WTF with Marc Maron Podcast - Ed Asner from 2015
Episode Date: September 4, 2021From 2015, Marc talks with actor Ed Asner about his legendary career, The Mary Tyler Moore Show, the time he played Marc's dad, and more. Ed died on August 29, 2021 at age 91. Sign up here for WTF+ to... get the full show archives and weekly bonus material! https://plus.acast.com/s/wtf-with-marc-maron-podcast. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
you and i did a short pilot you played my father yeah and you yelled at me in the driveway yeah
and then and then you were unavailable to do the series i was yeah unbelievable you were doing uh
you were doing theater yeah you had a theater run of something it was not the fdr thing
it was something grace grace in new york yes how did that go oh it was very well except the
fucking hurricane hit and then that was it no it kicked uh shit out of business for a couple of
weeks but we were on a limited run anyway do you love doing theater more than anything else?
No.
It's a lot of work, isn't it?
Yeah, it's a lot of work.
And there are a lot of conditions that I seem to solve filmic conditions more easily than I do theatrical problems.
Well, you've been doing the FDR thing for a long time, right?
Four years.
Four years. Four years. I'm about to launch into a new one-man show, though, that we tried out at the Falcon Theater last Friday.
Went very well.
What was that one?
Well, Ed Weinberger, producer, writer of one of them, of the Mary Tyler Moore show, wrote this semi-autobiographical one-man show called A Man and His Prostate.
About himself?
Yeah.
And it's a comedy.
It's light, but it's also very instructive.
About your prostate.
Mm-hmm.
So we learn.
Oh, yeah.
You got to get that thing checked. Oh, yeah. You got to get that thing checked.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
And you're going to find out the best way to keep yourself stroked.
Yes.
Yeah.
Stroked in general.
Yeah.
And stoked.
Uh-huh.
So when you do FDR, was that a personal fascination?
Yeah.
Was he your guy?
He was my guy.
Has there been any other?
I'm younger than you, so I have very little recollection.
I have very vague memories of Nixon, and then I sort of remember things, and then I remember getting angry.
Then that was, right?
And you've been angry ever since?
Sure.
Yeah.
I try not to get too attached to that.
I'm angry anyways.
With or without politics.
Well, I sulk.
Yeah, I do a lot of sulking.
Yeah?
No yelling?
No.
Well, who's going to listen?
Did you used to yell more?
No.
Well, I talk loudly now.
I'm naturally a little hard of hearing.
Right.
Last night, we were at a benefit at the Club Nokia.
Yeah.
And my son and I, Matthew, he's executive, our creative director for Autism Speaks.
And we were both being honored by Autism Works Now.
And Temple Grandin was there.
And she was the big guest.
And she was lined up with a bunch of people on a red carpet.
And I decided to really play it up like a clown.
I went and stood right in front of her, pressing her with my bulk and blocking
her from view of anybody else. And I then spoke loudly. And being autistic, she winced
visibly in pain. And I realized what a schmuck I was for doing two things, my presence overwhelming her and my voice wincing her.
And I thought being the father of an autistic son and grandfather of an autistic grandson,
I committed two of the most cardinal sins you could with an autistic person.
Getting too close, overwhelming them with your bulk, and talking too loudly.
See, but your first impulse was to be funny.
Yeah, yeah.
And then you learned your lesson right after.
Yeah, I played the schmuck last night.
For some reason, I don't feel like that was the first time.
Oh, come on.
Am I wrong?
I mean, sometimes comedy...
No, when I worked with you on your pilot, that was the first time.
There you go.
I got it back.
He turned it around.
No, but I mean, as a funny person, sometimes, I mean, sometimes you don't realize it when
you go through the first impulse.
Yeah.
And then it's just sort of like, oh, shit.
But, you know, when you're known as a clown in certain aspects, people tend to forgive you much more than if you weren't regarded as a clown.
Right.
Did Temple Grandin forgive you?
Yes.
Oh, good.
After the winch.
I don't know.
She could be harboring the greatest resentment in the world to me today.
After the winch, did she laugh at least?
No, no.
She doesn't laugh easily.
Yeah, yeah.
She's fairly serious, I guess.
So, like, how far back do your memories go?
You remember FDR.
Well, yeah, I remember.
I idolized him.
When you were a kid.
Yeah, he died when I was a sophomore in high school.
But like in your generation, my sense of it is that this guy was a guy that really wanted to help people.
Yeah, I think so.
And that doesn't happen.
And I think he learned along the way.
I don't know that he launched into national prominence.
He saw the problems affecting the nation, and everybody else saw the problems, but certainly
didn't think that they could employ the methods he did, which was socialistic, which the American
people don't understand.
They don't even know how to spell it.
Right.
Well, they know the word bothers them for reasons that are not clear to them.
They get it confused with communism.
Yes.
They really do.
So where were you at that time?
Did you grow up in a socialist background as a Jewish guy?
My father was a junkman.
Oh, yeah?
Where?
Kansas City, Kansas.
How'd you end up in Kansas City, Kansas?
I mean, I'm a Jew.
Why don't you ask him?
He probably told you.
I'm a Jew. I grew up in New Mexico. People were like, when a Jew. Why don't you ask him? He probably told you. I'm a Jew.
I grew up in New Mexico.
People were like, when did that happen?
How did you get there?
Well, there were ancient Jews there with the conquistadores.
Sure.
Oh, from the Inquisition.
Yeah, the conversos.
Yeah.
That they didn't realize they were Jewish.
Yeah.
It's a hell of a story.
They got Morgan Davids on their tombstones.
Right, right.
Yeah, they light candles on Friday night.
Right.
But they didn't know they were Jewish.
They thought they were some weird part of the Catholic Church.
Yeah, yeah.
It's a beautiful story.
It is.
But how did you, you don't know how your dad ended up there?
Was he first generation, obviously? Well, no.
I think he ended up there like anybody ended up there.
He worked a year in the sweatshops in boston and after he came after he immigrated yeah and um my mother was
starting to get ripe uh-huh and um my dad came courting and um he wooed and won her. Yeah? Mm-hmm. And how many kids in the family?
Five.
That's five of you?
Mm-hmm.
How many are around?
I got a brother alive.
Uh-huh.
He's six years older.
Oh, wow.
How old are you today?
85.
Pretty good.
Oh, yeah.
Watch me leap this table.
Yeah.
Ah!
Oh, my God, you made it.
I'm sorry I broke your floor.
That's okay.
It was worth it.
So when did you, how religious was the household?
Very, Orthodox.
So you wore a yarmulke?
I called, no, hell no.
I call it Midwestern Orthodox.
Yeah.
Because my dad didn't walk to shul.
Right.
He drove.
Right.
But he didn't smoke on Shabbos and um we had a kosher house you did
oh yeah two pans two plates two sinks all that not two sinks no no we didn't have two sinks
but separate plates seem like a big hassle after a certain point to keep a kosher home yeah yeah um but it's it's you know how nice
to have all the rigidity so that you got something to break away from yeah i guess that's one way to
look at it and what were you doing when you were a kid did you do jobs before you i delivered for a
i got my schwinn bike yeah my first job was delivering for a drugstore.
Yeah.
That was up a long goddamn hill.
And a Schwinn was not a fleet bike.
Sure.
So I was given an order to deliver a whole bag full of, like a newspaper bag, of beer.
This dog store sold beer.
So I pedaled down the hill to this house, and they gave me a bunch of empties to bring
back, which I had to pump up the hill.
Not anticipating.
No.
And I said, I thought it was strange.
There are closer drugstores.
How come you didn't deal with them?
When I got back after puffing up that hill, a little long hill,
three assistant managers were waiting for me in their
white coats. I said, what the hell did you say to that person? I said, I just said
there are closer drugstores. Don't ever do that again. I don't know how much
longer I lasted at that drugstore, but it wasn't long.
You're Be honest.
They screwed the business up.
Make me sweat my ass off going up that hill.
And when did you decide to be an actor?
After I tried out for and got the lead, ended up with the lead,
in T.S. Eliot's Murder in a Cathedral in the summer production of the University of Chicago.
So you went to University of Chicago.
What were you studying?
Revolution.
You were ready to start.
You were ready to lead.
No, I came in there.
I had a vague idea of political science.
I knew they were good for political science.
Archaeology, political science. I knew they were good for political science. Archaeology, political science.
But weren't they on the, wasn't their political
science department later
not the good guys?
They were not the good guys.
Not the good guys. Who was it? George
Schultz was there.
Well, was, right, who was he?
Scalia came out of there too,
I think. Right, and well, Milton Friedman
maybe? Oh, yeah, yeah think. Right. Well, Milton Friedman, maybe?
Oh, yeah, yeah.
And who was the other, the architect of the badness?
Strauss.
Oh, yeah.
I studied.
Leo Strauss?
Yeah, yeah.
Right.
I took Social Science 3.
With him.
Which was mostly economics.
I didn't pay attention one goddamn day that's
probably good yeah and that's when i auditioned for the play and got the lead so i really didn't
matter to me uh-huh and that was the first time he'd ever acted well other than you know synagogue
plays and little plays in school did you do do Jewish theater? Did you do Hebrew plays?
Well, yeah.
I was, you know, Haman.
I was Mordecai.
I was all those.
So you were always a ham.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And this was the first big production.
And you were working, what was it?
I guess it wasn't the theater school, but it was the theater, the troupe, right?
They did, yeah.
They were all extracurricular.
Right, right.
They didn't have a theater department.
And that was what planted the seed where you were like, this is it?
Well, I had done radio in high school and loved it.
But guys, they thought, you know, it was Kansas City bourgeois.
Yeah.
You don't make a living in radio.
How do you make a living in radio?
Right.
Well, I'm certain the parents were probably like, what are you thinking?
No, I wasn't thinking.
Right.
So they started a radio station at the dormitory in Chicago.
Yeah.
Decided to try out for that.
I talked to my effete roommate who was from Newark.
Uh-huh.
And I said, I did radio in high school.
Should I try out for this?
And he said, well, I don't know.
Let me hear you read.
So they had given me the Song of Songs,
beautiful Valenti Press of the Song of Songs,
he and my other roommate, because they considered me a jock
and they thought they'd give me something contrapuntal.
It's kind of almost a love poem.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
It's beautiful, beautiful stuff.
So he said, let me hear you read.
I stood at one end of the room, and I read to him.
And, of course, they thought I was a jock from Kansas.
So they expected to hear a cowboy read.
And after I finished reading, he said, where did you learn to read like that?
And I shrugged.
So after that, when he came home one day and he said, they're going to do Word in the Cathedral as a summer production.
Check the book out, read it, read it.
You can do any of the roles in it.
And I ended up doing Thomas.
Were you a jock?
I played football, you know.
So you were a burly guy.
You were like a...
180, I weighed 180.
Yeah.
So did you finish college?
No, I dropped out because I became an actor.
Oh, really?
That was it?
How old were you?
19?
19.
And where'd you go after that?
Where'd you go first?
Well, my funds were withdrawn
because I'd started an affair with
the lady in the chorus at the same time so between getting sex and getting beautiful acting roles
i couldn't pay attention to leo strauss could i no and your father said fuck this no no more school
right so i came home and i had a couple of jobs, shitty jobs.
And finally, friends were working on the assembly line at the Buick Oldsmobile Pontiac plant in Kansas City.
Yeah.
I got a job down there as a polisher buffer.
With the machine?
Yeah.
Mm-hmm.
And it was an open shop plant.
And the conditions were brutal, especially for somebody who'd never really worked before.
Had to wear a mask?
No, no.
I didn't wear a mask, but you're covered in schmutz.
Yeah.
So I had a Uriah Heep foreman who liked to pick on me.
Finally,
he traded me off to another foreman and I got along all right with him.
I spent six months there.
And in the meantime,
friends were coming from Chicago
and they said, go back to Chicago
and they want you to do Brutus and Julius Caesar.
Really?
Yeah.
Someone just came to you from Chicago
and said friend we need
you yeah to be brutus yeah i went back trying to give false pledges that the affair with the girl
was over with to who my folks what were they where they meant what she wasn't jewish what was the
problem she wasn't jewish yeah that was the problem. Yeah. Remember the old days? Kind of. Yeah.
So I went back and I did Brutus and became more disenchanted with her than I thought I had been.
And stayed on in Chicago and did all kinds of jobs there.
I sold over the phone.
I sold shoes.
But you were acting still.
Whenever I could at the university.
But you weren't enrolled anymore. No. You were just doing plays. Yeah, you could do still. Whenever I could at the university. But you weren't enrolled anymore.
No.
You were just doing plays.
Yeah, you could do that.
You could?
Yeah, and my last production for the regular theater, which was Antigone.
God, you were doing heavy shit.
Susan Sontag was his many.
Really?
Yeah.
She had two lines, I think.
She went a different direction. Didn't she? Yeah. I guess two lines, I think. She went a different direction.
Didn't she?
Yeah.
I guess you could say I fucked up.
How? As Crayon in Antigone.
And it opened on a Friday night.
Then we had a Saturday and a matinee and a Saturday night.
Saturday in a matinee and a Saturday night.
So just before the matinee on Saturday,
the director of the university theater comes down into the dressing room and he says,
he wanted to meet with us.
And he turns to each one of them and he says,
you stunk this way, you stunk that way,
you stunk this way, you stunk that way, you stunk this way, you stunk that way.
And then he said, all because of him pointing at me.
I evidently had shouted my way through the play.
I'll admit that's possible.
But that I forced everybody else to shout in turn
and it ruined the play.
So I pulled myself back for the Saturday night and the Sunday performance. And I was then exiled from that particular
group. Then another rebel group was forming from exiles and those who didn't like that director. A rebel theater group. Yes. Yes. To perform at Ida Noyes Hall.
And my first play was Man of Destiny, George Bernard Shaw.
And they were going to do Androcles and the Lion.
And Mike Nichols was going to be Caesar.
So they needed a little curtain raiser for Androcles.
Yeah.
So they decided to do a 15-minute playlet by William Butler Yeats called Purgatory.
And I played the old man in that, and Mike Nichols directed it.
So that was his first time directing.
Yeah, I think so.
And you were it.
I was it. And did you guys first time directing? Yeah. And you were it? I was it.
And did you guys remain friends?
We were never really...
We were acquaintances.
He was in the Compass Players, right?
Yeah. And he was there at the beginning
of that. Were you there? Of course.
Was that the
Renegade Theater Group that
formed? Is that what became...
Well, a lot of that.
Paul Sills was a member of that renegade group uh-huh and while I was in France stationed in France during the Korean War I did a couple of weeks
before I mustered out home I got a letter from Paul Sills saying, listen,
we're going to start a theater here.
We're going to do classics
and a new play.
Come join us.
And my life
fell into place.
And what was that called?
Playwrights Theater Club.
In Chicago.
How long were you
in the service?
Two years.
Did you get,
did you see action?
Not in France. Yeah, they didn't know that was the first. I saw. Did you see action? Not in France.
I saw a different kind of action.
Did you learn how to speak French?
C'est à demain.
Enough.
Would you take me for the food?
So you go back
and you're in. You're doing plays with these guys. How long were you there for with them? Two years. Okay, so you go back and you're in you're doing plays with these guys how how long were you there
for with them two years okay so you did two years and then then what happens you're like i'm going
to where well i got great reviews paul was starting compass then right with david shepherd his partner
at playwrights and i i didn't feel a nice jew Jewish boy would be doing improv.
So I decided to take my great rave reviews.
As an actor?
Mm-hmm.
So I would say they were going for improv theater.
That's what the Compass Players were. People's theater, they wanted.
So it wasn't comedy necessarily.
Yeah, well, Mike and Elaine came out of there.
And Shelly Berman was there, too.
Shelly Berman.
Yeah.
Mike and Elaine. Shelly Berman, Barbara Harris.. Shelly Berman. Yeah. Mike and Elaine.
Shelly Berman, Barbara Harris.
Uh-huh.
But not Ed Asner.
No, no.
I later, when they came to California as Second City
to do their first performance in California,
because I was such an old acquaintance,
I worked out with them and had a lot of fun.
And then when they had their 25th anniversary, they invited me to participate.
Do you like doing improv?
Yeah.
It's fun, right?
We're doing it now, aren't we?
Yeah.
I'd like to think I am.
I'm on it.
So where'd you go after Chicago?
Well, I went to New York.
I ran off to show my reviews to Well, I went to New York. I ran off to show
my reviews to the
producers and agents of New York.
How'd that go? Not well.
What? They didn't give you a
they didn't say, well, Broadway is yours.
Well, I went to see
Carmen Capalbo and Stanley Chase.
We had done a pirated version of
Three Penny Opera.
So I was supposed to
understudy the police chief.
Yeah.
And then Leon announced
that he was going to leave
for a Broadway touring company.
And I said, oh, shit.
Right.
And he said, well,
we were friendly.
He said, well, it's my role
because Peacham was my role.
And he said, I'll give my notice a week earlier
and recommend them that they try you out for Peachum.
So he did that.
I auditioned for it for the guys.
And they brought me in as Peachum.
And I did it for about two and a half years.
And where was that? is it on Broadway?
Theater Delice
the Lortel Theater
so that was spectacular right?
was I?
I think so
and it got you in?
you established yourself?
I was making $65 a week
that ain't nothing
every goddamn week how did your parents feel about that? Establish yourself? I was making $65 a week. That ain't nothing.
Every goddamn week.
Yeah?
Yeah.
How'd your parents feel about that?
They didn't make any comment.
They knew I was supporting myself, though.
That's all that counted.
Yeah.
And when did you start doing television?
I was doing television.
You could do television if you gave them sufficient notice.
So you're doing some television in New York.
Working my way up in television.
Live television, probably.
Well, there was the Sunday morning shows,
Camera 3, Lamp Unto My Feet.
What would you do?
Like, what were the roles?
Classics, classics.
Really?
Oh, yeah.
So you were doing Shakespeare, Greeks?
Yeah.
On television?
Yeah. Live? Live. On Sunday morning. That's incredible. Oh, yeah. doing a Shakespeare Greeks on television live
on Sunday morning
that's incredible
does that footage exist
hold on I'll go look
alright but when did you start
so what were the rungs
of the letter
my first camera 3
was a
compilation
of
Elizabethan poetry, et cetera.
And Jackie Brooks and I were playing the old lovers.
And a girl named Sharon Follett and George Pappard
were playing the young lovers.
George Pappard.
Banachek.
Yeah.
So that was my first show on Sunday morning.
And when did you start sort of defining yourself in roles that you felt were a little more contemporary?
Because, I mean, you're a monumental figure in television.
But like you're very specifically you.
And I have to assume that in the classics,
I mean, I'm sure you're amazing at it,
but at some point you started to chisel away.
A little more...
My first big, big opening was with
Burt Leonard and Marion Doherty
with Route 66.
Okay.
They hired me to do a Route 66
in Grand Isle, Louisiana,
where Bruce Dern and I
played Israeli secret agents.
Bruce Dern?
Yeah.
And we were there
because we had gotten word
that there was a suspect Nazi
working on one of the oil crews.
Interesting.
Yeah.
Well, we came down there
and we investigated
and found out, and Lou Ayers was the suspected Nazi.
Uh-huh.
And we investigated and found out that it wasn't him, it was somebody else in the crew.
So I spent three days in Grand Isle in insufferable heat and mosquitoes.
And that started me with Marion Doherty andt leonard you were all just young actors at
some point you know cutting your teeth was dern intense then well he was wild and crazy oh yeah
oh yeah so you so you move out here when what's 1960 what two one one and you've been here ever
since but you do a lot of television well i have you know i mean from the
beginning because most people know you from mary tyler moore but you were you were doing episodics
you were doing yeah you did the untouchables gun smoke alfred hitchcock alfred hitchcock a couple
times dr kill there dr kill before i was born yeah outer limits outer limits but so but you're working like a lot you're a working actor
you're in the union things are going good and you know were you at that time did you want to break
into movies was that the plan yeah you showed me the door yeah how did that work i mean it took a
while for you to get into movies well i i I did an early movie, which Jeff Bridges,
I think it was Jeff Bridges, was the star.
Calvin Lockhart was the star.
Uh-huh.
That didn't go anywhere.
I played a high school math teacher or something.
I don't know.
And then in 65 yeah Howard Hawks hired me for
El Dorado yeah and I went to Tucson and had a marvelous time with taking my
family there and I discovered Tucson I discovered John Wayne and Robert Mitchum.
You guys were hanging out?
No, Mitchum and I did some, not Wayne.
How was Mitchum as a guy?
He was a wild.
Another one?
Another wild man?
Black-hearted creature.
He wanted more than anything to be a writer really yeah
and he was just stuck being a movie star yeah it's a tough tough break too bad man yeah right
but howard hawks was that was that an amazing day to be working with that guy yeah he was lovely
yeah so all through this but well i guess what what's amazing, and I don't think that people really realize all the time,
is just that when you work as an actor,
I mean, you really worked.
It seems like you must have been working every month, every week.
Well, that's the thing that killed me.
We arrived in L.A. on Memorial Day of 61.
And I then proceeded to get jobs from my agent
I was lucky to have, Jack Fields.
And in that seven months,
I made more money than I'd ever made any year in New York,
the six years I spent in New York.
So I felt we were blessed.
And then by 62, we moved into a house.
This is with your first wife.
Yeah.
How many kids did you have?
Three.
Yeah.
And you moved into a house.
And I guess you were a type.
You were the Ed Asner type.
People wanted you.
Yeah, I suppose so.
How old were you when Mary Tyler Moore happened?
That was 70, I think.
And how did that come about?
I would have been 41.
Well.
How old?
41?
I think so, yeah.
And you'd already had a whole life of fucking acting already.
Yeah.
It's all these shows that, like, I remember
from when I was a kid,
you know, Mission Impossible,
Ironside.
It's crazy, man.
Why is it crazy?
The Mod Squad.
Because, like, you know,
like, if you were,
if someone was to show me
a reel of your small parts,
you know, leading up to,
it would be fascinating to me
because, like, a lot of times
we didn't have the opportunity. I would not have had the opportunity to retroactively look at your career. Like, you know, a lot of times we didn't have the opportunity.
I would not have had the opportunity to retroactively look at your career.
A lot of times it's like, there he is as Mr. Grant.
Yeah, but there's 20 years before that to look at all that work.
Do you consider a lot of that work stuff you're proud of or are you just working?
I don't like to denigrate.
I don't like to think in terms of take the money and run right i like to make something out of whatever i right sure uh and
there were good roles in there the route 66 has always had promise yeah i had a did a dilly of a
one on my way out to california but was a good show. And you loved doing it?
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
So how'd you get the Mary Tyler Moore part?
How was that?
How'd that evolve?
Well, I guess they had been doing some checking on me.
The producers asked Ethel Winan,
who was vice president in charge of talent,
can Ed Asner do comedy?
And she said, he can do anything.
And she didn't know.
Yeah.
I mean,
the only thing I'd done for her was nothing.
Yeah.
I'd garnished.
And Grant Tinker was the 20th,
and he touted me, too,
the guys.
I came in,
and I read.
So you were a known guy.
You were a go-to guy
as an actor.
Yeah.
I was one of them.
Yeah. And I read one of them. Yeah.
And I read Lou for them,
and at the end of it, Jim Brooks said,
well, that's a very intelligent reading.
And as dumb as I am, I said,
yeah, yeah, very intelligent, but not funny.
So he said, when we have you back to read with Mary,
we want you to read it Wiggy
Wild, Fallout, you know, crazy. I didn't know what the hell he was talking about.
You didn't?
No. So I said, okay, okay. I started to walk out, and I turned back to them. I said, I'm
not sure what you're talking about. Why don't you let me try it that way now, and if I don't
do it, don't have me back they never heard
anything like that before right and I had never said anything like that before
but well you have another point but I go ahead so I read it like I'm a sugar yeah
and they laughed yeah they laughed and after the end of it they said really
just like that was Mary he I came back a week or so later to read with Mary and I kept saying,
what did I do? What did I do? How did I do it? What did we do? I started reading and I read it
like I was sugar-nerving and at the end they laughed again. And I said,
thank you, we'll be talking to you. And when I left left the room Mary then turned to the boys are
you sure and Jim Brooks that's your Lou Grant uh-huh are you sure Jim Brooks how
old was he 12 probably and when you say Meshuggah I mean like a my recollection
of that work that you did
I mean
he was
a big character
but not crazy
well you know
it's that bit about
you know what
you got spunk
she
she
diddles the shit
on the floor
yeah yeah
I hate spunk
yeah right right right
so that
that was the wild and crazy part.
So funny.
Yeah.
Is it?
Like that was a funny moment just now.
Yeah.
Now, did you...
I like spunk, though.
You do?
Yeah.
Were you a spunky guy?
No, I'm not.
Not at all?
No, I took years to build it up.
Oh, really?
It was a learned thing, the spunk.
It is.
But did you grow to... I I have to assume that that set,
because it was like one of those things my mother would watch
and I would sit there at the foot of the bed watching that.
It was such an amazing ensemble and was so important to so many people.
Did you grow to love that show?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah?
It was the yellow brick road yeah yeah it was lovely
it's so much comedy yeah where did all that generate from did you how did that you just
began to work together like uh comedically did it take a little time well the two producers had
great taste they had a good casting director jay sandrich was our director primarily uh-huh and he uh he had
excellent comic knowledge it's just it's fascinating though does it fascinate you in retrospect
yeah but then then we went on and did an hour show of lou grant and i think the cast we had
there was as good if not sure uh better that was a great show. Yeah. Both of them lasted a good many years.
Well, 12 years total.
For both of them.
People love that Lou Grant character.
Do they still come up to you now?
Oh, yeah.
And say, Lou Grant?
He's the avuncular person that people always want.
I think you're hilarious.
Oh, yeah.
But you know that, right?
When did you think that?
Immediately.
When you said...
When you cast me as your father
in that flung you to the pilot?
Yeah.
And then when you got out of the car here
in the driveway and said,
oh, where the fuck am I?
I think, yeah.
Well, look at the neighborhood, for Christ's sake.
Where do you live?
Oh, yeah.
You would really think you had died and gone
to heaven really yeah got a beautiful place yeah we rent oh you do in an apartment or house house
yeah so you don't own the house anymore got rid of that one a long time ago yeah it's easier to
rent i let my wife have it the first wife second the second one and you've been married three times no twice okay she's the one who's showing me
yeah yeah they don't they're you know after it's done someone's not nice usually
yeah no it never never ends i'm sorry you're going through that. No, no, no. It's all part of the life spectrum.
But like, back in the career thing, after Mary Tyler Moore, again, you did another 40 years of work.
50 years.
You've worked more than anyone I've ever seen.
Oh, well.
It's amazing.
Yeah.
I remember seeing you in JFfk and thinking like holy shit
ed asner scary that is a heavy fart that was a heavy part what did you say it's a heavy part
that got you that's a heavy fart what a fart that was a heavy fart yeah it was well and jack
lemon had the scratches on his face to prove it. Oh, that's right. Was that the first time you worked with him?
No, we had worked on Broadway together.
When was that?
That was in 60.
Really?
Yeah, Face of a Hero.
Albert Decker, Betsy Blair, Sandy Dennis, Russell Collins, Roy Poole.
Did a lot of theater, Ed.
Ellen Holly.
I did before
yeah
before
not since I came
to Hollywood
now when
okay so
in 1960
you work with Jack Lemmon
then you work with him
in JFK
had you seen him since
I don't recall
like I always assume
that people have
these moments
where they're like
oh my god
how are you
that's what it is
you know
we had a we had a a great director for Face of a Hero,
Sandy McKendrick.
The night of the cocktail party before rehearsals began,
he said, lovely reading.
And he said, of course, you can't be that funny.
And I, oh, well I'll use the right director.
He'll take care of me.
Well, he so militated against anything I might do that was funny,
he eventually had me doing my role with my back to the audience.
Why?
Because he didn't want me to be funny.
Why?
And the character could only have been written for two reasons,
to be funny and to commit perj character could only have been written for two reasons, to be funny
and to commit perjury
as part of the plot.
Yeah.
So I suffered
through that goddamn show.
Years later,
I don't know where I ran into,
maybe it was with JFK.
Yeah, Jack.
And I made some comments
complaining about McKendrick's direction.
And he said, oh, no, no, no, no.
I knew we were in trouble when I was on stage.
And I looked over in the wings.
And there he was.
And he was visualizing the camera shot he was going to shoot from the wings as director. And he was visualizing the camera shot he was going to shoot from the wings as director and
he was visualizing the camera though he forgot about the play writing a play so
that brought Jack and me close together did you like working with Oliver Stone
yeah he was good the Oliver was funny yeah we. We'd go along, and we'd rehearse, and I'd think about something,
I'd think about something, lining up a shot.
Yeah.
And I'd say, you know, what if I change this word or change this line to that?
And if he didn't have time to think about it, he'd say, yeah, sure, fine, go ahead.
But if there was too much time before we were ready to shoot, he'd come back finally.
And he'd say, no, I don't think so.
Keep it the way it is.
Yeah.
So he had to sneak it in.
But if I got him without a lot of time, he'd always buy the changes.
You're doing a lot of voice work now and that was the the up
movie was a big deal yeah do you enjoy doing that i love it yeah right it's easy i love it right
that has nothing to do with easy but i i uh but it's exciting to see i can do a as good a job
with just the voice right without having to Right. I don't have to shave.
That's right.
I just did an angry raccoon today, earlier today.
You did?
Yeah.
I was an angry raccoon.
Where can we see this raccoon?
This would be on Nickelodeon.
This would be on the Harvey Beaks cartoon.
It's a Nickelodeon show.
I don't know.
Who knows what's going on on television anymore?
Well, it's nice that you're gainfully employed.
I do okay.
Yeah.
This thing does okay out of the garage.
Yeah.
That show that you and I did, it became a show.
It's a third season started.
Is it?
Yeah.
It's going?
Yeah.
So who ended up being your father?
Judd Hirsch.
Oh, my God.
What do you...
You were doing a play.
I know.
I know.
Judd Hirsch is a fine actor.
He is.
He's good.
He can be a pain in the ass.
How many episodes did you make per season?
We did 10 that first season, then 13 the second season, then 13 this season.
Good. first season then 13 the second season then 13 this season good it was yeah you know it's a it's
it's an interesting time now that when you were on television in the 70s you know you only had
three options and now you gotta you know you got hundreds of options it's interesting the landscape
and it's more chaotic than ever yeah it's just you know how our lives are not made better or
simpler i don't think absolutely, I don't think.
Absolutely not.
I don't think so at all.
And we just adapt to it without even thinking about it.
Does it exhaust you?
Yeah.
It does?
I haven't figured out all the aspects of my cell phone.
No, there's no figuring it all out.
Oh, some people do.
That's all they do because they live and sleep and die with it.
Yeah, but you just learn to do the three things or four things or five things.
That's right, that's right.
So now, you never stop working.
Is that, do you not?
Is that why I'm so rich?
Yeah, you're just filthy rich.
Oh, my God.
How much do you need?
I'm okay.
I just want you to be happy.
Oh, yeah, well, make me rich.
Now, what about the
when you were head of the union
how did that come about
what made you decide
to do that
well I had campaigned
vigorously
for the rebels
of the union
this is AFTRA right
no SAG
you were the head of SAG
yeah
because I
I was the
the head of Lou Grant
and I spoke well on the streets.
They decided to run me as their candidate against Bill Schallert, who was a good president, but they wanted to do better.
Right.
And I defeated him.
Was that exciting?
Yeah, I guess because I was going into waters I certainly didn't have charted.
Oh, yeah?
Yeah.
Well, how was that experience?
What were you hoping to accomplish?
Learning on the job.
Yeah.
Learning how your friends can be as punishing, if not more so than your enemies.
So what was the day-to-day thing?
What were you fighting for?
What's the job of a union head?
Well, as always, you know, you fight for minority rights,
you fight for senior citizens, greater inclusion.
So did you feel like you accomplished something in that position?
Well, the membership certainly seemed to like me
and speak favorably of my presidency.
But what the union has become is dreck.
Yeah.
Have they all become dreck?
A lot of them?
Why do you think that's happened?
Because I know you're a fighter.
You fight the good fight.
What do you think's happened? Well, merger was a fighter. You fight the good fight. What do you think's happening?
Well, merger was a mistake.
Yeah?
Because they didn't...
We had studied merger.
After 1980, we studied merger.
Uh-huh.
And merger would be fine
if you can achieve the merger
of health and welfare.
Right.
But if you can't merge those plans
and I forget what the term is,
gain acceptance of, say, your work and after
and get credit for it with your SAG medical plan,
if you can't do those things, you're losing out all the time.
And it's the same way with pension.
Why shouldn't the pensions be merged?
Right.
Find the way to do it.
Right.
To coalesce.
Right.
And they didn't do it.
Yeah.
And what they've got now is a mishmash.
Right.
Yeah, you just kind of get covered in whatever you make the money.
Yeah, yeah.
Right?
Yeah.
Did you ever
have any aspirations to politics people thought i did when i was uh when i got outspoken on central
america uh-huh they thought i was trying to follow in reagan's footsteps yeah yeah but uh no i never
read it i always found that the the actor who stayed the actor and spoke out probably achieved more clout.
Than a politician.
Than a politician.
And certainly it's much more rewarding financially to leave acting and become a politician.
Because those babies certainly receive great benefits.
Yeah, they do say the and security detail depending how high up you get well they should have security details
i'd like like to knock a few of them in the head yeah so what uh in looking back on the whole uh
the whole endeavor the life what uh because i just like, I look at the resume and you work so much.
Are there things that you look back on and think like, Jesus Christ, that was fucking amazing?
Like, do you like sit and reflect at all?
No.
You don't?
No.
I didn't think so.
It's done, right?
I'm waiting for the next job.
Yeah?
Well, it looks like you got a lot going on.
What are you doing?
Well, a man and his prostate certainly has a lot
of promise to it.
But that's going to get you on the road, right?
Not necessarily. I mean,
who knows? Maybe we can film it.
Maybe we can get it in a
stage in New York.
And just hang out for a while
and do it? Look at the mileage
Love Letter's got.
Yeah.
For God's sake.
And you still, you like working.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
Don't you?
Yes.
But sometimes I wonder, would it be nice to sit down?
Well, I think I've become too keyed up and geared up to sit down.
I've really got to go through a long, dry run
of practicing sitting down.
Yeah, it was never part of your...
Just keep moving.
Yeah.
How old are your children now, all of them?
Well, I've got boy-girls twins who are 51.
Unbelievable, yeah.
And their younger sister is about 48.
Yeah.
unbelievable yeah and their younger sister's about 48 yeah and then i got my 27 year old in uh connecticut yeah yeah you get along good with all of them i try to yeah yeah
and you got grandkids seven how's that it's great it's all right. Come on. Come on.
I don't drop my pants at the joy of grandkids.
Yeah?
Just another sperm order fulfilled.
No.
Yeah.
You don't fill with love in your heart?
No.
No?
I try to give them a fair shake, let's put it that way okay how old are they
they like my age they're from 15 to about four four 15 to four are the grandkids do they have
a sense of who you are i guess so i don't know oh right yeah you have any joy in your life ed
well you know she's not around right now
you're gonna be seeing her later yeah when she comes back from the ashram
really is that where she is do you keep in touch with any actors that you worked with i mean are
any of your friends actors yeah peter jason is a good friend. Yeah, I like him a lot.
And now all of a sudden
I'm just concerned about your life. Do you play cards?
Do you sit and do... I do play cards
at Norby Walters. Yeah?
Once a month or two. When you play poker?
Yeah. That's nice.
Yeah. What do you do for
exercise?
I spend a half hour on the
elliptical.
Okay. And do some push-ups.
Do you? Yeah.
Alright. And what...
You don't want to fuck with me. No, I never
wanted to. I knew that when we acted together
in that brief
capacity. Right.
I knew I didn't want to fuck with you.
So,
do you do the FDR thing anymore, or is that done?
I'm going to do it in Cape Girardeau, Missouri.
For how long?
In October.
One night.
Oh, okay.
At Rush Limbaugh's hometown.
I'm going to find out what the roots are to Rush Limbaugh.
To the monster?
What do you think it is?
He's a...
Well, I heard a story a long time ago that initially he was on radio spouting a liberal format.
Probably.
And that they came to him and they said, this ain't going to sell.
Yeah.
He said, okay, I'll switch.
Yeah.
He's a showboat.
Yeah.
There are evil clowns and there are good clowns yeah yeah right
but you probably remember like you know like what was radio like when you were younger
when you were loved it i loved it when you were trying to get into nbc you know i didn't try to
get into radio i never did well you did some in high school and you did a little bit i know but
i wasn't trying to get into it oh okay nbc NBC University Theater of the Air. Yeah.
Escape was another great show.
Yeah.
That's where I first heard
Leinigen versus the ants.
Yeah.
Oh, God,
was that great.
William Conrad
was the narrator.
Yeah.
And they had
little bugles blowing
every time the ants marched.
You loved it.
Oh, I loved it.
The theater of the mind.
Yes, yes.
So that was when you were a kid,
you were listening to that.
Mm-hmm.
Like, what other things
do you remember around that?
Radio.
Well, Screen Actors Guild Presents.
Uh-huh.
Lux Radio.
Yeah.
I thought there were a lot of actors
in radio, weren't there?
Well, I'll tell you what.
Yeah.
That's true.
I used to listen to The Eternal Light. Uh-huh. I don't there? Well, I'll tell you what. Yeah. That's true. I used to listen to The Eternal Light.
Uh-huh.
I don't know if they were playing when you were.
And so when I first started out, I got a, I was still in New York.
Yeah.
And I went to see the guy who cast Eternal Light.
Yeah.
And he said, yeah, yeah, I forget what his name was.
So they cast me on a couple.
And one of them, and this was memorable for me,
I played one of Moses' generals.
And the other generals were Louis Van Rooten, Alexander Scorby, Norman Rose.
I can't remember the others.
But five biggest names in radio.
Yeah.
In America.
Yeah.
And I was the sixth.
And I thought I had died and gone to heaven.
To me, it was more important than any play or film.
And whoever was in it didn't matter.
Being with these guys, to me, was the mark of success.
Yeah.
Was it a great feeling? Oh, yeah. Yeah. Was it a great feeling?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
Wonderful.
I mean, Scorby and Norman Rose.
Yeah.
Did you ever see
the Russian War and Peace?
Mm-mm.
Norman Rose was the narrator of it.
It's the most beautiful narration
you ever heard.
And Scorby, it goes without saying,
was always great.
Was that the only time
you really felt that
where you're like,
these are my heroes?
Yeah.
Yeah. I didn't feel it with John Wayne naturally.
Hawks?
Hawks, I expect
but he's
distant. He's the director.
John Wayne you didn't love?
Well,
he was hard not to love because he's such a scoundrel.
Yeah.
But I was too deeply geared in leftist identification to, but he ended up treating me okay.
Yeah?
Yeah.
But you missed the, I mean, you missed a blacklist in Hollywood.
Yeah, I mean, you missed a blacklist in Hollywood.
No, I became part of it my own, let's say, after I took my stand on El Salvador.
You felt ostracized?
Yeah, blacklisted.
Really?
Yeah.
And that was in the, what, the 70s or 80s?
80.
It was 1980.
And what was your position exactly? Well, that this government had to stop providing arms to the repressive government of El Salvador,
who were killing farmers and people that they regarded as poor scum,
who undoubtedly had to be communists.
it as poor scum who undoubtedly had to be communists.
And that you felt that that got you blacklisted.
Well, I was a spokesman for medical aid for El Salvador.
And people thought I was giving union money to them, which I wasn't. And they thought that I was aligning myself with what probably was a communist-inspired opposition.
I can remember the first big announcement we gave was in Washington, a press conference.
And I had always played it careful, you not to not to step on my wang
mm-hmm and the former I could the the so that because I was the spokesman and
then the others who were with me, who were also actors, the first questions automatically went to me.
Right.
So the second question I got was from a cable reporter.
He said, you say you're in favor of free elections in El Salvador.
I suppose those elections turn out a communist government.
And I thought, bam!
Oh, shit.
And I said, you come all this way,
and you've successfully avoided being pegged,
and here you've got to deliver.
And I gave some wimpish answer to him,
moved on to the next guy,
gave an answer that I could get away with with him,
and was so plagued with guilt
that I'd come all this way, come all this time,
and I was going to not be up front with who I am
and what I was doing.
And I said, I wasn't satisfied with my answer to you.
All I can say to you is that if it's the government,
the people of El Salvador choose, let them have it.
And nothing was ever reminded to me
of that answer.
But I felt from that point on,
my career was dead.
For how long?
Oh, several years.
Really?
Oh, yeah.
Interesting. Did you feel like you lost friends over that i don't know but if they if if they were friends and they left me because of that
statement then they can go to hell so but but mostly in in in terms of like if you felt like
you were blacklisted it was fear of the studios aligning themselves
with a communist sympathizer or a politically lefty actor.
I found two instances.
I eventually gave up, during this blacklist,
I gave an interview in Washington to see where I happened to be
for some reason.
And in it, I said that in a blacklist,
for some reason.
Right.
And in it, I said that in a blacklist,
your liberals join in on that just as much as your conservatives.
Oh, yeah?
Because the director or the producer,
well, they won't allow their conscience to say,
no, he's a commie.
What they'll say is, no, he's too fat,
or he's too gray, or he's overexposed.
Think up some euphemism to not hire me.
But they would never say he's a commie.
Right.
So I said that on that.
And it's what happens.
And I gave two instances.
And one was a producer
who one would think
was a liberal.
Howard Rodman wrote a script for him
for a new series
after Lou Grant was canceled.
And he suggested me
for the senior doctor.
And the producer said,
no, I think he'd be
a political liability.
Well, that's straight.
That's straight, yes.
But it's...
It's blacklisted.
It's blacklisted.
Right.
Yeah.
Right.
And then a little while longer, I got a job offer in Connecticut, I think, or Boston, I don't know, for some network documentary.
And the first day, the producer invited me to the launch.
He said, you know why you're here?
I said, no.
You gave an interview about six months ago or a year ago about blacklisting.
I said, yeah.
And he said, that's why you're here.
I said, what do you mean he said well I had I had another documentary that I put you down for and submitted your name along with
others to the uh to the uh company and the list came back and there was a red line through your
name he said and I knew why but I didn't do anything.
And that's why you're here now.
To make it right.
Yeah.
Well, you survived that storm.
You weathered it.
You stood your ground.
There are still people out there who probably wouldn't want to hire me because they think
I'm a commie.
But you're not a commie.
I don't know.
No, I'm not.
But I mean, who gives a shit
yeah
I'm glad you're alive man
me too
and it was great talking to you
good being with you