Today's Video Link

Wise words about today from Groucho Marx — except that today is Election Day, not November 6th…

Today's Political Comment

I will be glad when tomorrow's election is over. I don't expect to like most of the results because I think we're going to be making the transition from almost nothing getting fixed to nothing getting fixed. Still, I'll be happy to just not get those hourly robocalls from former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa telling me how to vote. I haven't heard what he's doing now but based on the persistence of those calls, he's got to be either a building contractor or someone who installs solar panels on your house.

Freberg Tribute Report

So what did you do last night? I co-produced a tribute to one of my heroes and I don't mind telling you: Jeez, was that a lot of work! I did not do all of it. I was one of three producers — the others were Howard Green and Arthur Greenwald — and I'm not sure I even did a third but I was still exhausted.

Arthur, along with his creative duties, was in charge of a lot of the physical requirements — making sure additional lighting was brought into the theater, making sure a stage was constructed and made properly safe, etc. As I have learned in television, you need someone who anticipates everything that could possibly go wrong and who has the devotion to make certain it doesn't. Howard did a lot of that throughout the project. Arthur did an insane amount of that the last few days.

If I'd known how much of my life it would consume for several weeks…well, I probably still would have done it. Stan Freberg has been that important to me. And I will say this: The job would have been even more difficult if Stan hadn't been so important to so many other people. Everyone, when they heard we were doing a Stan Freberg Tribute, was eager to help. There was total cooperation everywhere we turned.

One of the great things about the evening was that the audience was filled with bright, successful people, mostly engaged in creative enterprises. There were actors, writers, producers…a lot of Stan's peers and co-workers. I probably need to apologize to many friends to whom I did not say the right things because I was pretty busy at times.

We brought the show in at about 2 hours and 14 minutes. Approximately 1:15 of that was clips of Stan's past work. We had a lot of things you'd expect like the Lone Ranger commercial, the Ann Miller commercial, excerpts from his major records, etc. I was pleased that we also had some things no one in the house (Stan included) had seen — like Stan, Daws Butler and June Foray performing the entirety of "St. George and the Dragonet" live on Ed Sullivan's TV show in 1953.

Jerry Beck and Eric Goldberg put together a great 12-minute reel of Stan's voicework in animation that caused a lot of folks in the house to exclaim, "I didn't know he did that!" We also had taped "wish I could be there" videos from Matthew Weiner, Dr. Demento, Penn Jillette, Tom Hanks and Steven Spielberg.

Two of the above-named people.
From the tribute video sent in by two of the above-named people.

About 45 minutes of the evening was our guest speakers and hosts. Harry Shearer was a terrific Master of Ceremonies…and he turned out to be the biggest Freberg fan in the place. I was seated next to him for purposes of last-minute briefing and he was laughing, quoting from memory and singing along with most of the video we showed. "Weird Al" Yankovic, Micky Dolenz, Jerry and Eric, Leonard Maltin and animation producer Bob Kurtz introduced segments and I was delighted with what everyone did.

Finally, we had some moments with Stan and his wife/partner Hunter talking a little about his work, followed by the third or fourth standing ovation of the evening (I lost count) and a lot of happy milling after the show.

I should have some photos of the evening soon but you can see a gallery over at Wireimage.

Larry Latham, R.I.P.

larrylatham02

Animator and artist Larry Latham has died from the cancer he'd been fighting for some time. Larry worked for 30-some-odd years in the Hollywood animation industry, including stints at Disney, Universal, Hanna-Barbera, Marvel and Filmation. It was at H-B where I met him and hired him to do a few of the comic books we were doing then for Europe. He was very good and very professional and I was sorry to lose his services when he got other, better-paying work.

Larry did just about everything. He animated. He designed. He directed. He produced. He was very much involved with the Tail Spin series for Disney. Before any of that, he did some work in underground comix (most notably, Betty Boop Funnies) and after his time in L.A., he returned to his native Oklahoma and taught his craft at the Oklahoma State University Institute of Technology. He also did a popular webcomic called Lovecraft is Missing.

I liked the guy and his work. Near as I can tell, everyone did.

Today's Video Link

You got ten minutes? Spend it watching my friend Christine Pedi perform a Beatles medley as 22 of the great ladies of show business…

Go Read It!

This excerpt from Martin Short's autobiography is headlined, "My Saturday Night Live Hell." I don't think he gave it that title because it doesn't sound all that hellish to me.

Recommended Reading

Will Durst on the threat of Ebola. It's sounding more and more to me like the bigger threat is people who want to benefit from scaring others about it.

Sunday Morning

We set the clocks back an hour last night and I was so immersed in writing something that I got confused. I looked at the clock in my computer taskbar, saw it said 1:25 AM and had to wonder, "Is this the first 1:25 AM today or the second?" I had to look around the house until I found a clock that didn't automatically update itself to realize it was the second.

Tonight, of course, is the gala Stan Freberg Tribute at the Egyptian Theater. I'm not sure if any tickets are still available — there's no one I can call at this hour — but if you want to be there, you might try this link and see if it'll sell you a seat.

I'm co-producing the event with two great guys named Howard Green and Arthur Greenwald, and I'm amazed at how much there was (and still is) to do. I think Arthur and I talked on the phone twenty times yesterday. Howard and Arthur have both done a lot of these and their wisdom is invaluable but, as I'm learning, wisdom and experience are essential but so is the commitment to just plain doing the work.

I'll probably write a long post about the process next week. I'm less interested in telling you folks about it than I am in having a written reminder to myself. Next month when someone asks me to get involved with a tribute to Gallagher, I want to be able to re-read that piece, remember how much time 'n' attention the Freberg evening required and then say, "No, I don't think so…" I'd do it for Stan but not too many other people.

One friend of mine once told me something about organizing an event of this sort. He said, "Something will go wrong that you can't possibly anticipate. You can sit down and make a list of 100 things that might go wrong and what does will not be on that list." Can't wait to see what it'll be. I'm thinking the projectors will blow up and we'll have to simulate the clips from Stan's career with hand shadows. I'm going to go practice doing the Lone Ranger commercial…

Freberg Tix Available! (But not many…)

A handful of remaining tickets are at this moment available for the Stan Freberg Tribute tomorrow night at the Egyptian Theater in Hollywood. Fandango handles the ticket sales for the Egyptian and right this second, you can order tix via the Fandango app for iPhone or Android phones. The Fandango website does not seem to know about them. I have no idea why this is. However, you can access the mobile app page from your computer by clicking here. Once these are gone, there will be no more.

Today's Video Link

Hey, remember that play I saw the other night? The one I liked a lot? Well, here's a little sample of it. Tickets can be obtained here.

Freberg News

A dozen or so tickets have become available for the Stan Freberg Tribute tomorrow evening at the Egyptian Theater. Check back here in a little while and I should be able to tell you how to get one or more of them. I don't know yet if they'll be going up on the online ordering site.

Recommended Reading

Mark Binelli on the disaster that has resulted since Kansas tried the old "supply-side" theory of trickle-down economics. It's never worked anywhere but that won't keep certain folks from fighting for it.

I have a theory that years ago, a bunch of rich folks hired an unscrupulous economist and said, "We need an argument we can advance to poor and middle-class people that they'll somehow be better off if we don't pay taxes." He thought for a while and came up with this.

They said to him, "Won't that harm the economy?" and he answered, "Yeah…but what will you care? You'll be richer than ever."

Saturday Morning

Tomorrow evening, of course, is the big Stan Freberg Tribute…and I don't mind telling you that an awful lot of hours have been spent planning it. More will be spent today, mostly on finalizing video and prepping the Egyptian Theater. My co-producers are Howard Green and Arthur Greenwald and we've divvied up what has to be done. I, the non-green co-producer, don't have to deal with installing lights, testing audio, coordinating with the theater's staff, etc.

This is a wise division of labor because I'm a ninny at that kind of thing. If you left it to me, we'd wind up running the whole evening off one Kenner Give-a-Show Projector. Stan and his work deserve better than that.

One hard part has been deciding which of his work won't get in. We have only so much time and Stan has done oh so many things. I suspect that one big "takeaway" from the evening will be that folks will be amazed at the man's versatility. Shortly after it's over, I may have to begin slapping people who come up to me and say, "Why didn't you show my favorite thing of his?" Because we didn't have nine hours, you cloth-head!

We are, of course, sold out. There seems to be a slight chance that about ten seats will become available. If that happens, I'll tell you about it here and you can all mud-wrestle for them. We have at least one person who is flying over one thousand miles to be there and to get Stan to sign a couple of his treasured Freberg records.

I would tell you about other things going on in my life lately but there don't seem to be any of them. Look for other topics to resume on Monday, though I will have a long Tale of Something or Other for you tomorrow. You'll like it. It involves a TV star and a stripper.

Today's Video Link

Misconceptions from the movies…