Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - 170. Buck Henry

Episode Date: August 28, 2017

Gilbert and Frank welcome one of their favorite funnymen, legendary writer-actor-director Buck Henry, who looks back on his 50+ year career and shares hilarious anecdotes about Orson Welles, James Mas...on, John Belushi and Jonathan Winters (among others). Also: Buck adapts "Catch-22," praises Richard Benjamin, invents the Cone of Silence, co-directs "Heaven Can Wait" and confirms the Pat McCormick helicopter story. PLUS: "Captain Nice"! "Samurai Delicatessen"! Claude Rains speaks! The hoaxes of Alan Abel! And Buck remembers "That Was the Week That Was"! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:01:23 19 and over and physically present in Ontario. Eligibility restrictions apply. See casino.draftkings.com for details. Please play responsibly. Hi, this is Gilbert Gottfried, and this is Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast. I'm here with my co-host, Frank Santopadre. And once again, we're recording at Nutmeg with our engineer, Frank Furtarosa. Our guest this week is an actor, producer, director, and one of the most successful
Starting point is 00:02:14 and original television and film writers of the last 60 years. And frankly, when we found out he was willing to do this podcast, we were thrilled. As a performer, you've seen him on TV shows like Murphy Brown, Will & Grace, 30 Rock and The Daily Show. And as one of the most popular guest hosts of Saturday Night Live, hosting that show on 10 separate occasions, a record at that time. He also has done memorable acting work in movies, including Taking Off, The Man Who Fell to Earth, Gloria, Eating Raul, Shortcuts, Defending Your Life, The Player player and first family, which he also directed. But it's as a writer he's left his most indelible mark on the 20th century culture, writing satire and sketch comedy on The Steve Allen Show, The Gary Moore Show. on the Steve Allen Show, the Gary Moore Show,
Starting point is 00:03:27 and that was the week that was, as well as creating or co-creating three TV shows we've discussed and celebrated at length on this very podcast. Quark, Captain Nice, and one of television's most enduring and well-loved comedies, Get Smart. And as for the big screen, well, he scripted a few films you may have heard of, including Heaven Can Wait, which he also co-directed, Catch-22, The Owl and the Pussycat, Watch Up, Doc, To
Starting point is 00:04:10 Die For, and of course an obscure little picture called The Graduate. Please welcome to the show one of the great comic minds of his time, and a man who had the good fortune of meeting Humphrey Bogart when he was a kid, the legendary Buck Henry. Thank you for that beautiful, beautiful endorsement. It filled with lies. It was still beautiful. As so many lies are. I'm very excited now because I had a guest last week, Bobcat Goldthwait.
Starting point is 00:04:57 And now I have you. And with the three of us, this makes a kind of a reunion of an old great screen comedy. Do you remember which one? Oh, gosh. And what are the facets? There was a horse in it? Okay.
Starting point is 00:05:18 We'll turn all the cards over. I think he doesn't want to remember. All of us appeared in a Bob Goldthwait comedy, Hot to Trot. Oh, I know that. I thought you were talking about something else that I couldn't remember. That horse movie. Yes.
Starting point is 00:05:40 I'm thinking the Marx Brothers are in two movies with horses. Oh, yeah. Well, Horse Feathers for one. And Day at the Races. Day at the Races. Yeah. Right. Yeah, that one wasn't quite the Marx Brothers level of quality.
Starting point is 00:05:55 Yeah, they started falling in quality pretty quick. Now, tell us your real name, Buck. Fred Sengold papa shaniska it's similar to my own it's my married name he gets very excited when there's a jewish fellow on the show buck i haven't seen any around but you're henryuckerman, right, from New York City, from the Upper East Side. That's true. Yeah. Now, you said when you changed it, well, one of the reasons, you were doing a production in Cape Cod and the manager of the production, they wouldn't put on the show if he kept his own name because it was a Jewish name. That was true all through the business. So that's why all these old great comics like Jack Benny, George Burns, Jerry Lewis,
Starting point is 00:07:01 all changed their names? Yes. And you also said, and this one gave me chills, that another reason you changed it for a while, your passport was still under your old name and you had to legally change it to Buck Henry because back then there were hijackings Because back then, there were hijackings, and quite often the hijackers would line people up and go, okay, we're pulling out all the Jews out of this group. Yes. Yeah. No, and that was one of the reasons you changed it, because you didn't want to be identified as a Jew. I was traveling all the time in those years, and they kept throwing people out of planes for shooting them in the head. And I thought, I'd feel really stupid if one of these things happened, and I hadn't taken certain precautions.
Starting point is 00:08:02 So you went with a safer name. You went with the Gentile name, as it were. Buck Henry. Tell us about something that was in the intro, Buck, because we talked about you meeting Bogey as a kid. And of course, you come from a showbiz family. Your mother was a famous actress, Ruth Taylor. Yeah, my father and Bogart were close friends, which is how I got to know him. What was Bogart like? Was he friendly? Yes. Tell us about your mom, Ruth Taylor. What about her? She was a silent screen actress.
Starting point is 00:08:32 She starred in one of the great lost films of the Hollywood golden years. You know, there's a book of Hollywood's lost films. Films of which there are no prints that you can run. Yeah. Gentlemen Prefer Blondes was that film, right? Yeah. Yeah. And she was the original Laura Lylee? Yes. So you grew up around writers and theater people.
Starting point is 00:08:54 I did. Yeah. Also, a name that, two names that pop up from your childhood. Who were Arthur and Hilda? My brother and sister in New Jersey. So these were totally fabricated? Totally, yes. Yeah. So you just wanted like these playmates to have. I thought it was more interesting when people asked me whom I grew up with, if I could reference Arthur and Hilda, which none of my parents' friends had ever
Starting point is 00:09:26 heard of. So I could hear them sometimes going into another room with someone saying, Ruthie, you never said anything about Buck's brother and sister. And they would say, what the fuck are you talking about? So you were already, as a kid kid getting into this smart ass joking around. Yes. Well, we knew all the famous practical jokers of the time. My father was one of them.
Starting point is 00:09:56 My father was one of the original crew of, I think it was six, these raw stock exchange guys. And there were four or five of them that made their reputation by setting up these elaborate practical jokes, many of which ran afoul of the law, which was their charm. Interesting. Now, we were talking before we went on about the characters you played on Saturday Night Live, and uh was a pretty perverted one called Uncle Roy yeah and you were like a babysitter and um Gilda Radner and Lorraine Newman were two little girls yep and you would basically uh get you were basically a pedophile in those but a likable one yes
Starting point is 00:10:47 the little girls love me that's all that mattered yes yeah you would get them to lift their skirts up and you take pictures and then ride on your lap well buck you always said that you would the reason to write one of the reasons the writers loved you and loved when you hosted is that you were willing to do things that other hosts weren't willing to do. Yeah, I like to look in the rejected tray. Oh, yeah? Those were where the jokes and the sketches that were really interesting landed. And Uncle Roy was among them? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:11:21 Yeah. There were only two of them. Lauren would usually say to me, we got a very strange one here. You want to look at it? And I would say, yes. Please let me look at strange ones. Yeah. People talk about the controversy of Uncle Roy.
Starting point is 00:11:34 They remember more than there were. There were actually only two. Yeah. And you would have that wonderful last line when you're looking at the camera. It was what Jane Curtin, I believe it was, said, oh, you're one of a kind, Roy. And you would turn to the camera and say, oh, there are more of us out there than you think. I had this self-serving fantasy that all over America, little girls were turning from their position on the floor near the TV set, turned to look at their mothers and fathers and saying something
Starting point is 00:12:07 about their Uncle Roy to the horror of their parents. Interesting. There was one very funny bit on Saturday night where you were like this boring radio host who was talking about tax-free municipal bonds. It's a great one. I couldn't get anyone to call. And then you kept the subject matter to get people riled up. Like one of them I think was no toilets for the blind. And Hitler, boy, do we need him now. Have you seen this sketch recently or you committed it to memory? I remembered this. That's great. I remembered this. and Hitler, boy, do we need him now.
Starting point is 00:12:47 Have you seen this sketch recently, or you committed it to memory? I remembered this. That's great. I remembered this, because you were desperately ready to get people angry to call in. I remember you playing Ron Nesson, too, Nixon's press secretary, or Ford's, I guess. And we talked, too, before we turned on the mics, we were talking about one of your favorites, maybe your favorite, the Lord and Lady Douchebag sketch. I love Lord and Lady Douchebag.
Starting point is 00:13:09 I can watch it all the time. It's wonderful. Full of great gags. And Harry Shearer in the last season of the original cast, 79. And we were saying that was right before you came on, Gil. Yeah, that was a bad time period when I was on. Gilbert had the misfortune of being in the replacement cast, Buck. Really? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:13:28 Yeah. It was like, I always say it's like if in the middle of Beatlemania, they got rid of John, Paul, George, and Ringo and just hired four other schmucks. Tell us about writing for Steve Allen. Tell us about how you got how I know it was a short lived show it didn't last but I've heard you say that he was the one person you wanted to work for and you you you got to well he hired people that no one else would hire I mean he had Lenny Bruce on there were no other front guys for a tv show that would do it. He had singers that nobody cared about. Right.
Starting point is 00:14:07 And he's a visionary. And I think David Letterman always said he modeled himself. In the beginning, he modeled himself after Steve Allen. Interesting, yeah. When you got there, they partnered you. And I've heard you talk about this guy who's sadly no longer with us, but a very funny guy named Stan Burns. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:14:27 Who went on to write things for like Flip Wilson and the Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour. But it's fun the way you talk about him and how he would come up with 10 jokes. For any subject, any event, if something happened overnight that was tragic or weird, I would call Stan Burns. First thing in the morning, say, Stan, so-and-so died or so-and-so fell out of a boat and all this. And he'd do 10 jokes on it in 10 seconds. Funny guy. You said he was sight-gagging his way through life.
Starting point is 00:14:59 I love that expression. What does that mean? Well, he was also the inspirational writer for Jonathan Winters. He was visual, too. Yeah. And then he became half of Burns and Marmer, right? And then you used them on Get Smart. Yes.
Starting point is 00:15:15 Yeah. Now, we have something else in common. We can both claim we were in Aladdin. We can both claim we were in Aladdin. Now, I was in the Disney version of Aladdin, and you were in a production in North Carolina. I was in the famed traveling production of Aladdin and His Wonderful Lamp. You probably don't remember it. What year are we talking about, Buck?
Starting point is 00:15:47 I don't know. About, yeah. something okay then in north carolina there was a a blizzard that started and you basically escaped through the back of the hotel i climbed down climbed down the fire ladder. I ran across several fields and hitchhiked my way to New York. Wow. How long did that take? It was something like 27 rides. Wow. Oh my God. And you said you practically froze to death out there. It was very cold. And people kept asking me to leave their vehicles. Why? Offensive behavior on my part.
Starting point is 00:16:37 Oh, really? What were you doing or saying? I was disagreeing with something the driver was saying. Usually political. So it took 27 rides to get there. Took almost three days. I found this interesting, too. We're all New Yorkers, and you were talking about when you first started doing stage,
Starting point is 00:16:57 that there was something called the subway circuit. Yeah. And you would perform all over New York. And I didn't know that existed. We do a lot of research on this show about a lot of showbiz history, but I had never heard of the subway circuit. I think the Schubert's started it. We rehearsed in the basement of one of the 42nd Street movie theaters. We were underneath. In other words, we were below the ground level. And the entrance to the big room that we rehearsed in, we had to go through the men's room of the theater to get to it.
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Starting point is 00:19:12 1-866-531-2600. 19 and over and physically present in Ontario. Eligibility restrictions apply. See casino.draftkings.com for details. Please play responsibly. Live from Nutmeg Post. we now return to Gilbert and Frank's amazing, colossal podcast. Tell us how Get Smart came about. Dan Melnick, who was a producer and the second in command of David Susskind's company,
Starting point is 00:19:47 which was a production company for television, films, and anything else. Dan Melnick called me and Mel Brooks into his office and said, what are the two biggest successes in worldwide show business today? Don't answer. I know you don't know the answer. I'll tell you. He would say to Mel and to me, Clouseau, Inspector Clouseau, and James Bond.
Starting point is 00:20:14 Put them together. What do you got? And both Mel and I kind of said, say no more. We get it. And that was the start of it. And Don Adams was not on the radar originally. I'd heard you say Orson Bean and Tom Poston, and you were looking at other people. We had lists of available male performers. But Don Adams wasn't at the top. Don Adams didn't come into the picture until you
Starting point is 00:20:38 went from ABC to NBC? Yeah. It's funny because now it's hard to picture anyone else as maxwell smart oh yeah you can't have anyone do the voice it's parody right and i i heard that you are the one who invented the cone of silence it's true that was for people who don't remember Get Smart that much. Maxwell Smart would always tell the chief, I think this calls for the cone of silence. And it would come down and it never worked. Like a giant piece of plexiglass with two heads went into. It was like a giant piece of plexiglass that two heads went into. And they'd start screaming at each other through the plexiglass, and each one was going, what?
Starting point is 00:21:34 Max, it seems to me that... Just a minute, Chief. Isn't this top security? Yeah. Well, shouldn't we activate the cone of silence? The cone of silence? Yes. All right, Max. Hodgkins. Yes, sir? Activate the cone of silence. The cone of silence? Yes. All right, Max. Hodgkins. Yes, sir. Activate the cone of silence. The cone of silence? First of all, how much...
Starting point is 00:22:05 How much do you know about chaos? What did you say, sir? Chaos. What? Chaos. Oh, chaos. Yes, of course. Well, that's an international criminal organization that was founded, oh, I think in 1957.
Starting point is 00:22:21 How's that? What? 57. Agent 57 is in Hong that? Agent 57. What? Agent 57. Agent 57 is in Hong Kong. Hong Kong. What about Hong Kong? What? Hong Kong. Why are we talking about Hong Kong?
Starting point is 00:22:39 What? Hong... Hodgkins, raise the cone of silence. What? Raise the cone of silence! Perhaps we could just talk softly, sir. You liked the gadgets on the show, didn't you, Buck? You liked coming up with them.
Starting point is 00:23:06 I loved them. Now, who came up with the shoe phone? I think Mel did. I think it was his first thing he said. Take off your shoe and hold it to your ear. And Don looks at him and looks at me and with that look, how long do we have to endure this crap? That's funny. Did ABC, I heard you say this in an interview,
Starting point is 00:23:28 that ABC called, thought the show was un-American? They didn't get it. They didn't get what you guys were going for. The guy at ABC whom we wrote the pilot for summarily rejected it. Said we can't put this on in the evening when people are sitting down to have dinner. it, said, we can't put this on in the evening when people are sitting down to have dinner.
Starting point is 00:23:55 You've got a long, a 10 minute long garbage joke, rubber garbage. It was part of the plot, such as it were. And I heard that back then the CIA used to call the producers of Get Smart, and they'd ask them, where did these inventions come from? I don't know. That's news to me. Oh, that's interesting. Can we ask you quickly, Buck, about Captain Nice, which is a show Gilbert and I were very fond of. In fact, before you say anything, I remember from my childhood. Look, it's the man who flies around like an eagle. Look, it's the man who hates all that's illegal. Who is this man with arms built just like hammers?
Starting point is 00:24:38 It's just some nun who flies around in pajamas. That's no nut, son. That's Captain Nice. I'm appalled that you know this song. Someone has to pass it on to future generations. I'm honored. Vic Mizzi and Jerry Fielding, two talented guys. That show had a great cast.
Starting point is 00:25:04 I mean, William Daniels, Alice Ghostly. You put Byron Folger in there. Yes. And who was the girlfriend? Didn't he have a girlfriend? Ann Prentice. It was Richard's sister-in-law. Paul's kid sister.
Starting point is 00:25:16 Right, right. And then that went on opposite Mr. Terrific. Yeah, the CBS came up with its own. That was a really dirty trick and stupid. Yeah, both superhero parodies playing against each other. That had John MacGyver on it, as I recall. Oh. That show.
Starting point is 00:25:37 John MacGyver. He, I think, was... Yes, sir. I have an important message to send you on. This is very dangerous, sir. I have an important mission to San Juan. This is very dangerous, sir. Very dangerous indeed. Buck's laughing. Have you ever seen anybody do John MacGyver, Buck? I've never even seen John MacGyver do John MacGyver. But I don't have to now.
Starting point is 00:26:02 I can just call over and say, do that guy that I never heard of before, and he will. Good. I remember, oh, the theme song to Mr. Terrific. It didn't have words, but it was... Now you're just torturing him. Let's talk about, Buck, some of the screenplays. And we talked about them in the intro. First, I just want to ask about Catch-22,
Starting point is 00:26:38 which is a movie we've discussed here on this show. I just told you we just had Richard Benjamin here. And you say when you do an adaptation for something like that, that you want to please the author. Yeah, of course. Yeah. And Heller liked the picture. He liked what you did with it. He told me he did. Doesn't mean he really did. He told me he did. And we had an eminently sensible conversation about it. Because it's not an easy book to adapt, I'm sure. It's impossible.
Starting point is 00:27:11 Yeah. And you did the screen version of Day of the Dolphin. Happily, yes. Yeah, not a project he enjoyed writing. Yeah, that was with George C. Scott. Mike Nichols. Yes. And you didn't like the book to begin with.
Starting point is 00:27:30 I thought the book was silly. I don't mind silly. In fact, sometimes silly can be a whole movie. But in this case. But you did it to work with Mike and to spend a little time on that island. On a lot of islands. Yeah. And just getting back to Catch-22 for a minute. Yeah. To spend a little time on that island. On a lot of islands. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:27:47 And just getting back to Catch-22 for a minute, I heard you tell a very interesting story about Orson Welles, and Richard was regaling us with stories about meeting Orson. But what was that business where he had 50-foot people and 25-foot people? Orson told us early on, like the first day he was there, he was describing his technique for getting things done. And a lot of this, he said, is not wasting time. It's just knowing how to not waste any more time than you have to. And what was the bit about the people that fell into the different categories? He said, well, there are all sorts of people who want to talk to me every day when you're,
Starting point is 00:28:23 I'm sure when you're shooting, I'm sure the same thing. So very early, like the first day of production, one of my production assistants and I go off somewhere and we write a list of all the guys working on the show that have any reason to interface with me. And I tell them there's just too many people wanna talk, but it eats most of the day up. So what do you want us to do?
Starting point is 00:28:51 He said, well, I'm gonna do what I've done with every show I've done for the past 20 years. That little guy, Ben, with the irritating voice, he's a 50 yard person. What do you mean? He can't come nearer to me than 50 yards. What are we supposed to do?
Starting point is 00:29:09 Are we supposed to put down lines like at a football field? And Arsene said, yes. And what are the others? So he had a list of 50-yarders that were way out there and had to yell their questions to him. That's fantastic.
Starting point is 00:29:26 There were 25 yarders and there were five yarders. And how did the graduate come about? How did it come about? Yeah. Well, how did it find its way? How did the job of adapting Charles Webb's novel find its way into your hands? Mike said to me one day, have you read this book? And I said, yes, because I had, and I didn't want to lie that early. So, and I had read it. I thought it was terrific.
Starting point is 00:29:57 It's somewhat simple. And I mean that in the nicest sense, because I always add this little codicil to that speech because both Larry Turman, the producer who bought the book and brought it to Mike and Mike and I, we both totally identified with Benjamin, the protagonist of the book and subsequently of the film. Mm-hmm. One of the things that's interesting about it is Nichols' boldness in casting Dustin Hoffman. They originally wanted Robert Redford. No, Mike wanted Robert Redford. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:30:37 The studio, I didn't hear anything. Grodin gave a convincing audition, didn't he, Charles Grodin? Grodin was brilliant, as he always is. Always brilliant, yeah. Love Him in Heaven Can Wait, too. Yeah. Which you also wrote. But it's interesting, too, and there's a wonderful Vanity Fair piece about the making of The Graduate, and that Hoffman thought he was all wrong for it from the very beginning. He kept saying, what am I doing out here? I'm a New York actor. I'm a Jewish guy from New York. I should be on the stage. But Nichols was looking for an underdog quality that Redford didn't bring to the table. I remember Nichols said in an interview,
Starting point is 00:31:15 he said he met with Robert Redford and he said, have you ever not gotten laid? Right. Have you ever struck out with a girl yeah and he said what do you mean right and and he knew then he was going with dustin hoffman right right but it was still kind of brave to to cast someone like that or or someone who was the the the the i guess the the feeling at the time was that someone so Jewish in a lead, that it was a little bit innovative. Yeah, I don't think it was about Jewishness. I mean, they like to say it was because it made for good jokes.
Starting point is 00:31:56 I see. You think God is a Chinaman? You know, Dustin was very good at making fun of himself. Well, he's so great in the film. You want to tell Buck about how you lost a part to Dustin Hoffman? Oh, yes. Years ago, I auditioned for Warren Beatty in The New Dick Tracy. And he was telling me, oh, you're perfect for this. You're definitely, we want you. When
Starting point is 00:32:28 we were writing this, we just had you in mind. And so then I was already secure that I had the part. And then after a month or so, my agent calls and says, oh, they're going with someone else. calls and says, oh, they're going with someone else. And I said, who? And he goes, Dustin Hoffman. And I thought, when were they actually, when was I running neck and neck with Dustin Hoffman for a part? It's kind of like, I always say, the only way my name and dustin hoffman's name could be in the same sentence is i've seen gilbert gottfried's acting and he's no dustin hoffman or i've seen who's the other person in this formula well as warren baity he also lost a part to Billy Barty. Oh, yes. Which you would appreciate. He was too short. I couldn't make it. And also, when they hired Dustin Hoffman.
Starting point is 00:33:34 Who's they? And then the studio. Oh, right, for The Graduate. They hired Dustin Hoffman. And then a short while later, The Godfather comes out with Al Pacino. And then there was De Niro. Oh, that Godfather. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:33:53 Yeah. And at the time, De Niro, Hoffman, and Pacino, the press was calling them the ugly actors. They weren't really ugly, but they weren't like... Misfits. Yeah. Misfits, yeah. They weren't like beautiful like Paul Newman or something. Like we are.
Starting point is 00:34:12 Yes. You had a shot, Gil. You had a shot to be a leading man in the 70s. I see you and Redford in the remake of The Sting. I see you and Redford in the remake of The Sting. And I'm willing to work on it for very little money. I look forward to that one. You're in the Robert Shaw part, though, Gil. Yes.
Starting point is 00:34:38 That's a great idea, Buck. Since we brought up Grodin, can we talk a little bit about Heaven Can Wait? Sure. So Beatty approached you and said, let's remake Here Comes Mr. Jordan. Is that how that came together? More or less, yeah. But I think he probably pumped it up with names and things. He was going to get, first he was going to, I said, well, who do you get to play Mr. Jordan?
Starting point is 00:35:04 Who do you get to replace mr jordan who do you get to replace the greatest voice in films today which was claude raines yeah claude raines right women sitting in the theater would cry when he began to speak claude raines really oh yeah wow and i heard originally they they wanted carary Grant in the remake. In the remake. Oh, well, they would take anyone who was famous. What do they care? If Warren and he could sweet talk a really famous actor
Starting point is 00:35:36 and they're playing a part, you think they're going to say no? Sure. And, yeah and Mason was great in that part yes wonderful Mason is the next great voice yeah go ahead favor him favor him Gil here you go Buck
Starting point is 00:35:54 Joe from this point on you're not going to have any any memory so we could have had Gilbert doing it. Could have saved a buck on James Mason. It was our arrangement, Joe. Pretty good, huh?
Starting point is 00:36:14 Yeah, you could have looped it all afterwards anyway. You could have looped James Mason. How is directing a movie with Warren Beatty? How does that work exactly since you both since you shared directing credit? Well, you forget people tend to forget that hundreds, possibly thousands of films have been directed by more than one person. Right. And in some cases, more than two. Right. But how did you guys was that a necessity because he was in almost every scene? It certainly made things easier that there was always someone
Starting point is 00:36:51 to stand behind the camera. Great cast. Not just Mason, but Diane Cannon. And Jack Warden. And great Jack Warden. Yeah. One of Gilbert's favorite actors that we talk about. Do you have any memories of Warden or Mason? Anything specific come to mind? Didn't Dick tell you the funny stories about him and who else was in Last of Sheila? Oh, Raquel Welch. Raquel Welch. Raquel and a couple of others.
Starting point is 00:37:19 And Diane Cannon again. Yeah. Right. James was not happy about being stuck on a relatively small boat for two or three months, and the women drove him nuts. Why were they getting to him? I think the third actress was Joan Hackett. They were noisy, self-centered women.
Starting point is 00:37:41 He didn't like the sound of their voice. He turned to Dick one day, practically in the middle of a take and said, Richard, well, you can do it, Richard. Uh,
Starting point is 00:37:53 you know, I think our next film should be a prison film, man's prison on a rock somewhere where the food is crappy and there's no makeup. where the food is crappy and there's no makeup. I remember Warren Beatty saw me. He and Dustin Hoffman saw me at Catch a Rising Star in New York. They must have been researching Ishtar.
Starting point is 00:38:20 Oh, yes. Yeah. And Warren Beatty became a fan of mine for like about a month. Listen, not bad. It's tough to find superstars with really long, fill it in, ways to think about something for long periods of time. It's nice that he was a fan for a month. Yeah, that was flattering. Give Buck just a little more James Mason because he was enjoying that.
Starting point is 00:38:47 Oh, okay. Here's James Mason in, whatchamacallit, oh, A Star is Born. Congratulations, my dear. I seem to have made it just in time. I had a speech all prepare in my head, but it seems to have gone out of it. Well, look, there's no need to be formal. I
Starting point is 00:39:11 know most of you men on a first-name basis. Well, the point of my speech is I need a job. Yes, that's it. I need a job. I'm not confined to drama. I'm not confined to drama. I could do comedy as well.
Starting point is 00:39:29 What do you think, Buck? I think we set in motion a redo of all of James' great films, and Gilbert will be the voice of James and maybe a couple other people. Do you do Streisand? You do Streisand. Gilbert in Odd Man Out. You told a story.
Starting point is 00:39:54 You were playing a joke on Dave Garroway and Barbara Walters. Oh, well, that was with Alan Abel when they did the... That was the CINA. That was the Society for Indecency to Naked Animals.
Starting point is 00:40:11 No one understands that appellation, and I don't much understand it myself. You said that at one point, Barbara Walters, she thought it was an actual group. Oh, absolutely, she fell for it. But thousands did. And she started to argue very seriously and slowly. And she started to say now. Let me quote it exactly. Okay. Okay. The point doesn't get mixed up. doesn't get mixed up. So Barbara Walters is a guest on the show and a gorgeous little yummy French starlet called Mylène de Mongeau. So she said, well, you're trying to dress these animals,
Starting point is 00:40:56 but these animals are already dressed, Mr. Henry. Thank you for remembering my name and the gender. So she says, I have two, I don't know what she said, Newfoundland Terriers. Is there such a thing? Something like that, yeah. And she said something else. At home. And when I first heard what you were doing, I took a look at them and I realized they don't need to be dressed. Men and women and animals are all dressed. Even I, if you were to know me better, even I have a big black.
Starting point is 00:41:35 And I thought, oh my God, what is she going to tell us? Do I dare interrupt now and never let her finish the sentence? That's great. Yes, she said, I have a big black hairy. And she paused. Yeah. And the cameras began to shake because the guys were getting hysterical and couldn't control their hands. I worked with Barbara Walters for a couple years and I absolutely believe that she fell for that hook light and sinker it doesn't surprise me in the least
Starting point is 00:42:10 um why do you call Richard Benjamin I found this interesting Buck a boulevardier am I pronouncing that right yes well a boulevardier was a kind of actor in my younger days you know exactly what kind of parts Abulavadir played and why he was called that and he was defined by the parts he played well what a Clifton Webb fall into that category yes okay I got you now. And maybe you don't remember. There's no reason you should. You're only 12 or 13 years old. Is that Clifton Webb started as a song and dance man and a great one. I didn't know that. Did you know that? No. That's good stuff. That's a surprise. And he danced and sang in the first meaningful thing I ever saw on Broadway. What was that?
Starting point is 00:43:08 It was a musical called A Thousand's Cheer. Oh, I'm familiar with that. You were four years old, if I understand correctly. I went to see it on my fourth birthday, in fact. There you go. That's weird that we pulled Clifton Webb out of the air. And Clifton Webb was in one of the first film adaptations of Titanic. Yes.
Starting point is 00:43:32 With Barbara Stanwyck. He played a lot of captains. Yeah. He liked to have the cap on. I remember in this one, the ship's going down. I remember in this one, the ship's going down. He puts his grandson into one of the lifeboats. And then later on, as Clifton Webb is standing there, the grandson is standing next to him saying, I wanted to stay with you.
Starting point is 00:44:06 And he goes, I've never been more proud of you than I am at this moment. Never heard you do Clifton West. Which is more than his acting teacher could say at this time. That's funny. Well, speaking of Benjamin, we just want to ask you quickly about Quark, because we talked about it with Richard. And it's a show that a lot of people I know you said it was it had problems and it was mishandled in a in a way and it turned into a Star Trek parody instead of the satire of the science fiction satire that you intended it to be but even now a lot of people have a lot of
Starting point is 00:44:35 fondness for it I know I'm always surprised I'm surprised that people have fondness for anything up to and including their wives and children, but not their pets. It had a great cast. It had Richard. It had Tim Thomerson, Conrad Janis. I mean, very funny people. And you were ahead of a lot of shows now in the show. That was the week that was. It was better than people remember because it was so bad mouthed.
Starting point is 00:45:12 Political satire has a tough road to hoe. Sure. And it was preempted a lot, wasn't it? Endlessly by Republican announcements. Right. Because obviously there was a show they were threatened by. And now it's like so common to see political comedy. But back then... There isn't any show without it. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:45:32 And I remember just the first two lines and that was, that was the week that was. It's over. Let it go. It's an impossible song, but she did brilliant stuff with it. Who was this singer? Nancy. What the hell was her name? Oh, yeah, I know who you mean. Beautiful blonde with a formidable body and long blonde hairs.
Starting point is 00:46:02 I remember Phyllis Newman. Yeah, that was not Phyllis. No, I remember Bob Dishy, Phyllis Newman. Yeah, that was not Phyllis. No, I remember Bob Dishy, Phyllis Newman. What was her name? Tom Lehrer was on that show, for God's sake. Tom Lehrer wrote those lyrics. Yeah. Tom Lehrer was the one.
Starting point is 00:46:18 He used to be on Channel 13, like PBS all the time, because he had that show in Washington. Political satire. Yeah. And Gardner and Caruso were writers on that show, right, Buck? Yes. Two guys, you again, you worked with at Get Smart. I heard you say a lot of those episodes were just erased and taped over.
Starting point is 00:46:39 That was the week that was. And it's hard to find them. Well, because the Museum of Broadcasting was sweet enough to unearth as many clips of that was the week that was that they could find. And I said, well, what do you got? Yeah, I'll show up. But what do you got? I like to know what I'm going to be watching. They said, well, we've got so-and-so and so-and-so and so-and-so. And they named a whole bunch of stuff that I wasn't sure I wanted to see again. But I did. I watched it all one evening.
Starting point is 00:47:15 It was fun to watch again. I'll bet. See all my friends. See who was still apparently alive. They disappeared. People were taped over in those days, like the old Carson shows. They weren't saved.
Starting point is 00:47:27 They weren't preserved. I have more Carson shows with me on it than Carson's got. You did a lot of Carsons. I did a lot. I did 40 some odd, I think. Wow. Ridiculous. And you were one time talking about how writers, even throughout the 60s,
Starting point is 00:47:49 there was a heavy influence and a shadow from the House of Un-American Activities. Oh, yeah. Well, everyone was conscious. As soon as the first two or three guys lost their careers, and then one or two lost their marriages and their lives. That was when they were accusing people in show business of being communists, like writers, actors, singers. Oh, sure.
Starting point is 00:48:19 Zero Mostel and Martin Ritten, a lot of people. Dalton Trumbo. Yeah. My screenwriting professor. Most of them got their revenge in having a late career that was as good, if not better than any career they would have had under ordinary circumstances. It's easy for me to say. I don't know if it's true, but I say a lot of things that I don't know if they're true
Starting point is 00:48:42 when I'm forming them in what's left of my brain. Buck, we'll wind it down, but I just wanted to ask you, you worked with so many characters, people like John Cassavetes and Nicholas Rogue and Belushi. Do you have any memories of these people or Brando, working with Brando on Candy? Oh, that's a long, dense chapter. I'll bet. I'll bet. You never thought to write a memoir, huh?
Starting point is 00:49:14 I have, and I'm in the process of doing it. Oh, good. Wonderful. That's good news. Candy was a weird film. Yes, it was. But a great cast. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:49:25 And you could substitute a lot of words for weird. I'm just going to ask you one question that came for you from one of our listeners. A guy named Robert Schleuder wanted to know, he said, please ask Buck how much, I know Buck was a sight reader, ask Buck how much of Samurai Delicatessen was scripted versus improvised. Do you remember? It's all of the, there were ten of them that I did.
Starting point is 00:49:56 I don't think anyone else did them. No, I don't think so. John did the character only when I was there to back it up with my nebbishy dope that never – I like the fact that I never could remember from one event to the next that this guy was going to chop off my arm. You'd think I would have worn a complete suit of armor going into that deli. complete suit of armor going into that deli.
Starting point is 00:50:28 Listen, you do really fantastic work. That is gorgeous. Can you do me one little favor? Could you trim away some of the fat? I distinctly said no fat. There's a lot of fat hanging off it. I really meant fat. Hey, no, wait a minute. Don't take it personally. It's just always on. I don't know. Hey, no, no, no, wait a minute.
Starting point is 00:50:46 Oh, don't take it personally. It's okay. Look, I probably... I probably shouldn't be eating that anyway because it's filled with spices. It gives me heartburn. Really? Well, what the hell?
Starting point is 00:50:57 You only live once. I'll deal with the pain later. Would it be too much to ask if you could cut it in half? That's absolutely beautiful. Thank you very much. That's absolutely beautiful. Thank you very much. That's terrific. One other thing. What do you got?
Starting point is 00:51:31 Do you think you could break a 20? Yeah! And then in Samurai Stockbroker, you were actually injured on set. Oh, yeah. I guess I have more questions about that than anything else I've ever done. That's weird that so many people ask you about that. Well, I guess it was dramatic to see. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:51:57 If you weren't prepared for it, you didn't know what was going to happen. Suddenly, I'm ducking away from a prop, and then my pants are shredded, and my leg is bleeding. You remember this, Gil? Belushi hit him with the sword. And then you were walking around with a bandage on your face. Well, because it was SNL, there were doctors in the house, including Belushi's personal doctor.
Starting point is 00:52:25 So Belushi spent a lot of the five minute wait while the commercials were being shown, sidling up to Lorne and saying, you know, I know all the dialogue in Buck's next piece. If you wanted to sit him down somewhere and treat that leg, because he's bleeding right through his pants. And Lorne didn't pay any attention to that because he knew me and he knew John right uh but you were such a pro that you went on with the scene and you had you had to in the stockbroker scene you had to run through the wall yeah yeah everybody got better and better and better because it went to a there were five five open minutes where we could do whatever we felt like. There was two
Starting point is 00:53:06 long commercials and something else. And when we came back to live, Chevy was doing the news of the update and he was in a shoulder harness. And so he'd broken his shoulder, a rib or two, and his arm. And as the evening wore on, and it wore, when the next hour was done, everyone in the studio had Band-Aids, bandages. I remember. All the guys on the cameras. It was... That's the great thing about live television. Yes.
Starting point is 00:53:41 The great thing about hiring people over the long haul, just funny. Send me funny, I'll worry about the rest of it. Right. Now, there was a story, I told it on the show, and I asked Tim Conway about it, and he confirmed it, about
Starting point is 00:54:00 Pat McCormick and a helicopter. Yeah, it's a true story, but I doubt that he told you all of it. There's more to it. Tell me then. There's actually more to this story. Well, many of us have wives or girlfriends and we jeopardize them by telling this story. I see.
Starting point is 00:54:24 We don't want to put you on the spot. And we jeopardize them by telling this story. I see. We don't want to push on the spot. And we have contracts. Some do in various places. There are morals clauses everywhere. Yeah. I had heard Pat McCormick and his showbiz pals, most of them writers, would like to get together and outdo each other. Each one would take turns taking the other ones out to lunch. Hosting, yeah.
Starting point is 00:54:51 Yeah. And each one would do it by like a bigger restaurant and fancier things. And then Pat McCormick has- McCormick, I don't want to interrupt, but let me just add bits and pieces. Oh, okay. McCormick was the first one up. I think Mazursky or someone chaired the meeting and said, okay. Paul Mazursky.
Starting point is 00:55:18 Yeah, this is going to cost somebody some money. Who dares go first? And McCormick was flat on the table, screaming and yelling with his hands in the air. And I'm saying, yeah, I vote for Pat. Everybody voted for Pat. And so he went up first in the helicopter. McCormick. Well, it's more complicated than that. Okay. By the first time, he said, yes, I'll take the first lunch of the month. And we thought, it can't be better than this. We're all screwed, actually, because McCormick will put us all in the toilet, which he proceeded to do. Shall I tell you how?
Starting point is 00:56:02 Yes. Might as well. It's a story that's been around for some years anyway. So we were all working for various television shows. We were writing. I was writing for, who was I writing for? I can't remember. Gary Moore show or was it that far back? or was it that far back? No. Uh-huh.
Starting point is 00:56:25 I think I was writing for Steve. Uh-huh. And McCormick and Mazurski, there are good stories here, were writing for Danny Kaye in his show. And then I heard everyone was invited to a heliport. No.
Starting point is 00:56:44 No. Limos came and picked all of us up at our various places of work. So we got reports later of this mysterious long black limo sidling into the parking area of where I was at ABC on Vine. The others were on more expensive properties, I think. Where were you working, Gilbert, at that time? He would have joined you happily. Oh, but when you hear the rest of it,
Starting point is 00:57:21 there's no one in this room who wouldn't join me happily. So we're driven by these limousines. We're not told anything. And when we ask questions of the driver, the driver would turn around and say, Oh, we're not allowed to speak out loud, sir. Okay. And McCormick, when he wanted to, could really look threatening because he was what six foot six would you say yeah something like 300 and something pounds were you a little scared while this was going on not yet
Starting point is 00:57:51 and we were driven on in our limos out on the field at lax one of those private fields. And we were, the guy gunned the limo and squealed up as near as he could get to this big helicopter. Everyone out. They all, the three, I think there were three limos. There might've been four, but we could hear our friends. Everyone was a comedy writer and they're screaming punchlines at us. It was a game in which they yelled, you yelled the punchline. Somebody immediately made up the joke that had the punchline. Wow.
Starting point is 00:58:36 Yeah. Yeah. I spent the weekend with Eleanor Roosevelt, but I got to say this about her. When she isn't doing this, she's doing that, you know, something really nasty. I was assaulted for it in the next couple of days after we did this show. And somebody said, lay off him. It's a joke. They're just jokes.
Starting point is 00:59:00 Nobody was killed for a joke. Well, those of us like me, historians in the group, I should have come up with five rejoinders, but I couldn't. Gilbert, you're fast and funny, and you're a compendium of oddball facts. He is. What should I have said? Let's say the least. I've never heard that. That's the most flattering description. Odd and funny enough.
Starting point is 00:59:29 I could have condensed it all. You're a polymath. Isn't he? Yes. Look it up if you think I've insulted you. Now, but I heard when you got to the airport, you were all given a paper bag with like an apple and a tuna sandwich. We were given, yeah, we were given a box, a carton with lunch in it. I don't know where McCormick picked up this rapidly rotting food. They were looking at this like, what the fuck is this? This is our great lunch? Our gourmet lunch, yeah.
Starting point is 01:00:11 So we all had our little lunch boxes, and I guess there was some beverages, probably some of a boozy ability, but mostly just soft drinks. And then there were a couple of figures that we didn't recognize. We didn't think they were prominent comedy writers. Because they looked and dressed like prominent hookers. Which, of course, is what they were.
Starting point is 01:00:39 So this had taken a lot of research on Mazursky's part. So this had taken a lot of research on Mazursky's part. He had all our home addresses, which he gave in the order that he wanted. He gave them to the pilot and each in kind, the chopper would fly over and hover over our house while one of the girls serviced us. So it's true. All these years later. And I heard the ending was that one of the writers, when he got home, his wife said, you know, so how was your night? And he goes, you know, okay.
Starting point is 01:01:22 And then he goes, how was your night? And he goes, you know, okay. And then he goes, how was your night? And she said, it was okay, but there was a helicopter circling my house. And it sounded like somebody was swallowing. This is an historic moment in the history of this show. Buck Henry is confirming the helicopter, Pat McCormick helicopter story. I've told that story a bunch of times, but boy, to get it from an eyewitness is amazing.
Starting point is 01:02:00 Mouth witness. It's showbiz history. What percentage of the people you told it to believed you believe that the anecdote was real we discussed it with ronnie shell uh who else ronnie was one of our group there you go he confirmed i remember I once met Tim Conway and I walked over to him and I said, I heard a story. It's probably bullshit about Pat McCormick. And he goes, helicopter. Yeah, there was a shorthand for all of these indecencies that helped us get through the day. Fantastic.
Starting point is 01:02:46 You know, we all had to go home and face our nearest and dearest. All of them would say, so what happened? What was the big deal? Where did you all go and what did you all do? Wonderful. Buck, we can't thank you enough for this. It's been a hugely satisfying pleasure, but I can't think why. Is Alan Abel still with us?
Starting point is 01:03:12 He's a funny guy. He is still with us. We should talk to him. He's still got the same wife. His daughter, his adorable daughter, has had a child of her own. So Alan's got a grandchild. Whoever thought that his genes would stretch over more than a half a generation. Very clever fellow.
Starting point is 01:03:34 Very clever. Yeah. Yeah. We got to find Alan Abel. He's got to have stories. This was great. Oh, this was a lot of fun. We covered a lot of ground, Buck, but there's a lot of ground to cover.
Starting point is 01:03:46 And we ended with filth, which I think is always important. If the Senate and the House would end their sessions with, instead of a prayer, 10 minutes of filth. Of the aristocrats. It'd be a better world. I guess we'll start wrapping up. Yeah, we'll let Buck get to it. Buck, does the memoir have a title? A working title?
Starting point is 01:04:15 No. No. We hope the helicopter story turns up in there somewhere. I am so thrilled that you told that story. Yeah, I can't remember who else we told it to. Well, several people. I don't know. Maybe it was Norman Lear.
Starting point is 01:04:31 Maybe. I can't remember. You know about Pat's untellable jokes? Oh, go ahead. We don't. There's a long list of them. They're jokes that he invented and wrote that cannot be told in a public forum. So, I mean, I thought about it all the time. I was watching Gilbert's Dirty Joke movie,
Starting point is 01:04:54 which I love. Wow. Isn't that nice? Buck, thank you. That's Gilbert Gottfried, Dirty Jokes, my DVD. I'm telling you, folks, if you want to laugh, that's the one that'll make you laugh long and loud. So Buck did research on you. Yes, and to get a plug from Buck Henry on it, I can't ask for a better endorsement. How nice. Yeah, Gilbert Godfrey Dirty Jokes. You can get it on gilbertgodfrey.com. Well, we turned the mics off, Buck. You're going to
Starting point is 01:05:26 have to tell us where we can get our hands on some of those McCormick jokes. If I can figure out what the answer is, you'll be the first and the only to know. Okay. We appreciate that. We didn't ask you about What's Up, Doc or To Die For, a movie that I love
Starting point is 01:05:42 or lots of other stuff. But there's a lot of ground to cover. But we covered a fair amount of it. I met a guy, by the way, the other night at a party who said he wrote episodes of Captain Nice. His name is Arnold Margolin. He's Stuart Margolin's brother. Oh, wow.
Starting point is 01:06:00 Well, it sounds possible. Yeah. There you go. He wrote Captain Nice. Thought maybe you'd remember him. It's been a long time. Anyway, we got to get these Pat McCormick jokes. We were in a nightclub listening to McCormick do some nonsense.
Starting point is 01:06:22 And somebody, maybe me, said, Pat, tell them the joke that you told me night before last that made that person faint. And he said, it's a question. Well, there are two of them. One is a question and answer joke. What's the difference between a dead baby and a bathtub? And people look scared at the stage. Some people start walking out,
Starting point is 01:06:51 but it starts with a crawl. And it's like the ages of man. They crawl from their chair toward the door and then they sort of get up and knee crawl and then two hands and two feet and then they're running in the distance. What is the difference, Pat, between a dead baby and a bathtub? You can't fuck a bathtub. I think it's a great example of classic on the spot. Wow.
Starting point is 01:07:35 It kept me happy for a couple of years. And then I was staying in the Warwick Hotel trying to finish the script for Owl and the Pussycat. And George Siegel came and joined me and we went. We were going up in the elevator to see somebody. I can't remember. McCormick got in the same. We all came in from the lobby, Pat and George and me. We're in the elevator and there is a family of tourists.
Starting point is 01:08:07 And they see George and I think they're going to faint. I mean, the women, that's a movie star. They, they look at McCormick and then looked away. And they said something like, are you like an actor?
Starting point is 01:08:20 And he said something funny. And they said, no, no, you're a, you're a comic. Are you at a club or anything? And, uh, uh um it was dirtier than the one i've already told you oh wow god now i'm on the same level of funny
Starting point is 01:08:34 there's also that story of him giving directions where he opens his fly it's not him it's jonathan who did it oh it's jonathan winners how about who did it. Oh, it was Jonathan Winters. How about that? Who did it first and maybe last because everyone else was scared to. He's standing at a bar and a woman says she wants to get to the moon rock, but she doesn't know how to get there. Not the moon rock. There was a place, a nightclub restaurant called Moon Garden or something like that. He said, oh, I know where it is.
Starting point is 01:09:07 I've been there. And she said, can you draw me a little map? He said, well, I'll give you a better way to remember it. And he opened his pants, pulled out his dick, laid it in the palm of his hand and ran his hand along the blue vein. along the blue the blue vein. So you go up here to Sunset
Starting point is 01:09:27 go right here on Sunset Boulevard you're going toward Malibu here. Jonathan Winters. That's great. See you corrected us. We thought we were told it was Pat McCormick. Well I think he told Jonathan. He gave Jonathan the joke. Oh I see. It's more fun with Jonathan, I think. Knowing that there
Starting point is 01:09:51 weren't too many people in the world who would say, oh yeah, I'll do that. But Jonathan was one of them. Wonderful. Well, Gil. Oh, okay. Buck, we enjoyed this. thank you so much so did i a lot of fun pleasure and thank you for that compliment i can't get over that where do you see his documentary you'll like that too i'm sure i will so this has been gilbert godfrey's amazing colossal podcast with my co-host frank santo padre and our guest has been a guy who, well, what hasn't he done? Writer, producer, director, actor,
Starting point is 01:10:32 he's done it all, the great Buck Henry. And he was Lord Douchebag. Yes! And always will be. We wanted to get you here for a long time. We've done 160 of these, and this was a thrill. So thanks.
Starting point is 01:10:47 Thanks, guys. Yeah. We look forward to that memoir. Okay, Frank, you'll be one of the first or second to get a copy. I hope so. And when we get off the mic, we're going to demand more Pat McCormick jokes. Thank you, Buck. Thank you.
Starting point is 01:11:01 And thanks to Alan's White Belt, too. And here's to you, Mrs. Robinson. Jesus loves you more than you, Buck. And thanks to Alan's White Belt, too. And here's to you, Mrs. Robinson. Jesus loves you more than you will know. Whoa, whoa, whoa. God bless you, please, Mrs. Robinson. Heaven holds a place for those who pray. Hey, hey, hey. Hey, hey, hey Hey, hey, hey
Starting point is 01:11:25 We like to remember Little, little about you For our lives We like to help you learn To help yourself Look around you All you see are Sympathetic eyes Look around you all you see are sympathetic eyes
Starting point is 01:11:46 Stroll around the grounds until you feel at home And here's to you, Mrs. Robinson Jesus loves you more than you will know Whoa, whoa, whoa God bless you, please Mrs. Robinson Heaven holds a place Mom holds a grave Hey, hey, hey
Starting point is 01:12:12 Hey, hey, hey Hey, hey, hey Hey, hey, hey Hey, hey, hey Hey, hey, hey Hey, hey, hey Pilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast is produced by Dara Gottfried and Frank Santapadre Thank you. Nancy Chinchar and John Bradley Seals. Special audio contributions by John Beach. Special thanks to John Murray, John Fodiatis and Nutmeg Creative.
Starting point is 01:12:50 Especially Sam Giovonco and Daniel Farrell for their assistance.

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