Family.
I remember Milton Berle was
definitely traveling to the beat of his own piccolo.
I mean, that man was out there.
But I love Sammy and I love Mickey.
Well, we were all the same size.
It was like Milton Berle meets the Munchkins is what it was like. Um, but I, I love Sammy and I love Mickey. Well, we were all the same size.
It was like Milton Berle meets the Munchkins is what it was like.
But, um, Sammy became a good friend.
He and his wife Alta V's.
I remember being pretty upset the first time I went to his house because he had turned his fireplace into a fish tank and at a designated hour, uh, all the goldfish went to one side of the tank
well they were already at kind of one side of the tank anyway and then
that there was a maybe it wasn't glass maybe it was a lucite partition and on the other side of
the tank somebody dumped in piranha and then they pulled the partition out, and you'd see all the goldfish eaten, destroyed bloody water in about eight seconds.
That's terrible.
I thought, well, this isn't entertaining.
This is brutal.
This is awful.
But what made up for it was he had about 20 candy jars on his bar, and you could just pig out on sugar.
It was so great.
But the goldfish being torn apart.
That's awful.
By piranha.
Yeah, that was odd.
And that night, the movie he played for everyone
was Clockwork Orange and that was really weird too.
But that was only my first time going over to their house.
After that, things got a little more normal.
I would hope so.
Yeah. You met Sammy. I know you were on Sammy and Company. over to their house after that things got a little more normal i would hope so yeah you met sammy the
i know you were on sammy and uh sammy and company i think it was with lola falana and jack klugman
but you met sammy the first time on all in the family yes and he every day he brought his guys
to rehearsal with him and he brought gifts oh and any every day he would hand all of us presents i
mean we couldn't we couldn't believe it.
And then he invited us all over to his house. And then he and his wife, Alta Beast, drew up an adoption certificate for me and had it framed saying that I was dressed like Shirley Temple
and he was dressed like a little
baby in Dr. Denton pajamas.
We had the best time.
And he loved to
sing Tie a Yellow Ribbon
around the old oak tree.
Every time we were in his car with him,
he'd be singing that song
oh wow i don't know he was hooked on the piranha yeah not quite
that is very disturbing i always remember that line in the um in all the family where
where Archie says to Sammy Davis, he goes,
I know you had no choice in being colored,
but what made you change you?
Do you remember when Edith says,
I'm so happy, Archie, we get to meet Mr. Davis.
He says, now, Edith, when he gets here, don't say nothing about his eye.
She says, what about his eye, Archie?
He's got a phony eye.
You can't say nothing about it. All right, Archie.
So when Sammy Davis is there, she's bringing a tea service,
a big tray with cups and very fancy for Edith.
And he grabs it and he takes it from her.
He says, I'll take it, Edith.
I'll serve him.
Now, Mr. Davis, do you take any cream of sugar in your eye?
It's a great moment.
A great moment.
And, of course, Edith brings him a Twinkie.
Episode written by the great Bill Dana.
Yeah, I love Bill Dana. Yeah, yeah. We just great Bill Dana. Yeah. I love Bill Dana.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We just missed Bill Dana.
He was one of those.
We were back.
He agreed to do the podcast.
And then he died.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We tried so hard to get him.
He wasn't in great health.
Oh,
I even got to talk to him on the phone.
I remember thinking,
Oh,
he's going to be a great guest.
I got to stay in his house on Maui.
Oh.
He was good friends with Andy Williams, and I was dating Andy Williams,
and Andy took me over to Maui, and we stayed in Bill Dana's house.
I thought that was really swell.
You dated Andy Williams.
I remember Sammy Davis Jr.'s, he had some very funny reactions to everything Archie said.
Yeah.
Yeah.
They wrote very well for him.
And also they let him just react during rehearsal.
And sometimes his reactions were better than what they wrote.
So those got written in the script.
I mean, he was absolutely wonderful and just up for anything.
A really generous, kind guy who had a really tough time breaking into show business.
I mean, while his pals, Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin,
got to go in the front door, you know, and go backstage and do their show.
Sammy had to come in through the back, through the kitchen.
They wouldn't even let him walk through the hallways.
A lot of mistreatment.
And we were told, I think it was by Cliff Nesterhaus, maybe.
Or Nesteroff.
Nesteroff.
I know what you're thinking.
You're talking about the swimming pool?
Yes.
Yeah, that was Rick Lertzman went on the Rat Pack episode. Yeah. He was staying at some hotel and he went swimming in the pool and someone complained that they don't want to be in the same water that a black guy was in.
And and they the manager had them drain the pool first.
No. Yeah, that's what we heard.
No, come on. What's wrong with people? Roger had them drain the pool first. No. Yeah, that's what we heard.
No, come on.
What's wrong with people?
Well, listen, when Hattie McDaniel won the Best Supporting Actress, she wasn't even allowed to sit in the banquet hall in 1939.
Thankfully, we're a long way from that.
Human beings can be so ugly to one another.
I just don't understand it.
And since we were on the subject of all in the family.
Yeah.
Frank and I were talking before that, you know, some shows, there are people who hate each other.
And it wasn't like that at all on All in the Family.
Oh, we really were family-like when we were together.
We were all very close to one another, very trusting of each other, and very free.
We were in the zone of safety.
We could say anything in front of each other.
And, of course, we were working with an angel. Jean Stapleton was a devout Christian scientist,
so she didn't think or say a single negative thing. So we called her our angel. And Carol O'Connor
was a brilliant writer, and he wrote a lot of the early scripts. He helped write them.
writer and he wrote a lot of the early scripts. He helped write them. And he was an English teacher before he became an actor. And so he was a very smart, interesting, opinionated
New York Irish Catholic man. And my father, Dr. Robert Struthers, died two years before I got all
in the family. So Carol O'Connor became my
father off stage as well as on. And he and his wife, Nancy, took me everywhere they went. If they
got invited to party, they'd take me. They'd always pick me up. They were so good to me.
They introduced me to Bill Rader and said, you know, we met him at a party at Groucho Marx's
house. We really like him. And he's going to come to the taping tonight.
And he's probably going to ask you out.
And so he did.
And I acquiesced in a couple of weeks later.
I went to dinner with him.
And then a year later, he asked me to marry him.
And I called Carol and Nancy O'Connor because they introduced me to him.
So he got on the phone.
And Nancy went to another extension in their house.
And she got on the phone.
And when they were both on, I said, I just want to let you know that tonight at dinner, Bill asked me to marry him.
And I said, yes. And there was dead silence on the phone. There was probably eight, nine seconds of
I hear crickets. And then Carol said, we only meant for you to have dinner with him, not marry him.
We only meant for you to have dinner with him, not marry him.
Oh, wow. I said, wait, wait a minute.
But you wanted me to go out to dinner with him.
They said, yeah, but.
So that was my first Burma shave sign, you know, jumping up on the side of the road telling me, turn back.
This isn't going to work.
It's bad.
But they were right.
I shouldn't have married him, but they introduced me to him.
But, you know, he called me Sally when we were all together socially. But the minute we were in CBS in a rehearsal hall,
I didn't have a name. I wasn't Sally and I wasn't even Gloria. He called me the girl.
And I found it the most interesting quirk. How interesting. He didn't call Rob Reiner the boy,
but I was the girl. And he'd talk about me, you know, third party wise.
He'd say, now the girl should move over here.
Or, you know, that line that the girl says on the top of seven, I think we could cut that and gain a little time and then go to page eight.
And I used to keep raising my hand saying, Carol, I'm Sally.
Why are you calling me the girl?
But I was just the girl.
Oh, interesting.
What an interesting choice.
Yeah, and Norman Lear wouldn't let me out to do a movie,
a big motion picture, Day of the Locust.
And John Schlesinger, who was British, was directing it,
an award-winning film director.
Midnight Cowboy.
Yes, and I was going to be the lead in the film,
and my agent and I went to Norman and said,
could I get out of the last four tapings of the season
to shoot this film?
And he said, absolutely not.
If I let you out, I've got six television series on the air,
then I have to start letting everybody out,
and it ruins our shooting schedule.
I can't do that.
It sets a precedent.
I can't do it.
So it was a, you know, we'd even thought of another way. I said, well, I only say three lines per show, which are, I'll help you set the table, Ma. Michael, where are you going? And oh, Daddy,
stop it. And then the next week I say the same three lines, but in a different order. I don't
need to come to rehearsal all week. I could just come on taping day and do my part. And the other four days of the week I could be shooting the movie.
No, I'm not going to let you do it. So I said, oh, okay. I was really upset, but I said, okay.
The next year he let Rob Reiner out of several shows to shoot a film with Alan Arkin called
Fire Sale. And I found a lawyer and I said, get me off this effing show. The nepotism
and the misogynistic attitude around here, I want out. So I fought my entire hiatus period
between when we finished filming that season and the next. I was working with a lawyer
and we went to arbitration and I lost and I had to go back.
I'm sorry that happened to you.
That's unfair.
And Norman had someone the first day back, my first day,
every 100 feet there was someone holding a bouquet for me
through the parking lot, through the hallways, up the elevator,
down the rehearsal hall hallway.
And everybody that I walked past, I just said, shove it. And after
that, for several weeks, I wore a t-shirt every day rehearsal that said prisoner of rehearsal hall
too. Wow. I really didn't want to be there. But then we had a new director named Paul Bogart,
and he was so delightful to work with. And they finally started writing stories for Mike and Gloria.
And I had more lines to say.
And so everything was fine.
From season six on, after they got rid of John Rich, who I know you didn't have a lot of fondness for.
Bogart came in and changed the climate a bit for you?
John Rich picked on me.
Yeah.
And you'll love this story.
One day in the rehearsal hall, Betty Garrett and I were coloring in our coloring books.
And they were starting from the top of Act 1.
And that was a scene between Mike and Edith in the kitchen.
So I stayed at the table with Betty coloring in my coloring book.
And they started saying their lines.
This is all happening behind me.
I can hear what's going on, but I'm coloring.
And then he must have moved his hands like,
be quiet, because all of a sudden everyone went quiet. And then he said,
I said, we're starting from the top of Act One. And nothing happened. And I kind of realized this
was about me. So I turned around and looked at John Rich. And I said, are you talking to me?
And he says, yes, I said, we're starting from the top of act one,
and I want you to get over there and place outside the bunker's doorway and wait for your
entrance. That had never happened before. In the rehearsal hall, you didn't have to
get in place and wait five minutes for your quote unquote entrance. And he says, get over. I said,
well, I'll be, John, I don't come in until page four, and I'm just finishing coloring this picture.
I promise I'll be over by the bunker's front door and make my entrance in time.
And he said, shaking his jowls like Richard Nixon, he said,
I don't want to hear your platform shoes clomping across this floor while they're doing their scene in the kitchen.
Get out of there now!
And I did the worst thing a human being can do.
And I've never forgiven myself for it because he was of the Jewish faith.
I clicked my heels together,
raised my hand in a Nazi salute and said,
yes,
sir.
Wow.
And he,
he did a three point drop kick on a folding chair and was lunging at me.
And I ran out of the rehearsal hall and down to the
bowels of CBS and through all the places where all the electronic stuff goes on and up another
stairwell up into the executive suites and ran into Norman Lear's office. And I said,
he called me a effing bitch and a pain in the ass and kicked a chair. He said,
here's a box of Kleenex. Sit down. I'll go get him. I'll bring him back here to apologize to you.
And Norman was gone almost an hour.
And when he came back in his office, he didn't have John Rich with him.
And I said, I told you he wouldn't apologize, Sally.
I couldn't bring him back because he's on the way to the hospital because he broke his foot.
And I said, there is a God.
He broke his foot kicking the chair.
Yeah.
Wow.
And so the next day, Norman Lear called for us
to circle the wagons in the rehearsal hall.
And it was Norman, and then in a circle,
then it was Carol O'Connor, Gene Stapleton, Rob Reiner,
me, and Mike Evans, who played Lionel Jefferson.
And Norman's pretending to be a therapist. And Norman says, well, we all know what happened
yesterday. And there's John with a cast on his leg and crutches sitting there. And he said,
I think we need to talk about it. Sally says that John picks on her, and I want
all of your opinions about that Carol and Carol says
yeah he's a little hard on the girl so he turns to Gene Stable he says that is does John pick on
Sally all the time and Gene she was so above all that you know she didn't even want to be involved
in this conversation she fumpered around well, well, you know, I, you know, sometimes I, you know,
John, I, she couldn't really say anything. So then he got to Rob, who was sitting next to me,
and he said to Rob, you know, does John Rich pick on Sally? And Rob said, it's real simple, Norman.
He's not going to pick on Carol because Carol's the star of the show and have him fired. He's
not going to pick on Jean Stapleton because Jean is in his peer group and she's the female star of the
show and she is an angel and it really wouldn't look good. And he's not going to pick on me
because I'm a rich Jewish kid who grew up in Beverly Hills and I'll tell him to fuck off and
walk out of this rehearsal hall. And he's not going to pick on Mike Evans because Mike is black
and John's a guilty white liberal. So the only one left to pick on is Sally and he does it all the time.
That was the end of that moment.
And this necessitated, if I have this correctly, that was the end of John Rich's.
He did the rest of that season.
Right, he didn't get renewed.
Right, right.
That was a turning point.
A turning point for you because you say that the Bogart episodes from season six on, you were given more to do.
Yes.
More Gloria Mike stories.
Although I have to say, and Gilbert and I were talking, some of my favorite episodes in the early season are Gloria episodes.
The Women's Lib episode, Battle of the Month, the Black Wig.
Oh, God.
Rob Reiner couldn't say that line.
Rob Reiner, was that the one where I said, you're a pervert.
You want me to wear this wig to bed so that you can sleep with another woman without cheating on your wife.
What a sickie, you said.
You sicko.
And he says, right, I'm sick.
You're the one who's sick.
You're jealous of your own wig.
That's a great episode, Sally. You're the one who's sick. You're jealous of your own wig. That's a great episode.
Sally, you're wonderful in that episode.
I remember one of the most powerful moments in all the family was you were really angry at Archie.
And so Archie to cheer you up is kind of like throwing punches at you like you do with a little kid.
And you say, stop it, I'm not your little girl.
And he says, don't you ever say that to me again.
It's a lovely moment.
Yeah.
Yeah, we actually had some lovely moments.
And that was kind of planned by Norman and the writers when the show got picked up by CBS and was going to actually go on the air instead of just be another pilot.
And I didn't know any of this, but one day when the show started airing, we already had eight in the can, as they say.
And now the first one was going on the air January 1971.
And it was quickly climbing to number one.
And we were all so excited every day and feeling our oats.
And we were on the set with the cameramen and the sound men rehearsing because they had to do the dance with us.
So they had to learn when and where we were moving and do it with us.
And on a break, Norman was standing there. And I went over to him and I said, Norman, remember when I was auditioning and it was down to the last four girls to play Gloria and we each had to go in a room in front of all of you and do improvisations with Rob Reiner?
Was I really the funniest one? they do not go on fishing expeditions if you don't like what you're going to catch. Because Norman said to me, no, Sally, we tried to think ahead of which would get us more mileage.
If Gloria was her mama's daughter or she was her daddy's little girl,
and we thought we could get more pathos and humor and tenderness out of some moments in the shows if she was daddy's little
girl and so we cast you because just like carol o'connor you have blue blue eyes and a fat face
jeez i said thanks
well you know regardless of of how you were cast or why you were cast, Sally, I mean, you won two Emmys for the part.
Some of those episodes and some of your work in those episodes in the early seasons is Gilbert and I were talking about in Battle of the Month.
You're trying to get Edith to stand up for herself and you call her a doormat.
And then you say you're a nothing.
And it's a wonderful—your apology to her is a wonderful moment.
The sex talk scene that you have with her is a wonderful moment from the wedding flashback episode.
Oh, yes.
There's so many—and when Gloria has the miscarriage, the wonderful scene with you and Carol on the bed.
Yeah, when he comes to the room and he doesn't know what to say to her.
It's lovely.
It's lovely.
And it's only, what, 11 episodes into the series that this show is proving that it's way more.
It's after something much more than shock value.
Yeah.
You know, it's really quite beautiful.
quite beautiful we had some amazing writers and the only difficult thing for us was that norman kept spinning other shows off onto television and he would take our writers and put them on the new
show and then he'd give us a whole new group of writers to write for us who hadn't written for us
before and didn't know how to really write for us yet and we would have to help them get in the
groove i see in a
groove with them and then norman would take them and put them on his next new show and we'd get
new writers again so it made carol o'connor really mad i can imagine and and one thing uh with carol
o'connor well i it's a combination of carol o'connor as an actor and the writers that here's Archie, an angry bigot, and he's a lovable, sympathetic
character.
Isn't it amazing that you can be both?
Yeah, that's part of the magic of that show, that they pulled that off.
Yeah, because, you know, if you can divorce yourself from the ugly things he's saying,
divorce yourself from the ugly things he's saying, which is learned behavior, and realize that a person that is a bigot like that learns that sitting on their father's knee. It doesn't come
out of nowhere. They learn, children, you know, what's that song? Children, be careful, children
can hear you. So, you know, Archie Bunker must have had a really racist father,
and that's how he turned out to be like that,
and he doesn't even really know what he's saying.
Yeah.
You know, Sammy, them words I just heard you saying here,
they reminded me of something that I always wanted to ask you.
Yeah, sorry.
Now, you're being colored.
Well, I know you had no choice in that.
But what ever made you turn Jew?
Smile, everybody.
Ah, come on, Barney!
What are you doing?
I thought you went home.
You're turning my house into a peep show.
I'm sorry, Mr. Davis.
Sometimes my father says wrong things.
Yeah, we noticed that.
But he's not a bad guy, Mr. Davis.
I mean, like, he'd never burn a cross on your lawn.
No, but if he saw one burning,
he's liable to toast a marshmallow on it.
Right on! Right on!
So we're going to pause it right there, folks,
and continue our conversation with Sally next week in Part 2.
We're going to call this one Part 1.
As you can hear, Sally is a terrific guest and a great talker and full of stories and very enthusiastic.
And we've recorded so much more with her that we want to save some goodies for next week.
We talk about her meeting Katharine Hepburn, working with Joan Crawford, doing the female odd couple on Broadway, of course.
How Ruth Gordon, the great Ruth Gordon, inspired her character on Gilmore Girls and so much more. As I said, she's a terrific, talkative, outspoken, fun guest.
And we thank our friend John Shuck for the introduction to Sally and for making this happen.
So we will see you all next week for part two of the terrific and funny Sally Struthers. I see it's all over now
All over now we're through
And tomorrow I can start in remembering you
There's a faraway look in your eye
When you try to pretend to me
That everything is the same as it used to be
I see it's all over now
All over now we're through
And tomorrow I can start in
Remembering
Sad because we're parting
Remembering
Consolate my heart in
Remembering you Thank you.