Recommended Reading

Here's Kevin Drum (quoting Paul Krugman a lot) on the subject of the proposed Comcast absorption of Time-Warner Cable.

I must admit that my attitude has been more or less that these companies are so huge and so powerful, it doesn't matter a lot if they get more powerful. It's like if you have King Kong and Mighty Joe Young stomping around. Does it really matter which one steps on you? If they teamed up and one climbed on the other's shoulders, would it be much different if they stepped on you with their combined weight?

But probably with cable providers, it would for reasons Drum and Krugman state. And it's going to be a tough deal to block because there's a powerful group of people in this country — including for some reason, a lot of very poor folks — who think the most immoral, awful thing the government can do is to prevent anyone from making as much money as possible, no matter who it hurts. The only reason bank robbery is illegal these days is because when it occurs, the money flows from the wealthy to the poor.

What Have You Done?

Today, I want to start with two similar anecdotes that one hears in or about Hollywood. Both deal with the not-uncommon situation where someone who is older and accomplished has to audition for someone who is young and perhaps not well-informed about the person who is there to try out for a job.

In one, the older/accomplished person is the great director, Billy Wilder. In it, Wilder has come in to talk to a much younger studio executive about perhaps directing a project. The much younger studio exec says, "Thank you for coming in, Mr. Wilder. I'm afraid I'm not familiar with your work. Could you give me a brief rundown of what you've done?"

To which Mr. Wilder replies, "You first."

In the other, the older/accomplished person is the actress Shelley Winters and the much younger person is a casting director. The casting director asks pretty much the same question of Ms. Winters —

— and Ms. Winters, who has had these auditions before and is sick of them — reaches into an enormous purse she's carrying and hauls out the Academy Award she received for The Diary of Anne Frank and the Academy Award she received for A Patch of Blue. She slams them down on the casting director's desk and says, "That's what I've done!"

I can't say for sure that either of these stories is true but they are widely-told and widely-believed.  I've also heard a version in which it was Wilder who brought his Oscars to the meeting and when asked what he'd done, brought out his for The Apartment, Sunset Boulevard and The Lost Weekend, plus his Irving Thalberg Award.  In any case, that question is asked of veterans too often. Show Business is all about selling yourself and if you're around for any length of time, you will eventually be selling yourself to people who are much younger and don't know who the hell you are. A lot of older folks have a chip of massive proportions on their shoulders over this.

In 1983, I was auditioning voice actors for a cartoon special I'd written and would be voice-directing. In fact, it was my first voice-directing job. I had written all the major roles with specific actors in mind and would have been happy to just cast them without forcing them and a host of others to traipse into a studio in Burbank on a very hot day to audition. But the network insisted I read and record at least three actors, including my first choices, for each part. One of the actors I knew I wanted was Howard Morris so we called him in.

You know Howard Morris. That's because if you come to this weblog, you're a well-read, intelligent human being. Alas, in 1983, Howie was 64 years old and hadn't been appearing on television or in movies with any regularity. He felt he was spending his life auditioning for a stream of folks too young to have seen Your Show of Shows or any of the other fine things he'd done.

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I had met Howie before, most recently when I was eleven years old. That day in '83, I was 31 but I probably looked 11 to him. He was, as I would learn, a wonderful, sweet man but he had a temper — a bad one at times. A lot of things pissed him off and a biggie was, as he put it, "auditioning for teenagers." A man of great accomplishments, it drove him crazy that the whole question of whether he worked — whether he got to do what he loved and what paid his bills — was in the hands of children who were too often unaware of those accomplishments.

So when I said to him, "Mr. Morris, it's an honor to have you here," he fixed me with a confrontational stare and tone and said, "Oh, yeah? You have no idea who the fuck I am."

Ah, but we were even: He had no idea who the fuck I was, either. He didn't know he was there to read for a guy who'd written the part with him in mind because I was so very familiar with his work.

He also didn't know he was there to read for a guy with a great memory and an obsession with the entertainment industry, comic books and cartoons included. That has been one of the Secret Weapons of my career. The first time I met Jack Kirby, he was impressed with how much I knew about the comic book field. When I went to work for Sid and Marty Krofft, they too were startled by the history (some would call it trivia) I could come up with about them and the folks with whom they worked. Marty found it especially useful when we were courting guest stars to appear on our shows. One time, he introduced me to Jerry Lewis and said, "Mark here knows every single thing you've ever done." I didn't but I knew enough to more than flatter Jer.

So I told Howie, "I know who the fuck you are. You were on Your Show of Shows with Sid Caesar and then you did Caesar's Hour with him. You were in Finian's Rainbow on Broadway and you directed the pilot for Get Smart and lots of episodes of shows like Hogan's Heroes and The Dick Van Dyke Show. You played Ernest T. Bass on five episodes of The Andy Griffith Show and directed a couple of them, too. You were in The Nutty Professor and you also directed a bunch of movies including Don't Drink the Water, Goin' Coconuts with Donny and Marie, With Six You Get Eggroll with Doris Day and one of my favorites, Who's Minding the Mint? You were the voice of Beetle Bailey on his cartoon series and then you were Jet Screamer on The Jetsons and you were Atom Ant and you were Mr. Peebles, the pet store owner who kept trying to sell Magilla Gorilla and you were the voice of the koala bear in all those Qantas Airlines commercials and you directed most of the McDonaldland commercials and you were the voice of about half the characters in them and can we get on with this audition so I can get you in my show now that I've proven I know who the fuck you are?"

We were friends from that moment on. And he was great on that show and others I used him on. I really loved the guy.

But there was one disadvantage to being around Howie. You had to keep listening to the Shelley Winters anecdote, which he told constantly. I must have heard it from him fifty times. Because he was so mad at having to audition for people who didn't know who the fuck he was.

The last two decades of his life, Howie did not work as much as he wanted to and I suspect that attitude was one of the reasons why. I don't mean the attitude of producers and casting directors who hadn't bothered to familiarize themselves with his résumé. I mean his attitude, as expressed to me when he came in for his audition with me. 95% of the time, that would cause the person with hiring power to think, "Well, this guy would sure be a lot of trouble."

It wasn't just that he was confrontational and occasionally angry. It's that when someone walks in the door clinging to long-ago accomplishments, you wonder if they're capable of turning loose of the past and living in the present. Howie certainly was.  Once he felt he was among friends, he was a pussycat…a very talented pussycat.  Not everyone is.

On one project I worked on for a few days, I found myself writing sketch comedy with a guy who'd been at it since about the time I was born. I started to tell him an idea I had for a skit about two friends and one of them owes the other some money. Before I'd said much more about it than that, he interrupted me and said, "Oh, yeah…the money-owing bit. I did it with George Gobel. I can just write it up."

I knew the routine he was recalling. It was an old burlesque sketch that turned up in a lot of early TV shows and it wasn't at all what I had in mind. But that was all we were going to get out of this guy.  We were not, by the way, writing for George Gobel…or anyone who worked in his style.

There's a difference between bringing experience to a project and bringing a stubborn denial that things change…and should. I know an older writer (meaning: older than me) who had a personal Golden Age in the sixties and seventies writing detective shows like The Name of the Game and Cannon and Barnaby Jones. Every time I run into him, he starts in bitching about how "these damn kids" who are now the producers and show-runners won't hire him to write the cop shows of today.

To him, it's pure Ageism…and I don't doubt there's some of that. There's a lot of Ageism out there. But if he does have a chance to get any work these days, it isn't helped that he so obviously doesn't want to write the current shows. He wants to write Banacek.

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The other day when Sid Caesar died, I wrote a piece here about how every time anyone hired him, his natural instinct was to turn whatever he was doing into a sketch from 1957. No one doubted his talent. A lot of producers just doubted he could or would do their show instead of doing his show. Let me give you an amazing example of this. Some of you are going to think I'm making this up…

Sid wrote his autobiography twice. I haven't read the second one but in the first one, which he called Where Have I Been?, you can read the following beginning on page 261 of the original hardcover…

…I was called over to Paramount Studios to meet with two TV producers who had sold ABC a pilot for a new situation-comedy series. I was told they had been associated with Taxi, a series I thought was quite good. Their new show was about a bar and the quaint characters who hung out in it. I was to be one of the quaint characters.

I had read the script, which they sent over in advance, and I didn't like it very much. The role they had in mind for me, in particular, was pure cardboard, strictly one-dimensional. But I saw some promise in it if I could be allowed to add some of my own shtick. So I went over to see the producers.

I expected to be meeting with Jim Brooks or Stan Daniels, two top talents, who, in addition to creating Taxi had previously been involved with The Mary Tyler Moore Show, among others. Instead, I found myself in a room with a couple of twenty-five year olds who seemed to know of me only from a part I had played in the movie Grease in 1977. I soon realized that, like so many of their generation in the industry, their concept of comedy did not go back beyond Gilligan's Island, on which they had been raised as children.

I said, "I have a few ideas to make my part a little more interesting and meaningful." They stared at me coldly and said, "We're perfectly satisfied with the part as we wrote it, Mr. Caesar." I felt my temper rising, but I controlled it. I went through the motions of having an amiable chat with them before I got up and said, "OK. That's it. Thank you. Goodbye." They were startled. Actors don't walk out on the almighty writer-producer when a possible five-year series contract is being dangled in front of them.

But I figured the concept was so poor it probably never would make it to a series anyway. Besides, even if it did, who would want to be associated with such shit?

And that is why Sid Caesar was not a regular cast member on that unsuccessful piece of shit, Cheers.

I mean, you figured it out, right? It wasn't on ABC. It was NBC. And it wasn't a five-year series, it was eleven, during which it was maybe the most acclaimed situation comedy on the air. But the show he walked out on with such disgust was Cheers.  It went on the air about the time his book came out and it stayed on for a long, honored time.

The producers he met with were almost certainly Glen and Les Charles, who were not twenty-five years old. Glen was 39 and Les was 33. (When Sid Caesar started on Your Show of Shows, he was 28 and Mel Brooks was 24.) By this point, the Charles Brothers had not only produced Taxi — a show he and most of the country thought was "quite good" — but they were also writers for The Bob Newhart Show, the one where Bob played a psychologist. That was a rather fine show, too.

Giving Sid the benefit of every doubt, maybe the pilot script he'd read wasn't as wonderful as the eventual series. The role in question was reportedly Coach and it may at that stage have been somewhat different from what Nicholas Colasanto wound up playing.

Still, Caesar had been around TV long enough to know that scripts — especially pilot scripts — get rewritten and rewritten and rewritten. He'd done the Broadway show Little Me, which Neil Simon rewrote extensively throughout rehearsals and tryouts. Things change as you cast roles and get into rehearsals and the project takes shape. That's why when you consider signing on for a project, you take into account the reputation and talents of the folks you'll be working with. You trust in their ability to fix that which needs to be fixed…especially when they've just done a successful show you thought was "quite good."

(I've only met the Charles Brothers once, by the way, and don't really know them. But they're very bright, nice guys and I'll bet you they knew exactly who Sid Caesar was. Just as I'll bet they didn't learn comedy from watching only Gilligan's Island.)

The tragedy, of course, isn't just that Sid walked out on one very popular, highly-honored series. It's that for the rest of his career, any time some producer said, "Hey, why don't we get Sid Caesar for this role?," someone probably told him about the way Sid had treated the Charles Brothers. Which meant that the producer said, "Well, let's see who else might be available…"  The anecdote not only suggested he'd be difficult to work with but also that he was hopelessly out of touch with what current audiences would like.

And had he been on Cheers, a couple of new generations would have known him and that would surely have translated into offers for other TV shows and for movies. Look at what being known from being on a current series, even as a guest star, has done for Betty White and Jerry Stiller and Shelley Berman and even Sid's old cohorts, Carl Reiner and Mel Brooks. This is on top of the millions and millions of dollars and probable Emmy Award(s) Sid would have had from being on Cheers instead of sitting home, stewing about how there was no place for him on television.

None of this is to suggest that there isn't a lot of Ageism in the entertainment industry…or that there aren't plenty of people in power who don't know a whole lot about the history of their business. But there are know-nothing bosses everywhere in every walk of life. If you try to avoid them all, you'll never get a job…and sometimes, you're wrong about them the way Sid was wrong about the guys who had that show set in a bar.

The world keeps turning and you have two choices: You can turn with it or you can spend your time trying to shove it back in the other direction. Since no one has ever succeeded at that yet, I don't know why people — especially people who could be as brilliant as Sid Caesar — keep trying. Besides, it's so much fun to hop on and go along for the ride, especially when the alternative is being left behind.

Nothin' Says Lovin'…

Stephen Colbert is auctioning off the microwave oven that he once stole from Bill O'Reilly's green room. It's all for charity but folks have been monkeying around with the eBaying. The bidding got up near $100,000 but a lot of five-figure bids have been canceled, withdrawn or just plain voided…so now it's at $4,050.00 — still not a bad price for an old microwave — and they've restricted the bidding to pre-approved bidders. I suspect Dr. Colbert will be having some fun with all this in the days to come.

Today's Video Link

A good song for tonight. Times three…

My Latest Tweet

  • Charlie Sheen to marry for 4th time. She's a porno actress. He's Charlie Sheen. How could this not work out?

We Knew It!

Dame Edna (aka Barry Humphries) did her/his Farewell Tour a few years ago and stopped in Los Angeles at the Ahmanson Theater. Dame Edna (aka Barry Humphries) will be doing her/his Final Farewell Tour in selected U.S. cities next year and will be down at the Ahmanson January 25-March 15, 2015.

Weather Or Not

This morning on Meet the Press, Bill Nye the Science Guy debated Marsha Blackburn the Congressional Hand Puppet of rich folks who don't want to face the overwhelming mountain of evidence for Climate Change. The topic, of course, was Climate Change and while it was a shorter discussion than the one Nye did with the Creationist, it went pretty much the same. The Creationist believed what he believed and nothing was going to change his mind. Nye said that evidence would change his mind.

If you want to watch the debate, here's a link. But I think I just spoiled it for you.

Today's Video Link

Hey, let's listen to two more of these "Happy Birthday" songs that Mel Blanc recorded. If you were born in July, you were born in the sign of Pepe LePew, which means you're destined to spend your life lusting after a cat with a white stripe on its back. And if you were born in August, you're under the sign of Speedy Gonzales, which means you star in the weakest Warner Brothers cartoons ever done and they don't show them much because of ethnic stereotyping. Sorry…

A Conversation with Mel

Shelly Goldstein sent me this link to a 1975 interview with Mel Brooks in Playboy. I don't know how Mel managed to make movies between around 1975 and 1980 because he always seemed to be giving these interviews…and it's not as true of this one — because this one interviewed him for many, many hours and was whittled down — but most seemed to be the same interview. Same questions, same anecdotes.

I got to sit in his office a few times when others were interrogating him. He was even funnier when you heard him.

Note that in this conversation, Mel makes it sound like Larry Gelbart and Woody Allen worked on Your Show of Shows. Even he gets it wrong!

Tony News

Neil Patrick Harris will not host the Tony Awards this year. He may get one but Hugh Jackman will be the host this time. Mr. Harris is opening on Broadway April 22 in a new production of Hedwig and the Angry Inch that is, at the moment, only slated to run through August 17. Advance word on the show is very strong but even if no one likes it, it'll probably be sold out for that entire run…and since the Tony Awards are June 8, N.P.H. will be a little too busy. He probably won't be too busy to do one number with Jackman about who's the better host but…

Hey, you know why the show is opening April 22? Because the cut-off date for a show to open and be eligible for this year's Tony Awards is April 24. Cutting it close. The nominations come out April 29. The field doesn't look that strong this year so Hedwig has a good chance of copping a lot of Tony Awards.

Wiki Worries

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In 1967, Hanna-Barbera produced for CBS a Saturday morning series called Moby Dick and Mighty Mightor. Someone just called my attention to the Wikipedia page on this series and this paragraph…

Tor is voiced by Paul Stewart, while Mightor is voiced by Robert Duvall. Pondo, Tog, Ork and Bollo are voiced by John Stephenson. Sheera is voiced by Patsy Garrett. Little Rok is voiced by Norma MacMillan.

The reference to Robert Duvall links to the Wikipedia page for the actor who appeared in Tender Mercies, M*A*S*H, To Kill a Mockingbird, The Godfather, Lonesome Dove and many other films. I don't know of him ever doing voices for any animation but he was certainly not the voice of Mightor. Paul Stewart was the voice of Mightor and Bobby Diamond was the voice of Tor. Then we come to this paragraph which is even screwier…

When Hanna Barbera was producing an animated series based on the Marvel Comics super-group the Fantastic Four they were also slated to produce a series based on the Marvel superhero the Mighty Thor (Marvel Comics) as well. However, Marvel had recently made a deal with Grantray-Lawrence Animation to produce several animated series based on some of their other characters called The Marvel Super Heroes. And at the last minute Marvel pulled Thor from Hanna-Barbera slate as part of this new deal. Not wanting to abandon the Thor concept entirely, Hanna-Barbera retooled the designs made for Thor and come up with a show which became "The Mighty Mightor". There are noticeable similarities between the characters: First, their names, "The Mighty Thor" and "Mighty Mightor". Thor carries a hammer-weapon that fires blasts and enables him to fly. Mightor carries a club-weapon that fires blasts and enables him to fly as well. Thor wears a cape and a winged helmet. Mightor wears a cape and a horned helmet. And lastly, both can transform into secret mortal identities initiated by the power of their mighty weapons. In addition, there are similarities between some of the supporting characters as well. Most notably Thor's father Odin and Chief Pondo of Mightor's village.

There aren't many similarities between the two features and the timeline is wrong. The Marvel Super-Heroes cartoon show — which included animated adventures of Thor — was produced for the 1966 season. Then the company that had acquired the animation rights to the Marvel properties made a deal with ABC to do shows of Spider-Man and Fantastic Four for the 1967 season — the same season when Moby Dick and Mightor debuted on CBS.

So Thor couldn't have been pulled "at the last minute" from H-B to put into the Marvel Super-Heroes series since that show was already on the air, and since Thor had been a part of it from its earliest sales presentations.

It also would have been dumb to kill a network sale of a Thor TV series to make the property a part of a low-budget syndicated series. In fact, the opposite happened with Spider-Man. Spider-Man was part of the original sales presentation for the Marvel Super-Heroes series and when Steve Krantz's company (which had acquired all those rights, not Grantray-Lawrence) realized they could sell Spider-Man to ABC, they pulled the character out of that show.

So this "history" doesn't make any sense…and like I said, the characters were quite different. I can't see how anything developed for a Thor cartoon show could have been of any use for the Mightor series.

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Lastly, the Wikipedia page says "Moby Dick and Mighty Mightor is a science fiction animated series created by Alex Toth." My late friend Alex routinely gets credit for creating most — sometimes all of the Hanna-Barbera adventure shows from that period. And while it's true he did most of the design work on them and had a lot to do with their successes, there were also producers, writers and even other artists involved. Some of them claimed they created Mightor or Space Ghost or The Herculoids or any of them.

Alex sometimes claimed he'd created some of those…though I'm pretty sure he never claimed Moby Dick. I'm not in a position to judge who should be considered the creator of these shows but it seems to me that those who just reflexively credit Alex are in even less of a position to make that determination. I suspect they're just giving Alex the credit because they don't know the names of the other folks.

Today's Video Link

A first for this blog: Something about a Groucho Marx impersonator who isn't Frank Ferrante…

This is an Aqua Velva commercial from the early seventies that was done with Groucho's blessing and, I assume, compensation. The gent doing the great impression is Lewis J. Stadlen, who did it in the short-lived Broadway show, Minnie's Boys. The show was not a hit but Stadlen got great reviews, including many a compliment from the man he was playing.

Stadlen had impersonations in his blood. His father, Allen Swift, was a leading voice actor in cartoons and commercials made in New York (also the host of a kid's show back there) and was often called upon to mimic voices. Lewis went on to become a top Broadway star. He was seen most recently in The Nance, which starred Nathan Lane. The show has closed but before it did, it was recorded for posterity and for a Live From Lincoln Center broadcast some time this year on PBS. Don't ask me why it's on Live From Lincoln Center if it was recorded last year…probably the same reason Jimmy Kimmel Live is not live.

The lady at the end of this commercial is also of interest. It's Erin Fleming, who was Groucho's controversial lady friend, manager, caregiver and crazy person. Erin was an unsuccessful actress who…well, if you care about this, you know the story. If you don't, my pal Steve Stoliar — who worked in Groucho's house during the Fleming regime — has written a splendid book about his experiences there. If you don't have a copy, click here to get one. There's also a Kindle version and a lot of people like the audio book for which Steve not only reads his words but does impressions of the leading players.

I think it's also safe to assume that Erin got the job in the commercial because Groucho made that a condition of obtaining his permission. Or maybe that the ad agency offered her the role figuring that she wouldn't let Groucho say no. Either way, here 'tis.  By the way, Aqua Velva is a great after-shave if your mustache is painted-on…

From the E-Mailbag…

Tony Adams writes…

I don't know if it's been mentioned or if it is even worth mentioning, but I've noticed that it was The Tonight Show with Jay Leno and it will now be The Tonight Show starring Jimmy Fallon. Any idea why the change?

Yeah. Leno asked to have it say "with" because he thought it was humbler or quieter or something. Fallon wanted it to say "starring." It's a distinction I don't think a lot of people noticed. In fact, when Johnny was "starring" on the show and later when Jay was "with" the show, NBC sometimes got it wrong in press releases and tickets and such. Conan O'Brien used "with."

Hack to the Future

Kickstarter has had a security breach. No credit card data was involved but go change your password there anyway.