Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - GGACP Rewind: Episode #4: Paul Shaffer
Episode Date: January 15, 2026Musician, comedian, actor and composer Paul Shaffer was heavily influenced by the musical (and comedy) acts he grew up watching on “The Ed Sullivan Show,” so it was only fitting that we interviewe...d him in the “Ed Sullivan Room” of the famed New York Friars Club. Not many people can say they worked with James Brown, John Belushi, Sammy Davis, Jr., Jerry Lewis, Brian Wilson, Mickey Rooney AND the infamous Phil Spector, but Paul has — and he shares memorable anecdotes about every one of them. Also, Gilbert and Paul discuss their mutual obsession with a certain Cindy Crawford/Valerie Bertinelli infomercial. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
At Medcan, we know that life's greatest moments are built on a foundation of good health,
from the big milestones to the quiet winds.
That's why our annual health assessment offers a physician-led, full-body checkup
that provides a clear picture of your health today,
and may uncover early signs of conditions like heart disease and cancer.
The healthier you means more moments to cherish.
Take control of your well-being and book an assessment today.
Medcan. Live well for life.
Visit medcan.com slash moments to get started.
Albert Godfried from Gilbert Gottfried's amazing colossal podcast.
Now, most of us know Paul Schaefer as the musical director of the David Letterman Show,
which he's been doing for, I think, a thousand years now.
But did you know that every year he's the director and producer at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
induction ceremonies?
Did you know that he helped create the blues?
brothers with John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd.
And he was the musical director of the House fan for Saturday Night Live for several years.
And he was the musical director of Godstead.
He has worked with everybody in show business over the year.
Sammy Davis Jr., Jerry Lewis, Bob Dylan, you name it, he's worked with them.
You realize why David Letterman hired him and kept him all these years.
He's fast, he's funny, he's witty, and best of all, he's a friend of mine, and he's here now, Paul Schaefer.
It's Gilbert Gottfried's amazing colossal podcast.
I'm here with my co-host, Frank Santo Padre, and a special guest we have on the show today, a friend of mine,
and very talented performer, Mr. Paul Schaefer.
Thank you so much, Gilbert, for that marvelous introduction.
And Frank Santopadre.
Yes.
How did you get him?
Yeah.
There was a lot of begging in doubtful.
Yeah, well, this is going to be a good.
You guys are an easy crowd.
Easy audience.
Okay.
Now, of course, my interviewing skills are to just turn it to me.
Okay.
As best as possible.
So let's talk about the first time I did the Letterman.
First time you did the Letterman show.
Well, you know, a lot of guys are nervous when they do the show
and they can't wait to get on and, you know,
and they jump their cues and everything.
They don't wait for laughs.
They're not relaxed.
You were the opposite.
I usually give the comics a choice of what music they want.
because I figure they have to come out and work and do their act, you know,
and so they should have the music.
Everybody else, I decide the music, but for the comics, I say, what do you want?
And I asked you that question, what music do you want when you come out?
And you said, well, I was thinking about the theme song from Thick of the Night.
I said, well, I love that, you know, you were, you were.
You were on thick of the night.
You were a member of the rep company.
Yes, with Richard Belzer.
With our mutual friend, Richard Belcher.
And there was, of course, several weeks running,
there was a running gag, if you will.
You were up in the rafters.
Yeah, in the kit book.
You refused to come down.
Gilbert won't come down.
He's in the kit walk.
That's when they try retooling,
and they tried to retooling.
that show every week.
Yes.
And so I finally came up with this idea,
you're the guy who lives in the catwalk.
I see.
You won't come down.
No.
So we decided then on my theme music
from Thick of the Night
and my season of Saturday Night Live,
my two biggest failures.
Well, I thought that that would be funny
since Thick of the Night had flop.
Once you came down, they were off the air,
and then the same.
You did one season of Saturday night,
and that was a terrible flop too.
Yes.
Was it even the entire season?
You said, so why not a medley
of both of those songs,
my two big flops,
for when I come out?
I said, well, you know,
you only got like six minutes.
If I do a medley,
it's like you're going to be out there
and I'll just be going
into the second song.
You said, well, I'll just wait.
And you did.
You came out and just were very patient
waited until I did the entire
medley of your two flops in a row
and then you
how's everybody doing to me?
You went on and I
I've never
you know respected a man more than I did
you that evening.
Did people really know the thick of the night
theme? I don't think anybody knew
either. I don't think
Alan Thick knew it. No.
No he didn't but although he wrote it
running in the thick of the night.
You want to do it, do it? Yeah.
Mama don't leave the light on.
I'm on the road tonight.
And we do the dueling Canadian accents.
And then there was the bridge.
Everyone needs a dream to hold on.
I'm going to make it on my own running in the thick of the night.
What did that have to do with a talk show, though?
Yeah.
Everyone needs a dream to hold.
to hold on to.
So I guess his dream was this talker?
Well, I suppose so.
But I think he just subscribes to the tenant,
the songwriting tenant.
When you're stuck, just go into everyone who needs a dream.
You know?
It's the American Idol way of songwriting.
Follow your dreams.
He was way ahead of his time, really,
because now they're all about follow your dreams.
He was into it back.
in the 80s.
He was a Renaissance, man.
He could do everything.
He could, and Friday night, as you remember, party night.
Oh, yeah.
That's when he would roll the sleeves up of his jacket.
Yes.
Yeah, and that's when you know it's party night,
when a guy will roll sleeves up of his jacket.
I'm not talking about his shirt sleeve.
The actual jacket sleeves would go up, you know.
Serious.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's how you know.
You're a party animal.
Yeah, it's party night, yeah.
So that was the first time that you did Letterman.
Yes.
I played that music, but I don't know when it was that we first met.
Yeah.
I think that's the first time we actually had a real out-and-out conversation.
Well, and this is the second.
Yes.
This is the second time right here.
It's going very well.
Yeah, I think so, too.
Thank you, George Feneman.
Thanks to have George Feneman on it.
You flatter me, Paul.
Thank you.
Well, you're a lovely couple, and now it's time to play you by Chile.
Yeah.
Stay warm.
That's what Charlie Chaplin told him.
Told Groucher, stay warm.
Yes.
Well, he was right.
When you get older, it's harder and harder to stay warm.
That's why that's the greeting for elderly people.
Perfect.
Yeah.
Now, I'll just hit you with a bunch of things.
Let me have these things, and I'm going to give you the first thing that comes in mind.
Go for it, Gilbert.
Okay. Ed Sullivan.
Well, you know, the greatest variety show ever in the history of television,
and a show which all of us have a certain vintage, you and I are included.
And I don't know about Frank Centro.
He's half our age, Frank Centro partner.
But you heard, did you ever hear about a thing that, the Ed Sullivan?
living a show? Very familiar with it, Paul.
Uh-huh. Yeah.
It was big
in my household. I'll tell
you that. Up in Canada.
And it's a good thing, too, because
every week after week,
now, for all the United States
in Canada, he would always
take care of us people
up in Canada. Yeah, those are you up in Canada
because it was a syndication deal
up here. He wanted
to keep running up there, too.
So, like every family,
my family, was in front of the television
set 8 p.m. Sharp and watched the
Ed Sullivan show. And of course for us kids, we had
the latest British Invasion Act, or
before that, Bo Diddley.
Remember that thing? Did you ever see it on
YouTube? Ed Sullivan introduces Bo Diddley?
And it's absolutely for real.
Now, up in Ed Schifrin's
Paula Theater, people have been going
Matt for
this next gentleman who plays the kind of music
which you call rhythm and
what rhythm and color?
He rhythm and blues.
He couldn't think of rhythm and blues.
He said rhythm and color.
Swear to God. But it was another time.
And he had
all those acts
that he, well,
Topo Gijo
of the little Italian
mouse that he brought over.
And do you know who wrote the
Topo Gijo
sketch?
No.
Miss Joan Rivers.
Ladies and Charlie.
Wow.
One of the way she started out, at least if you believe her.
In an interview she gave just a little while ago.
I wrote the Topo Gijo sketches for Sullivan.
Wow.
So she had a, yeah, can you imagine?
Speaking of Sullivan, Paul, tell Gilbert a little bit about, Rick, we were discussing it before you got here.
Ricky Lane and Vel-Vel.
Yes, well, you saw everybody from the animals and the Dave Clark Five,
Clark 5 to Tessiochet,
the Marvelous Irish Music Hall Act that he brought over.
Our mutual friend Tom Leopold always talks about the chimps.
And Bobby Baranzini's chimps, yeah, we would see them.
Right.
And then who was it?
Oh, yes, Ricky Lane and Velvo, the Yiddish comic, Yiddish Ventriloquist.
And the dummy was Yiddish, Velva.
You remember this, don't you, Gilbert?
Ricky Lane and Velvet.
Well, it happens that, and I would have been about 12 years old, 11 years old, maybe at the time.
Sullivan was the biggest, the United States and Canada, and Ricky Lane went on a Canadian tour selling Israeli bonds.
Okay, and he was going to come to Thunder Bay, Ontario, the Israeli Bond Drive, this year's
starring Ricky Lane and Velva.
Well, the whole town was up in arms.
Everyone was so excited.
Kids, adults alike.
Jews and Goyem alike, because
Ricky Lane, the Sullivan show
was so big that Ricky Lane and Velvo
were above, you know,
they blasted off right into
ecumenicism.
They had to, even though it was, you know,
they knew they were probably only going to
sell Israeli bonds to the Jews.
Nonetheless, this evening had to be opened up
to Jews and Goyem alike.
the mayor was going to come, the Gentile mayor, and everybody, the whole community was going to come.
Now, it was an orthodox synagogue where they were going to appear, so the food all had to be glot kosher.
And that means they had to bring this food in from Winnipeg, Manitoba, because, you know, there wasn't exactly a glot kosher butcher in Thunder Bay.
There may have been at one time, but not at this time.
So the food was being brought in from Winnipeg.
and my parents are a little feeling a little bit uncomfortable about their Gentile friends coming
and having to eat kosher food and stuff, you know, but they were keeping a stiff upper lip
because it was all, you know, the most chishi of Goyam were going to come to this thing.
And everybody was a little uptight.
So it comes the big evening and it's huge.
And a rabbi starts out selling bonds.
and once they get the business out of the way,
then they're going to move into the entertainment.
The rabbi gives his pitch,
selling bonds and how much Israel needs the money,
but it must have been a hard year because nobody's buying.
And he says, you know, who's going to buy the first bond?
Nobody put up their hand.
Nobody is going to buy an Israeli bond,
and the rabbi starts to flip out.
And he loses his temper.
And he starts yelling at the congregation.
You people, you don't know, you know,
the state of Israel,
and what it would be like and you people,
and he's just, he's red in the face,
and he screams his guts out,
and now, ladies gentlemen,
Ricky Lane and Velvet.
Ricky's got to follow that.
And I remember so clearly
seeing him down on his knees
with his suitcase open
because the dummy is in his suitcase.
And he's sticking his hand,
he's down on his knees,
sticking his hand up,
the you know what of the dummy,
getting ready for his act.
And meanwhile, he's,
saying, wow, rabbi, wow, this is what I got to follow? Wow, I mean, no, really. I mean,
rabbi, don't feel too bad about it. I mean, wow, I got to do calmly after that. Wow, I just,
don't worry, rabbi, we'll talk to the people and I'm sure that we will, wow, you know,
that was his intro. I never forgot it. And now, another person, we're both fascinated by,
yes, Jerry Lewis. Yeah. Well,
I watched that telethon faithfully.
In 1976, of course, the greatest year,
the year that Frank Sinatra brought Dean on as a surprise for Jerry.
Oh, yeah.
Who will ever forget it, right?
Jerry didn't lie.
I don't think he liked it initially.
He was caught off guard.
He was caught off guard.
He doesn't really like surprises on his own show anyway.
But boy, he had to.
You know, Frank Sinatra, you are the kind of human beings.
that would bring on a man's enemy
on his own show and surprise him
the kind of man that you are
you know, I'll get you for this and he gave him what we
like to call the Vegas fist.
Just pretending, I'll get you, I'll get
you for this, you know, a fist that doesn't really
mean anything.
It seemed like Dean Martin
was uncomfortable too.
Well, he...
Oh, I'm sorry, I hate when that happens.
Do you think Dean was uncomfortable?
Well, what made you think so?
Yeah, I don't know.
He looked like he wasn't sure what he was doing.
I don't know if he knew where he was.
Yeah.
I don't think he was sure where he was.
By the way, I want to reschedule all this when we can be face-to-face.
That's another show.
That's a reference to another show.
Yeah.
The audience hears the other show.
Then they'll know what I meant.
Yeah.
And he'll understand what I meant by that.
Shecky Green agreed to do my podcast.
And he goes on and he goes, we're going to have to talk face-to-face.
and he walked off.
It was a six-minute podcast.
Yeah.
Well, some pods are bigger than others.
That's all.
Now, oh, the Chevy, I was at this.
I don't think I roasted him, but I was there.
At the Chevy Chase, yeah, it was on the dais of the Chevy Chase roast.
The infamous Chevy Chase roast.
Why didn't you roast him?
I don't know.
I always like, if I could be there, I've asked him a few times.
at these rows. Can I just
sit on the dais and
not, I won't have any pressure
I can eat and
just sit there and have my name yell down.
So you really go for the free lunch?
Yes.
Is that surprise you, Paul?
I've gone in the other direction. After I did
my last roast, I was never asked
again, well, you can sit on the dais, but
just don't open your mouth.
And I say, you know what, maybe not, but
now I know, I'll give my space to you.
Yes.
because you want the free lunch.
They would never ask me anymore to speak.
Not after that Chevy Chase thing, which was, well, let's put it this way.
When you open up, as I did, I was the roastmaster, and I opened up with a song,
which I think characterized the situation with the whole evening,
the song was called We Couldn't Get Anybody Good.
Because it was mainly people on the day.
that he didn't know.
It was young comedians, right?
Like, Greg Gerardo and people like that?
Yeah, young comedians.
Who took advantage, none of them knew him,
but they all took advantage of the opportunity
to really trash him.
Not necessarily for laughs, either.
Which I understand is what you're doing in a row.
You're trashed.
Ideally, there's some comedy.
But everyone loves each other so much that, you know,
you can say anything about the gun.
This, they didn't know him,
so they felt they could say anything about him.
and it really was a sort of a massacre.
You remember it.
Oh, yeah, it was, and then there was that long speech at the end when Chevy finally gets up.
Well, he didn't know.
First of all, he was taking notes all through.
Yes, I remember.
Yeah, taking notes.
And we thought when he finally gets up at the end, he is going to put everybody away.
It looked that way.
He had a smirk on his face, and he would take notes, and I thought,
Oh, he's going to explode when he goes out.
Yeah, and he had one.
He did open strong.
He said, I would thank all the comics, but I don't see a fucking one on us.
Everyone enjoyed that.
And after that, you know, when he turned to Al Franken, and instead of saying, Al, you were hilarious, he said, Jesus, Al.
I know.
I know.
You're not really going to get a laugh with a Jesus Al.
Otherwise, though, he acquitted himself very nicely.
I think he was a little shaken by it, though.
And that was the last time I ever got to participate in a roast at the fireth.
Now, you also knew, oh, Brian Wilson.
Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys?
Yes.
Yeah.
Brian is a genius.
He had a rough upbringing.
I don't think he makes a secret out,
but he took his share of psychedelic drugs and such.
And whatever it was, you know, genius as he is,
it left him talking a little bit like a Bill Murray character.
You remember Bill Murray's character, The Honker?
Yes.
Well, that's the way Brian talks.
And I think it's just a defense mechanism.
Whatever it is, I was,
Brian helped me with an album that I made in 1980.
He and I collaborated on one cut on the album.
And I was supposed to move in that weekend with my wife, Kathy, and I, she, we weren't married at the time, but we were about to move in together finally, get a place together.
And we were going to move in together, but I said, honey, I got to go to the coast and work with Brian Wilson.
And she says, have a heart, you know, how can you do that?
But, you know, as you know, when you got to go, you got to go.
So now I am on the West Coast with Brian, and we're in the studio, and the song is getting, the more we work on it, the worst the song is getting.
Sometimes that happens.
You know, you can overwork a thing, and that's what was happening to us.
It was getting worse and worse, and then Kathy calls up to the studio.
I'm in the new apartment, honey, and the whole building is shaking.
It's a windstorm, and the building is oscillating and trembling and shaking from side to side.
And I'm in them, you know, I'm trying to do a song with Brian Wilson, and she's through.
3,000 miles away, and I don't know what to do,
because the song I'm working on is getting worse and worse.
So I look around, and what am I going to say?
And I guess the perverse side of my personality took over,
and I said, Brian, Kathy is in a new apartment all by herself,
and the building is shaking.
Can you see if you can, and I pass the phone over to Brian Wilson,
I just, I can't believe, I don't know what's going to happen, you know.
But that's how perverse I am.
And he takes the phone, he says,
Hey, Kathy, you says, you know, these tall buildings, you know, anything over 35 stories,
it's kind of built to be elastic, you know, and it's supposed to give in the wind, and that's the way,
you know, and somehow he calmed her down, you know.
As the honker, he said, okay, thanks, Brian.
And she can go, I can go to bed now, honey, and that's happily ever after.
So you never know what a rock and roll genius will do when he'll come through for you.
And then he had that weird psychiatrist that lived with him who was claiming ownership.
of all of his songs.
Dr. Landy.
Dr. Landy was on the scene when I was.
He's no longer with the living, apparently.
Dr. Landy died.
Oh, okay.
But, yeah, he went from being Barnes Therapist
to being Bryant's co-writer
and producer and owning all of the material.
And I had to deal with this.
Every day, things were getting worse and worse.
It wasn't really the doctor,
Dr. Landy, that was the scariest,
There was these little boys that he would send over to spy on Brian
and call him surreptitiously so that he would know everything that was going on in the studio.
You know, well, Brian, I hear you guys didn't come up with a second verse.
How did you know that, Dr. Lenny?
Oh, just a little bird told me, but really these kids.
And we called them to surf Nazis because that was almost like what they were like.
They were spies, you know.
They were Luftwaffe SS spies calling in.
So every day I would get up and I was staying at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel in Hollywood
and say, how am I going to face the studio again?
And I'd be down to the pool, you know, getting a little color.
At least if I go in looking good, I'll feel better.
And who would pull up a chair right beside me by the pool?
Tommy Toon.
Wow.
The Broadway legend.
And he's seven feet tall.
A very long chaise lounge.
Yeah.
Exactly.
George Fenhamen, long, chaise long.
Very funny.
Thanks.
I do what I can.
Yeah.
So I started talking to him, Tommy.
I don't know, there's a guy, Brian Wilson.
You may know you're more Broadway oriented,
but there was a thing called surf music,
and the little old lady from Pasadena
and the thing, California girls are so great.
And now there's a guy, Dr. Landy, and he was his therapist,
and now he owns all the stuff.
And I don't know what to do because now his girlfriend,
Landy's girlfriend, wants to write the lyrics to the song.
What am I going to do, Tommy?
And Tommy said,
embrace the doctor
wow
that's it
the wisdom of Tommy too
yeah we'll be right back
wow yeah
embrace the doctor
that's it
that's all you have to know
speaking of musical you know
I did a music video
with the beach boys
they sang the theme song
to Problem Child
really
and that was a movie that you started
yes
Problem Child
well excuse me
wow
I don't
go to movies too much.
Was that what it was?
He's been holding out on me.
Frank?
Was he in Prompt?
He was also in Problem Child, too, Paul.
Those are movies.
Yeah, you missed them both.
And I was in Problem Child 3.
Yes.
A TV movie.
Problem Child 3, Jr. and love.
And John Ritter wouldn't do it.
So they had William Cat,
greatest American hero.
Oh, sure.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And I don't know who the kid was.
Okay.
So getting back, the Beach Boys sang the theme song.
The theme song.
Yeah.
How did it go?
Okay.
Nah, nah, nah, nah.
Oh, yeah.
Who wants to grow up?
Who wants responsibility?
Oh, no, not me.
Who wants to show up and work until you're 93?
Oh, not me.
And then how that, you know, it's a therapist.
Yeah.
Now everybody says you're running wild.
The teacher's calling you a problem.
Ooh.
That's when you say.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
See, rather than saying child, they lead you.
That they're going to say problem, child.
They go problem.
Oh, well, it's almost like a child.
that's not blue.
Is child the dirty world?
Maybe to some people.
No, it made it one of those cool
song songs.
So then they were performing in the music video
and you were in the video too?
Yes.
Playing the problem child?
No, they had the actual kid there.
Oh, oh.
And what were you?
The therapist?
I was...
I was claiming ownership
to the problem child theme.
He was the Dr. Landy.
You should have been speaking to Tommy Tune about this.
Embrace the doctor.
That's right.
I'd like to have that as my slogan in life.
Embrace the doctor.
You can have it.
I'll talk to Tommy Tune's people.
Can we have Embrace the Doctor?
Yeah.
Knock yourself up.
We will return to Gilbert Gottfried's amazing colossal podcast,
but first a word from our sponsor.
On Game Day,
can hit hard and fast, like the headache you get when your favorite team and your fantasy team both lose.
When pain comes to play, call an audible with Advil plus acetaminopin and get long-lasting
dual-action pain relief for up to eight hours. Tackle your tough pain two ways with Advil
plus acetaminopin. Adville, the official pain relief partner of the NFL. Ask your pharmacist
at this product's rate for you. Always read and follow the label. Now, you also knew Phil Specter.
Yes, he and I had a 20-year friendship, and we're still friends, as a matter of fact.
I got a call from him after he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame back in the 80s.
Well, not from him.
You didn't really hear from him, but from an assistant.
Mr. Spector wants to know if you'd like to hear some jazz music,
and I didn't believe it could possibly be him.
But it turned out to be him, and he was a lovely guy, almost.
the obsequious in how polite he was. Always stand up. If a lady got up to go to the powder her nose,
you know. And of course, one of my all-time greatest idol's, rock idols ever, and still a genius
and terrible what's happened with him. But people, they separate the music from, you know,
from the musician, and they still talk about how wonderful that music is. And I,
I still believe that it is.
What did you think, oh, did you see the Al Pacino TV movie?
Yeah, I did see it.
All I can say is that when it opens up,
Pacino, as Spector, is ranting about the record,
Abraham, Martin, and John,
and about how they added the verse about Bobby as an afterthought.
It's an afterthought.
And I heard him do that actual rant live.
Wow.
And one of those jazz clubs that we went to.
So I don't know where this guy, Mammett, was, how he heard it.
He must have been under the table with a tape recorder because I heard it live.
And that's just an inkling of how accurate this thing was.
I thought it was absolutely wonderful.
And you thought, but Gino did a good job?
Gino Salomon from Milwaukee?
Gino Salomon gets a reference.
How did he?
You know Gino Salomon?
Sure.
How do you?
Frank?
How do you know?
Who doesn't know him?
Well, he's a guy who used to work in radio in Milwaukee.
The name has been bandied about.
So did you think he talks about it?
Yep.
Did he ever, did Gino ever represent Gilbert?
Gino has come up more than a more than once or twice.
How do you work him into the conversation?
Are you still in touch with him?
Oh, yeah.
Let's give Gino his due.
Does he?
Go ahead.
Oh, no, I was going to say, did you think Al Pacino did a good job as Spector?
And Gino.
Or Gino.
Gino directed him.
Yeah, I think he did a good job.
I mean, one of the things is that there's a lot of tape now.
There was a time when you couldn't, I played Spector in a thing, a live presentation back in the 80s,
and I didn't know, you know, what does he sound like?
I didn't know because you couldn't hear any tape.
But now there's lots of video, and I think all that Pacino had to do was study him.
and he got him down
and he actually got him John.
But he got him down.
But let's get back to Gino Salomon.
Well, I know he has a crush on Sondra Bollock.
Who, you have a theory about Sondra Bollock?
Well, she's Jewish.
Yeah, that's not a theory.
Yeah, no, that's absolutely true.
I don't know if Lewis is Jewish yet,
but she's, yeah, Sondra Bullock is Jewish.
Now, how did you find out that Sondra Bollick would be Jewish?
Jewish.
Gino told me.
Any more question?
I got to reschedule this
until we can be face to face.
Yeah, Gino has a crush on Sandra Bullock.
And he used to say, live the dream or something, right?
Believe in the dream.
And the dream was that he was going to get to marry
Sandra Bullock.
Yes.
But how did you, and it would be a Jewish wedding, of course.
But how did you find out?
that son your bullet was Jewish.
I think it was when she stepped
on the glass at that wedding
yeah. That was where.
I don't remember how.
Sometimes you just know these things.
When I used to watch the Ed Sullivan's show with my parents,
my dad would be watching
and he was uncannily he was able
to spot who had
a toupee and who didn't.
And who was Jewish and who wasn't.
So that's when you sit there, oh, there's a good toupee.
Tony Bennett? Oh, look at that.
Oh, that's a good old. That's a good
Twanthia. Franty and Taitia, ooh, bad
Tupet. Whoa, those are bad.
Bad to pays. And, oh, Jewish,
you know, Tony Bill, Jewish, you know.
So I developed a six sense about who's Jewish
and who wears a toupee.
And you know, Sandra Bullock's Jewish, but doesn't
wear a toupee. Well, I don't know if she wears a toupee or not.
I know that she's definitely Jewish.
So, because I'm,
I always thought she admits to being German.
Oh, she does?
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Or I don't know if she, but like her mother was a big opera,
a German opera star.
Oh, her mother was a German opera star.
Yeah, yeah.
It sounds like the beginning of the third ride.
Most Jewish, most German opera stars are Jewish, as it turns out.
I don't know, do you ever get letters from the podcast?
Well, Werner...
Let's have people...
Wernher Klemperer.
His father, Otto Klemperer,
Werner, of course, was Hogan.
Yes.
And his father, Otto Klemper,
was a famous German conductor.
Yes.
I know that, yeah.
Yes.
And I think he used to date,
Sandra Bullock's...
Mother. So there.
There you have it.
Was Werner Jewish?
Oh, yes.
Yes.
Both the Nazis on Hogan's heroes were Jews.
Shulst?
Yeah, Shultz.
John Banner.
John Banner was Jewish?
John Banner not only was a Jew, but he and his family were in the camps.
Wow.
But the camps weren't quite made into death camps at that point.
They were fun camp.
Yeah, they were fun.
There was sewing activity.
Fun camps, yeah.
Sowing circle.
Yeah.
It was so long.
Paul, we were talking about your parents.
Yes.
Wait, we're talking, we're making
jokes about the concentration camp.
Why are you interrupting?
I thought we might add a little humor to the show.
Do something radical.
Paul's parents were very hip parents,
and they took him to Vegas to see Juliette Proust.
In fact, it was the first time you ever took the stage
with Jackie Gale.
I was a part of Jackie Gale.
Gale's act.
Yes.
I didn't actually walk on stage, and I want to be clear about that.
But you were a foil.
Because there may be somebody who was there.
That's true.
The right end to Gilbert's podcast.
Paul Schaever was never on stage with Jackie Gale.
I don't want to be, yeah.
We saw a number of performers on that trip.
Again, I think I was 12 or 13.
First trip to Las Vegas ever, a 12-year-old kid with my parents.
and we saw Nat Cole.
Fantastic. I'll never forget it.
And we saw...
Saravan in the lounge. Unbelievable.
Fantastic.
We saw Vaughan Meader and the first family review.
Wow.
Now, you remember.
Oh, my God.
Yeah.
He had a series of comedy albums
in which he did an impression
of President Kennedy,
Jack Kennedy, and the albums were big hits.
And so he had a review
with the cast from the album.
in Las Vegas.
And my dad said,
I would not walk across the street
to see Von Meeter.
But you wanted to see Von Meera.
I forced him to.
I forced him to.
And his entire career
ended when Kennedy was shot.
Well, you remember the story
about Lenny Bruce,
the night after it.
Can I tell it?
Yeah, go ahead.
It's your podcast.
Yeah.
Your guest, so you get to tell the story.
Well, he was the night of,
The night after the assassination, in Chicago, Lenny Bruce was appearing in a nightclub.
And the tension was high.
And people are, what is he going to say?
He's so politically or he's incisive.
He cuts to the chase when it comes to political commentary.
What is he going to say about the assassination of President Kennedy?
Well, he comes out, you can hear a pin drop.
It's quiet.
He sits down a stool, grabs a mic, and he says,
whew, Vaughn meter, man.
Wow. That said it all.
Yeah, that said it all.
And I think Vaughn Meeter found out
because he was working out of town.
He got in a cab.
The cab driver says,
Hey, did you hear about Kennedy?
And he thought it was going to be, oh, another joke.
So he goes, all right, let's hear it.
And he goes, he was shot.
And that's when Vaughn Meade his entire career dried up.
Right, that was it.
It was it for Von Meeter.
Anyway, we saw Von Meeter,
but we also saw
Juliet Krauss
opening act
Jackie Gale
and we're sitting
you know
my dad says
well let me just show you
how to smear
a matre d
and we'll get a good
so for those of you
not of the Jewish
persuasion I'm talking about
bribe you know
this is a
you can put a smear
of peanut butter
on a piece of toast
or you can use the term
to mean bribe the matre d
well he smeared the matre d
you know, a good five bucks, and it didn't get us anyway.
We were the very last row of this showroom.
But before Jackie Gale went on,
the Matro Gale came, we have a better seat for you, people,
and he moved us right up to ringside.
Didn't understand why.
It turned out that Jackie Gale needed a kid to talk to in his act,
and he talked to a kid ringside, and it was I.
And he said, to kids today, you know, forget about it.
They're so spoiled, give me an idea,
hey, you, kid.
And he looks at me, he says,
how many televisions you got in your,
in your house.
And I told her to, I said, Juan.
He moved on.
He went and he talked to a kid on the other side of this stage.
Yes, my first time in show business.
That was how I knew I was actually in show business.
I remember growing up, it seemed like Juliette Proust was on TV every day.
Well, when she was going with Sinatra, she was on TV every day.
That's all it took, you know.
She's dating Frank Sinatra.
Are you kidding?
Booker.
and that's why we went to see her,
but it was great, you know,
when we finally went to see her,
legs up to her neck,
and every number more exciting than the last.
I loved it.
I was 12 at the time,
but I would love it even today.
And much like Charlize Theron,
she also was an African-American.
Yes, that's right.
Very much like Charlize Theron.
And very similar to the Bee Gees.
She was, oh, no, they were Australian.
Who's that?
Same thing.
Yes.
An African American.
South African.
Yes.
My drummer on Letterman, Anton, is South African.
And it is South African.
That's my impression of a South African accent.
South African.
Now, John Belushi.
Yeah.
Great.
Legend.
Okay.
And, you know, I did the Blues Brothers with John and Dan Aykroyd
and put together that.
Blues Brothers Band for them.
We had our pick of the greatest
R&B and blues musicians in
the country because everybody wanted to play for
them. They were so hot.
And
it was
you didn't know if it was comedy.
Are they sending up the music? Are they making
fun of it? Are they trying to do it?
Neither
John and Danny really
claimed
to be all that great shakes as musical
performance, but they both had a little bit of experience.
They had been in rock bands in
in school.
And I didn't think the act was, you know, all that special until I started to see more recently
all the tribute bands and clone acts that do a tribute to the Blues Brothers and do the act.
And when I see that, I say to myself, you know, it wasn't so bad.
And not so bad at all.
And John could actually put across a number.
He could deliver a number and do so in a credible fashion.
And what did you think of Blues Brothers, too?
Well, I didn't get to be in Blues Brothers One.
So Blue's Brothers 2 was my favorite of the two Blues Brothers movies.
Now, it only sold four tickets and I bought all for for my family.
But aside from that, I was very proud of the music in that movie.
That's when they added a kid to it.
That's always a scary.
They added a kid to it.
Yeah, well, the studio said you've got to add a kid.
It's going to warm up, make the Blues Brothers a little more heartwarming.
Yeah, whatever you want, they said, whatever you want.
Tell us about seeing Belushi for the first time, Paul,
because you saw him in Lemmings, do Joe Cocker the first time you ever saw him?
Yeah, he was phenomenal.
I mean, his Joe Cocker impression was...
Remembered from S&L.
It has never been equal since then.
That Lemmings was a hell of a show.
Chevy Chase was in it, too, and other people that we know.
Chris Guest was in it as well.
And it was a parody of
the Woodstock Festival, which
gave them the framework within which to
do incredibly uncannily accurate
impressions of all the great rock
performers at the time. Belushi
was a force of nature, no question
about it.
He and I butted up against each other
a little bit when I was working for him in the Blues Brothers.
But
I certainly missed the cat.
What do you think about that?
Now, did you ever...
Well, you were watching...
You were looking at your notes.
Yes, yes, I was.
To see what to ask me next.
Yeah, yeah.
Don't you know the whole thing about it?
Instead of, you know, you're supposed to be listening to the guy.
No.
And his answer.
I've been on enough radio shows to know that in the middle of an answer,
the guy is like checking the boards and looking over notes and talking to other people.
Well, that's what you're nicely done.
Yes.
See, now you're impressed.
Yes, yes.
Did you ever see the Charlie's Angels episode with Sammy Davis Jr.?
No, boy, I really, I missed out on something.
Oh, you owe it to yourself.
Now, I know the name of the game episode with Sammy Davis Jr.
You're not confusing these two things, aren't?
No.
They're both great.
Tony Franciosa.
Sure.
Yeah.
They're both great in their own.
Let me hear a little bit about the Charles' Angels episode, and then we'll talk.
He does a tour.
of force. He plays two roles. One, he's Sammy Davis Jr. And the other is he's a guy named
Herbert who owns a supermarket who looks just like Sammy Davis Jr. And is Herbert a sort of a nerdy guy?
Yes, yes. I see a bookish bookworm kind of guy. And then you know how shows and that
he were always had to end with a joke? Yeah, yeah, won, won, wong. So that they could put that
sound effect in. Yeah. And so this one had a double joke. This I got to hear.
Let me hear that. At the end, Sammy is there. They capture the people who thought they were kidnapping
Sammy Davis Jr., who were actually kidnapping Herbert. And then at the end, he goes,
you know, I'm the most talented guy in this room. Herbert, as Sammy, as Herbert says this,
And Sammy, with a non-threatening, very affable black power fist, goes right on, Herbert.
And that's one joke.
And you figured that would be enough.
For me, it would have been.
It would have been.
But they break for a commercial and come back.
And Sammy and Altavis.
Oh.
Walk in on the Angels and say, we're going to a big opening.
me and Alta Viz.
And they go, an opening,
oh, that's great.
What will I wear?
And they get old girly.
And he goes, it's an opening of Herbert's new supermarket.
Oh.
So it was...
Yeah, it was the greatest Charlie's angels.
I love it.
Paul, you worked with Sammy.
Didn't you?
I got to work with him twice.
Yeah, twice.
Both times were...
He was...
Jewish. Yes, he was.
I've heard.
He sure was. And each time I worked
with him was an education.
First time
was when Letterman Show was
doing shows from Las Vegas.
And he
came in
from working
the night before
in Boston with the Boston Pops.
He was always working this guy.
I got to talk to him once
before he, before the
and I said, what song do you want to do with me in the band?
And he said, you tell me, man.
I said, what do you mean?
You pick out something for me that cooks and swings, man.
Let me know.
Swear to God.
And I thought I was doing it.
What am I going to do?
So I thought, and I thought, and I asked the different guys in the band, and actually
it was Will Lee, who both of you guys know, who plays bass with me on the show, who came up with two great ideas.
for Sammy. Oh, and the other thing I forgot
to mention was we weren't going to get a chance to rehearse
because he was flying all night from
Boston the night before he was going to get there
just in time of the show, no rehearsal.
What can we play for Sammy Davis? No rehearsal.
So Will said, well, maybe for once in my
life, Stevie Wonder version,
because that's a song he knows very well,
or perhaps on Broadway,
George Benson version, also kind of
in his wheelhouse.
Every time I called from then on,
he was either sleeping
or working. And I
I would call day after day.
And Altevis would pick up the phone.
May I speak to Sammy Davis, Jr.?
She said, this is Alta Viz Davis.
Well, I was so thrilled to, it was Alto.
And I knew to call her Alto from watching the Johnny Conn.
Alto, I said.
She and Miss Abed.
Yes, it's me.
I said, where's Schmool, using his Yiddish name?
Because that's what the rapist called him.
That was Sammy's Yiddish name.
Shmool?
Shmool, a Sami in Jew.
Fantastic.
Sammy and Jewish.
What's on your balloons?
You know?
Well, that at home.
Okay.
Sorry.
I am going to reschedule this when we can be faced with it.
I said, Alto, where's Schmull?
He says, Schmull is sleeping.
Always, you know.
Always sleeping.
Well, I'll call back tomorrow.
And I didn't, I never got him.
And it's the morning of the show,
and I'm in the showroom in Las Vegas.
And I don't know what to rehearse because he hasn't picked a song.
So I guess, well, I guess I'll rehearse them both, I guess.
And then the phone rang, the backstage phone.
Mr. Schaefer called for me, Mr. Day.
He's calling from the plane.
And this is before there were phones on the plane.
I don't know how he did it.
He must have had one of those things.
Styrofoam cups in the job.
He said, for once in my life, it'll be great, you know,
and he told me the keys and stuff,
and now I was fine, and I rehearsed,
and I decided to tape the arrangement
in case he made it in time to at least hear it
so he would know what was going on.
Tape the arrangement. He comes walking in,
by some miracle, his plane lands on time,
He's there in time for one run-through of the song.
I said, here, listen to the arrangement.
I taped it. He said, I don't want to hear it, madam.
I said, what do you mean?
I don't want to hear the arrangement.
I said, just listen to it.
I said, you may not like it.
He said, I'll like it, I'll like it.
I said, it might not be in the right key.
All right, play it for me.
So I press play, and I start to play it back.
And he's hearing it on a little cassette.
Bum, da-da-da-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-m.
His head starts to go, he's starting to enjoy it.
And he's grooving on it.
And he looks at me, and he says,
Do you know how much fun this would have been if I hadn't have heard this tape?
And he was serious.
He wanted to go, he's done so many shows, you know.
He wanted to just do...
Spontaneous.
Spontaneous.
First time hearing it.
Let me just go and see what happens.
And I wrecked it because I...
Wow.
Yeah, I wrecked it.
Anyway, and there's this other...
You can see this on YouTube now, too, because he comes over on the show and he says,
Paul, I was helping I might do a thing with you and the cats.
and I looked down and said it would be my honor man
and I said that he says oh you're doing that
Billy Crystal stuff on there
so you know no good deed
anyway thrilled though it was a thrill
the next time he came on he knew better
he said I'm just going to I know you're going to need me to rehearse
so but I'm going to save some of my best
lines for the air so the first time
you hear him is on the air and he was saying
I've been around the world
and a plane and he changed
and Billy Crystal has asked me
to start.
But he
saved that for air.
He had me figure it out.
Any more questions?
I always thought Sammy and
Jerry Lewis were very similar.
Same person.
Yeah.
How so? How are they similar?
They're influenced by each other for sure.
Yes.
They're singing styles.
The way they talk,
the way they get serious.
I'd like to hear a little bit about that
when they get serious. What's it like
with Jerry Lewis?
gets serious.
As a filmmaker,
I think
I speak the international
language,
which is mine.
And I was always,
I think the secret
to my comedy is I was nine.
I was always nine.
I never grew up.
I, yes, I'm nine. I'm nine.
Jerry.
I'm nine. And I, oh, he used to refer
to Jerry in third person.
Yeah, when Jerry, yeah.
He was, well, I don't think I'd allow Jerry to go up and do that.
Jerry would never do it, yeah.
And then what about, now, what about Sammy Davis?
What does it sound like when he gets serious?
As a filmmaker.
I love when Marty Short does the serious Jerry with a lozenge.
Oh, the lozenges.
Yeah, well, the Gilbert's got the lozenges to it.
And I remember Jerry also when he talks about Dean, he was the handsome guy,
And I was the monk.
The monkey.
Yeah, monkey.
Right.
And he says, you know, well, we had the kind of an arrangement whereby we both shared the work.
I wrote the act and Dean drank.
But that was the kind of, you know, the way we had.
One of my favorite things when Jerry acts like he's giving credit to someone else but likes to put it on himself, he was saying,
it was so unfair
the pain that Dean was going through.
Yeah, he went through pain.
And I mean, look, here's the reviews.
They would only talk about me and not Dean.
Jerry is a brilliant performer
and great legendary comedian
and not a word about Dean.
And he went review after review
saying how great he was.
Not a word about that.
Yes, yeah.
Well, that's the, you know, that's what a person goes through.
That's all I could say.
But, you know, we mean this, of course, with all the love.
We mean it with the love.
Yes.
Yeah.
Well, okay.
I think, see, this is something like a lot of people don't understand, but I know you understand
that.
And like in, I think we both have that fascination of show business that it's a love-hate relationship.
You can only, first of all, you can only parody somebody.
that you really love.
That's the only way you can really get
to the higher levels of what they're doing
and really do a one-for-one parody
when you really appreciate
and love the person's talent.
How can you argue with Sammy Davis's talent?
You can't.
He was the greatest entertainer that ever lived,
maybe ever will live.
Or some say Louis Prima.
But I say it's got to be Sammy Davis.
So you got that for openers.
You're not going to criticize the guy's talent.
You can't argue with it because it's there.
But that doesn't mean you can't,
kid him, good-naturedly, and like to talk about when he says,
you know, man, if I may say, you, Gilbert, in all seriousness,
or as Bobby Bittman would say, in all seriousness, is a comic.
The way you, what you do, man, for the kids,
and you don't hear enough about the good things you do.
You got to have that ability to kid a guy and appreciate him at the same time.
And people just say to me, oh, you hate Sammy Davis.
Well, no, I love Sammy.
I love Sammy Davis.
That's the thing.
Love him, kid them.
It's all part of the same thing.
Right?
Yeah, just like when you...
Well, maybe not you.
You hate it.
It's a little different there.
Yeah, you hate him.
When I watch Jerry Lewis, there's like when it gets really egotistical, sometimes really
phony and everything, but I love every second of it.
Well, there's that too, and we love every second.
But you also think you can't deny he's the funniest.
Oh, yes, yes.
The bellhop, funny, right?
Nutty Professor.
The Aaron Boy?
Yeah, I grew up on Ola Jerry Lewis.
She's great.
There you go.
We will return to Gilbert Gottfried's amazing colossal podcast after this.
Now, here's a segue.
They once said to Sammy Davis, Jr.
that he's the greatest performer in the world.
And Sammy said that he didn't agree with that.
He thinks Mickey Rooney was the greatest performer.
in the world. Sammy Davis feels
Mickey Rooney was the greatest performer. That's interesting.
Mickey Rooney, who you also
worked with. Worked with him, yes.
And he,
what do you think? Do you think
that Mickey Rooney, greatest performer
in the world? I don't know.
Certainly a brilliant movie actor. Yes, yes.
Great. Had a lot of wives.
Yes. Beautiful
wives. Really hot.
Ava Gardner. Married Ava Gardner twice.
Isn't that true? Yes. She did.
Yes. Some guys couldn't even marry her once.
or couldn't get her. Couldn't get her once.
Mickey Rooney twice.
Tell us about working with Mickey on...
Well, George Feneman.
I aspire to be George Feneman.
In the 70s, I did a sitcom for CBS called A Year at the Top
where I and a kid named Greg Evigan
had sold our souls to the devil.
It returned for rock stardom,
and Mickey Rooney was on the first episode,
the first hour-long debut episode.
I was telling Gilbert about it before you got here.
Really, he was supposed to be on the series, but we made four episodes with him, and it wasn't his fault, but the episodes were so bad that they had to shelve all four and start all over again.
By this time, he had to move on. He was bored. He said, I'll do the first one.
When I first started working with him, I was thrilled to be working for him, and he was so funny, I was writing down the jokes that he would tell during the readthrough on the back of my script.
Like he would say, well, a guy says, when I get all.
I'm going to be buried in a copper coffin.
He said, why?
And he pointed to his wrist, says,
help my arthritis,
as if, like, you know, the copper thing.
And then the next day, he would say,
the guy says, copper coffin,
and the day after that,
copper coffin, help my arthritis.
Same jokes coming back time after time after time.
Not his fault.
He thought he didn't know anybody was listening to,
let alone writing it down like I was.
Funny guy, though, funny guy.
and he has that type of thing that so many stars have
where they have to be the center of attention.
That's what makes them great.
And even if somebody else is performing,
well, they have to be enjoying it more than anybody else in the room.
That's what makes them great.
That's why he's great.
One of the reasons why he's great.
You did that show for Norman Lear and Don Kirshner.
Yeah, it was Norman Lear's first flop, I think, as a matter of that.
Now, and your co-star, Greg Avigan,
who would later be.
in My Two Dads with Paul Reiser.
How about that? Yeah.
And BJ and the Bear.
First they replaced me with a monkey and did a BJ and the Bear.
And then he was in, yeah, my two dads with Paul Reiser, yeah.
Yeah.
Is that where your relationship with Don Kirchner began and the impression of Don Kirchner started?
When I was doing this show and Kirchner was the co-producer with Norman Lear and I got on with
Kirster right away because I knew everything about him.
I had read about him in Time magazine.
I knew about how he was the man with the golden ear.
I knew about he was the music supervisor for the monkeys.
And so he got a kick out of me because I got a kick out of him.
And one day he called me and he said,
I've decided to go on camera doing on my own show.
You know, he had John Kirscher's rock concert
where a voiceover announced and say,
and now Edgar Winter is white trash.
Well, he said, I'm going to go on TV on camera and do the intros myself.
And he would say, you know, they used to say Sullivan was stiff,
but he had the gig.
You know?
Right.
And then they're stiff,
so on him,
but he had the gig.
So he was,
stiff as he was,
he was going to go on TV.
He wasn't anything but stiff
in regular life.
He would be a fast-talking
New York publisher
who would say,
forget about it with the
Carl Kings and the Sadacus
and we never looked at a contract.
Herbie made him out.
He didn't look at him,
but, you know,
it was over with the Connie Francis
and things with the monkeys
and the Mickey Dolans
and the showmies that we gave him.
And a mile a minute talking,
and then when he went on camera,
he slowed right down
and his eyes glazed over
and he said,
I'm Don Kersh.
and welcome to rock concert.
And I never, I mean, the impression that it left with me was so strong
that when the show flopped and I got my old job on Saturday Night Live back,
I started doing the impression of Kirchner on the air.
And the rest is...
I think it's the first time I remember being aware of you.
I mean, watching SNL, but seeing that Don Kirsner impression.
Well, thank you.
I was really, you know, I channeled him.
Because I really felt, you know, I had a sympathical with him.
You say your parody what you love.
You parody what you love.
That is the point, I think, that what I'm trying to make.
I love how...
Gilbert hates the people that he plays.
I love them.
I love them.
That's where he and I differ.
Here's a name out of nowhere.
But I don't know.
I just thought, because she's really of, like, more modern but still old Hollywood.
Raquel Welch.
Yeah.
Had a little experience with her.
She hosted one of the...
Saturday Night Live shows, I think, in the first season.
And sometimes when Lorne Michaels, the famous producer of the show, would have a host that he wouldn't
exactly know what to do with yet, he would say, get a rehearsal room and go in there with Paul
and figure out what you're going to sing.
So here I was, fresh out of Canada, 25 years old.
I'm in a little rehearsal room with Raquel Welsh, and she's doing her act for me, including
what she called the hot tamale numbers.
And I would say, well, I don't know if that hot tamale number is better than that hot tamale number.
One of the greatest days.
Greatest days.
And of course, Chevy Chase wrote the sketch for her.
I don't know whether actually played.
The sketch was called Take Off Your Shirt.
Hi, I'm Chevy Chase and welcome to take off your shirt.
Today's guest, Raquel Welsh.
And you can guess where the thing goes from that.
You know, see, now, Chevy Chase is one.
one of those people.
Yeah.
And he's in that category.
I guess I could say with both, with Jerry Lewis,
where you could say the same thing.
And that's like he was always nice to me.
He was always nice to me.
Yeah, Chevy Chase was always nice to me.
The few times I'd met Jerry Lewis.
Always nice to you.
But it's like you, you hear stuff.
Some of the guys who did the roast of Chevy, I suppose,
may have heard a few things.
I don't think any of them knew.
him, but they had heard a few things, and I think it's just Chevy, you know, we in comedy, Gilbert,
if I may say.
You know, we're trying to be edgy.
Yeah.
I don't know if this goes with Chevy or not, but we're always trying to get close to the edge,
and sometimes we fall over the edge, but you can't be edgy unless you're willing to get
as close to the edge as you can.
Chevy may have fallen over a little bit with the insult humor.
Perhaps.
I'm just saying perhaps.
He was always nice to me.
Yeah.
He was always nice to me.
It's always nice to me the few times that I've met him too, yeah.
So they were both always nice to both of us.
Chevy Chase and Jerry Lewis were nice to both.
Yes, we've got that.
We both have a great admiration and respect for Cindy Crawford's infomercial.
Well, now you're really getting into my wheelhouse.
Cindy Crawford's infomercial.
Now, this has to do with the product meaningful beauty.
Yeah, by Dr. Chavad, the French doctor.
You're talking about Dr. Jean-Louis Savard.
Yes.
Yeah, Sabah.
S-E-B-A-U-G-H, I believe.
He's known as the youth guru.
Yes.
He's known as, I don't know what else.
And I remember he tells the story with Cindy listening.
Yeah.
And being very touched by it, he goes,
well, she looks.
into my office.
This is the most beautiful
girl in the world.
Yes. And what does Cindy do? Just a very
modest, doesn't say anything.
Hands together in prayer.
Yes. Yes.
Svens over.
Sort of like a Buddhist salutation.
Oh, doctor.
Yes. Oh, you shouldn't have.
And Valerie Bertnelli is the
interviewer. She was the interviewer
on the classic, the first episode of this.
I think they've got a couple of them going now,
I don't like the second.
No, well, there's no Valerie Bertonelli.
No.
Without her, what do you have?
You know, you've got a chick with a mole, you know.
You need really the full, the full, uh, the Louberon, though.
You really should visit it sometime good, but that's the way that's why the melon.
Dr. Savag has found a new melon, a miracle melon, that grows in a secluded area of France called the Louberon.
you should visit it sometime.
And they have a great scene where he's actually out in the field
with a tiny little vial.
It's like half an inch big.
And he holds it into the sunlight.
He's holding it up to the sun.
And then, of course, you know, let's talk to the doctor.
Well, he didn't have time to come in for the taping.
He's by a satellite, yeah.
Really is in the next room, of course, so obvious.
It's like they painted the Eiffel Tower behind him, yeah.
He's in the next.
Well, I'm glad that somebody else is as weird and perverted as I have.
They've watched it as many times as I and has memorized it as I have.
And Valerie Perrine is very good.
Valerie Bertinelli.
Valerie Perrin.
Oh, Valerie Perrine will be on next time.
Love Valerie Perrin.
Valerie Bertnelly has a great self-effacing.
Yeah, how does that go again?
Oh, well, what she says?
I use it morning and night.
I'm greedy.
Is that what you?
you meant? Well, I love
when she looks at the two pictures of
Cindy Corrupt and goes,
this was 20 years later. Cindy.
Cindy.
She's Louise or something like that,
right? Cindy.
And we wanted to make new pictures.
You know, these are a three years old.
We wanted to do new pictures.
So we did these new pictures.
Cindy.
Now, oh, God. Yes. Yeah, no, go ahead.
Valerie Parine.
Valerie Parine.
Great.
only met her once.
She didn't really know who I was.
But one of my favorite actresses.
Any personal experience with her?
I never met her,
but what I loved about Valerie Pryne
is she had no qualms about getting naked
in every movie she was in.
Well, an actress has to.
Except for Superman.
Yeah.
I would have no qualms.
With that either.
You know?
But I'm only here because I said you do it naked.
She was one of the few who was naked on TV.
What was she naked in on TV?
Steam baths with Bill Bixby.
That's right.
I don't know how I missed Steam Bath.
It was a play written by Drew's father.
You were sort of like the guy, Mr. Skin.
You could say that.
Yeah, who fast forwards to the good parts.
Is that what you're like?
And they always do those bad puns in the Mr. Skin one.
Yeah.
Like, they had one, they said, you know, you'll be mad about Helen Hunt's nude nude scene.
Yeah.
And when you see Helen Hunt's naked body, it will definitely give you a riser.
Oh, Roger.
I didn't know that.
Now, Frank Sinatra.
Ever had dealings with Frank?
No, I never got to meet Frank.
But I understand that in his compound Palm Springs,
he named each one of the different cabins after one of his hit records.
Wow.
Tom Driesen, he usually stays in the tender trap.
So that's all I know about.
And you know that Frank Sinatra Jr., you remember when he was kidnapped.
Sure.
Yes.
Yeah, wasn't that terrible?
Yeah.
And the kidnappers eventually had to let him go.
You know why?
Why?
They heard him humming in the trunk.
Seriously.
Now, here's what I don't understand.
Here's what I don't understand.
If you're Frank Sinatra, and you know every gangster in the world,
you're friends with it.
Allegedly.
Allegedly.
Yeah.
Allegedly.
Now, if your son's kidnapped, wouldn't you just make one call and have them both killed?
You should be able to.
I don't know.
I can't explain it.
What do you think happened there?
I have no idea.
Obviously, they heard him humming.
Obviously.
And you worked with Frank Jr.
Yes, definitely.
Worked with Frank Jr.
Because in the 80s, there was a band called Was Not Was.
Oh, yes.
Don was.
Yes, Don was.
And now the head of...
Everybody walks the dinosaur.
That's right.
their thing and Don was gone on to do great
things as a record exec and producer
and everything.
But he had a band, Was Not Was,
with a guy who, they
pretended to be brothers, but they really weren't, but maybe
they were. And their tradition
was they would do one vagusy
loungy kind of cut
per
album. One album they used
Mel Tourmet to sing a song about a kid who
you know, like a suicide,
you know, teenage suicide in the record was
called Zaz turned blue.
Zaz being the name of the guy,
Zaz turned blue.
He didn't know what to do.
And then the following
album, Frank Jr., singing one
called Wedding Vows in Vegas,
and it was brilliant.
And we had them on,
was not was, with Frank Jr.,
a special guest, Frank Jr.,
singing
Vegas wedding vows in Vegas.
So,
Morty, who we all remember
so well as being the producer of Letterman back in those days,
said, let me take you and introduce you to Frank Jr.
And he did.
Took me to his dressing room. Frank opened the door.
Morty says, Frank, this is Paul Schaefer,
what, I do not, I do not understand who that.
Like his dad, he spoke like a character in guys and dolls.
I do not know who, you know.
I said, Mr. Sinatra, I absolutely love the record.
He said, what record I do not understand.
Oh, Don Waz's record.
Oh, that's another story.
You know, he had to make sure that I understood.
It wasn't his record.
It's a record that he did for Don Waz.
And I said, I loved your record, which I remembered from the 60s.
He had a record out in the rock and roll era.
His attempt to get a rock and roll hit.
And it was called Shadows on a Foggy Day.
I said, Frank, I love it.
I love Shadows on a Foggy Day.
She says that, he says, that record got me dropped from Mercury Records.
I said, what, how?
How did that?
He said it was about LSD.
And they wanted me to do a follow-up the same,
and I said, I will not sing another pro-drug song,
and they dropped me from the label.
So there you go, you know.
Who would have thought, Shadows on a Foggy Day was a pro-drug song?
shadows on a foggy day
That's his idea of a rock and roll single
Not too hard to find
Now we're also big fans of the same film
Starring or co-starring Sammy Jr.
And now Frank Sinatra Jr.
Yeah
With Sid Melton
Well this is something that I believe you turned me on to
I don't know how a thing like this gets made
Talk to me a little bit about
Tell the people
The fine folks at home
What you're talking?
Yeah
One of these like character
Uh, comic actors
Yeah, from the 50s, 40s, 50s
He was in, uh, make room for daddy
That's how we know him.
He was, yeah,
But he'd pop up in like, uh, you know, old movies like Humph-
Oh, he was in Ladies Sing's the Blues.
That's right.
He was in Ladies' Things the Blues.
And real funny-looking, uh, guy.
Yeah.
And when he was really,
really old, he made this movie and called me in the morning where Frank Sinatra Jr. is his agent.
He plays his agent, yeah.
And it is just, it never was released amazingly.
First of all, how old was Sid Melon at this point?
Oh, my God.
He was like a day away from death.
Like in 90.
Yeah, yeah.
And then the movie was about how he was having an affair or something.
Yes, with some hot young girl.
Hot Young Chicken, he's 90.
Hot young, 30-year-old girl.
And the whole thing comes across as very dreamlike
because it makes no, there's no rhyme or reason.
I thought I dreamed it.
Yeah.
Yeah, but it was true.
But we both became hypnotized.
Well, if you see it, you know, you can't help it be hypnotized.
But it's because we love Sid Melton and Frank Jr.
Well, remember what?
Not you.
You hate that.
I once visited Sid Melton's apartment.
You did.
Really?
With Gino Salomo?
You know Salomon.
It's a callback.
It was like some little ratty apartment by the airport.
Yeah.
It was quite sad.
You once told me that he was like six inches from the road.
Yes.
No front lawn area at all.
Just front door highway.
Yeah.
When you open the door.
from the street.
There's no like,
no stoop.
No foyer or anything.
No stoop.
No stoop.
It was right flat on the ground.
If it rained,
it would rain in the apartment.
You were there,
you were at Stun Mountains?
Do you remember what Dean Martin said
when Jerry Lewis
toward the end of their team,
when Jerry Lewis said
it was about the love we had?
No, are you talking about when the reunion on the telethon?
No, no, no.
This is a story that when Martin and Lewis were really arguing and they hated each other,
Jerry wanted to reach out to Dean.
He said, you know, I think what people really loved.
Our success was our love.
And Dean Martin said to Jerry Lewis,
well, you talk, love all you want.
Pally, when I look at you
Ola, he's a fucking dollar side.
Ooh, boy.
Yeah.
Well, first of all, you do a great dean.
Thank you.
You can see.
Like John Biner doing it.
You can see where that might have caused a riff.
Oh, yeah.
Perhaps, you know.
Anyway, it was a love story, though.
Oh, yes, yes.
The book.
The love story.
Yeah, it was a love story.
George Feneman, what were you going to say?
I was just going to talk about
how much I loved reading your book.
Well, that's very sweet of you.
Which is called We'll Be Here for the Rest of Our Lives.
A Swinging Showbiz saga.
Still downloadable, I think.
Listen, I got the audio version, too.
Before we let you go, Paul,
we have to ask you about the significance
of James Brown's Cape in your life.
Well, of course,
it has a number of significant
features.
First time I saw it,
and the Cape Act was on
the Tammy show in the 60s.
I had to get up Saturday morning at 8 a.m.
That's the only time they played this thing.
It was in a kinescope that they played in theaters.
I saw him do that.
It was the first time that the white audience ever saw James Brown.
I never got over it.
And then somehow I ended up in a position
where I got to do the K-Pact every Friday night on Letterman.
For two years.
For two years.
Well, it was a thing.
He said in his book that he got the idea from
gorgeous George, the wrestler,
who wore a bunch of capes
when he would walk into the wrestling ring.
So James would wear the cape
as he was getting ready to go off stage,
one of his henchmen would come on with the cape,
put it over his shoulders.
He would walk offstage like a broken man.
He would then get re-enervated
and throw the cape off and come back on
for one more curtain call,
and now the henchman would come on
with a different color cape.
Put that on him.
He would do the same thing, broken man walking off.
He didn't want the audience to see the pride of a man broken from a woman.
And the henchman was even embarrassed for him.
But he would throw that cape off.
And that was the act that I would do on Letterman each Friday night.
In the middle of two commercials, there would be about 30 seconds there I'd be doing the cape,
throwing it off, falling down on my knees.
More recently, I went to an auction to James Brown.
a state auction at Christie's and bought one of the actual capes where I have it now on display
in my house, behind glass, and right next to it, Murray the Kay's hat.
Wow.
That's the kind of the, you know.
I remember seeing you do the Ben on Letterman and guest stars would come out and wrap the cape.
Yes, different.
Tina Faye and Whoopee and Jack Black.
Fantastic.
Different guest stars coming out and putting the cape on me, including James Brown,
the Godfather himself, came out and put the cape on me.
So, you know, I want to talk about a guy who's had his share of thrills in show business.
That's it.
I definitely have.
Thanks for bringing it up.
Here's a very quick question.
Okay.
And I'm sure you'll have a quick answer to.
Now, what are your plans?
Now that letterman.
Oh, you and everybody else in the whole world, I've been asking me, what are you going to do now?
Yes.
Yeah.
Well, I'm not retiring.
You know, my boss is retire.
I don't plan to retire.
I'm going to keep playing the piano.
That's all I know.
I'm going to lie down.
initially, and when I get up, I'll see what happened.
Try to keep playing the piano.
That's what I'm going to do.
Thanks for asking.
And what Slice the Lone do?
And not Slicestone, Slice the Lone.
What's he doing?
I don't know what he's doing.
I heard he was homeless and living in his car.
Oh, I read that too.
He was living in a trailer.
You never know with that.
Living in his car, living in a trailer.
Living in his studio, living in the plaza hotel.
You never know of that guy.
Well, this has been...
This has been Gilbert Gottfried.
You know how Don Kirsner would answer that though?
He had a way,
Don Kirchner had a way of refuting a thing like that.
You say to me,
he, he's,
sly is living in his car.
Yeah, Sly's living in his car.
He's living in his car.
He's not living in his car.
That's how he would.
Living in his car, he's not living in,
that's how he would do it.
Is that what you're going to sign off?
Peter Lawford.
Peter Lawford, yeah.
Salt and pepper.
Oh, yes.
With Sammy.
Yes, that Jerry only directed.
Yeah, and then there was a follow-up to it.
Oh, one more time.
Salt and pepper one more time.
Yes.
Yeah.
And this is how the theme.
The theme went like that.
Salt and pepper one more time.
No.
Salt and pepper one more time.
Now, didn't Sammy also sing the theme song of the Aaron Boy?
How did that go?
How did that go?
Oh, I forget.
God, this is going to kill me.
This will come back to me in the middle of a night.
That's a Drew Friedman question.
Yeah, oh, God.
He'll know.
What did you say about Drew Friedman?
His dad wrote...
Oh, no, no, no.
It was the disorderly order.
Oh, he's saying...
Yeah.
How would that have gone?
It was something like, and all I remember is the name,
disorderly ordely.
And I think it was Sammy,
and I think he was going,
then this son-al-ly,
on a lay.
How I got to hear.
We've got to get a hold of that.
Can we find that?
Can we get a hold of that?
I'll make it my business.
And edit it into the podcast.
Have it playing throughout the time.
I remember Sammy on I Dream of Jeannie.
That was also a great,
a great episode.
Phil Specter, too.
That's right. That's right.
Yeah.
Well, were you going to sign on?
Oh, I get so.
Okay.
Could you take us out as Don Kirshner Paul?
Oh, yes.
Okay.
And, uh, uh, did Anthony, who's your gentleman, called me on a kid name give a Godfrey.
He's one of the funniest gentleman ever.
Something like that.
Are you going to sign on?
Yes.
I can't top that.
Okay.
So, Gilbert Coffrey's an amazing colossal podcast, and I'm here with my co-host, Frank Santo Padre,
and we've been interviewing the legendary.
Oh, you should.
Yes.
You don't have to.
It's true.
As a performer, he's one of a kind.
And as a human being, he's one of the kindest.
Oh, you know, you don't have to say that.
Eugene Levy said as Bobby Vittman,
as a performer, he's marvelous.
As a human being, he's absolutely marvelous.
He's someone who taught me.
It's nice to be important, but it's important to be nice.
Good night, everybody.
It's been a pleasure being on your podcast, both of you guys.
Thanks, Paul.
Thanks for doing it, buddy.
