Welcome Back, Groucho

Here's something I never expected to see. October 26, 1976 was my second day as a Story Editor on the TV series, Welcome Back, Kotter and the day of the first taping for which I was present. I can't begin to tell you how many amazing (and in some ways, life-changing) things happened to me that day.

The place was swarming with stars, above and beyond those in our cast, and I met so many people and I heard a live studio audience laugh at a line I'd suggested and I was briefly trapped in an elevator with Olivia Newton-John and Elliott Gould and I started to feel like I was really in show business and…

…and Groucho Marx came to the set.

Some years ago, I wrote a two-part article on what Groucho meant to me and about the few, precious times in my life I was with him.  If you want to read both pieces, here's a link to Part One and here's a link to Part Two.  If you don't have time, the following is an excerpt from Part Two — the section where Groucho comes to the set of the show I was working on to tape a brief cameo appearance…

The studio audience was in bleachers, being warmed-up by comedian Mike Preminger. Mike was unnerved by all the noise in the wings and by conflicting signals he was getting as to how much time he had to fill before we'd be ready to roll tape. No one had told him about Groucho.

At about 8:15, a call came up to the writers' dressing room that Groucho was downstairs. (The writers got a dressing room so that they could be close in case of emergency rewrites. Executive Producer James Komack had a dressing room just off the stage but he vacated his for the evening and Groucho's name was inserted in the slot on the door.) We all traipsed down to see Groucho.

Our esteemed cameo guest was not feeling well and it was decided that he would not do the walk-on but would, instead, have his photo taken with the cast on the set. I'm still not certain if that was his decision or ours but one look at the man and you could see he was in no shape to go on-camera.

The shortest route from Groucho's dressing room was directly across the front of the bleachers, past where Mike Preminger was filling time, and through the center flap of the goldenrod curtain between the audience and the Kotter classroom set. With several people guiding him, Groucho was led out in front of the studio audience while cast and crew hustled around the other way to meet him behind the curtain.

Out front, the audience did not, at first, recognize Groucho Marx.

Mike Preminger looked over and saw an elderly gent, shuffling slowly towards him, interrupting in mid-joke. In a second or two, he sized up the situation and blurted out a quick introduction. The audience, responding to the name, burst into loud cheering and applause. "Thunderous" is the word that came to mind.

Groucho, making his way through the curtain flap, didn't hear them.

Behind the drape, cast members and crew members alike were introducing themselves to Groucho. He shook everyone's hand and mumbled "Nice to meet you," oblivious to whom he was actually meeting. He didn't seem to know where he was and he certainly didn't know which of the people gently pumping his hand were actors and which ones moved scenery for a living. He was steered to Mr. Kotter's chair in the classroom and gently eased into it as Gabe and the Sweathogs (John Travolta, Ron Palillo, Larry Hilton-Jacobs and Robert Heyges) crowded around.

Recalling Dick Cavett's warning to the audience on the record of Groucho's Carnegie Hall show, I warned the photog that Groucho was made dizzy by flash bulbs. He replied that there was plenty of light on the set and, besides, the way Groucho looked, these pictures would probably never be released. (He was correct. Days later, when I phoned up the appropriate P.R. folks to procure a copy, I was told that no such photos existed.)

As they went through the motions of taking the pictures, Groucho remained unmoving, unsmiling and about as unlike the fellow in Duck Soup as it would be possible to imagine. I found myself mentally repeating, "This is Groucho Marx," trying to get the notion to sink in. The Groucho I met at Hillcrest was the one I knew — older perhaps, and slower, but nonetheless recognizable.

This Groucho was not. I couldn't help but wonder, "Why is he here? What is he out to prove?" And just as I was wondering that, I overheard Erin Fleming pitching herself to our producer as an actress whose presence would do Kotter proud. Okay: Question answered.

The pictures done, Groucho was helped off the stage. Several people had already left, almost or actually in tears. "I don't want to see him like that," I heard a few of them say, exiting as quickly as they had eagerly arrived. Bobby Heyges was walking around saying, "How can I go on after seeing that?" Bobby was in no mood for comedy.

I got the idea to liberate the GROUCHO MARX sign from the dressing room door, an interesting memento. But, when I got there, someone else of like mind had beaten me to it. I arrived just in time to see Groucho and his entourage step slowly out the door to a waiting limousine.

In the months I worked on Kotter, I never heard anyone mention Groucho's visit again. You couldn't have found a person on the crew who would bet you a dime that the man who posed for photos with the cast would live another ten weeks, much less ten months. But he did.

After the taping, I tried like hell to locate photos of Groucho on the set. I was (of course) interested in any that showed me standing next to him but I was willing to settle for anything. I found nothing. The ABC Publicity Department told me they didn't have any and they told that to our show's star, Gabe Kaplan, who had about a jillion times as much clout with them as I did. I tried a few other sources but finally accepted what that cameraman had told me; that the photos would never be seen. Well, look what someone found on the Internet and forwarded to me…

grouchokotter01

Not the clearest photo but there's the cast and there's Groucho…and I think you can even see his disinterest in being there with those people.

I was standing just outside camera range when this was taken.  As I recall, there was no real expression or anything from Mr. Marx. He sat there and all the photos that the photographer was getting were the same. Someone suggested changing things up a bit by giving him the book to use as a prop…so he held it but had the same blank, "When can we leave?" look on his face.

There were later reports that his secretary-keeper Erin Fleming sometimes gave him drugs he should not have been taking.  It would not have surprised me if he was on something that night, though I'd prefer to think he was just an old man having a bad evening.

Either way, he should have been home in bed instead of on the set of a TV show. In fact, for the few sad minutes he was there, I wished I was home in bed instead of on the set of a TV show.

As I think I mentioned in one of the above-linked articles, I saw him one other time after this…an afternoon visit to his home. He was a little better there but not by much. I have no idea why but I've never written anything about that visit. I suppose I will one of these days but it'll be kind of a depressing article.

COL239

Groucho
Part 2

by Mark Evanier

ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED 6/11/99
Comics Buyer's Guide
REVISED SOMEWHAT 8/18/17

This is PART TWO of a two-part essay on my encounters with Groucho Marx both on-screen and in-person. If you haven't read PART ONE first, you may wish to do so but it's not mandatory.


I next saw Groucho in person on the evening of December 11, 1972 at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in downtown Los Angeles. It's part of the Music Center complex down there and that's where Groucho performed his one-man show (one man plus Erin Fleming and Marvin Hamlisch, it turned out). The gala event was scheduled for months earlier but Groucho took ill and the whole soiree was delayed.

In the interim, we Marx fans waited — anxious at the notion of perhaps our only chance to ever see him in person. We consoled ourselves by listening to the A&M recording of Groucho's show at Carnegie Hall in New York. On the record, Groucho sounded pretty good; coherent, though a bit hoarse. I later learned that Groucho actually sounded worse and a bit less coherent at Carnegie Hall. Most of what was on that record was recorded at a "warm-up" appearance he made at Iowa State University.

Finally, the rescheduled concert took place. I went to the theatre with my friend Robert Solomon, a soul of similar Grouchomania. I did not take my then-current girlfriend Karen, whom I had roped with much the same ploy used on Pauline. Karen was not pleased by my going with Robert.

The evening was a success and then it wasn't. Groucho received an endless cascade of ovations, usually standing. But the audience, outwardly applauding, was inwardly cringing. Groucho was very old and his show consisted of him standing at a podium. Why he wasn't sitting, I don't know, but his promoters sprang for exactly no scenery or props. He seemed to have aged twenty years since when I'd seen him at Hillcrest Country Club.

He stood there and read card after card of anecdotes, sometimes breezing from one to the next with no notice that a laugh was supposed to come between stories. At one point, he read a card introducing a film clip, then continued right on into a story about something else. His secretary-manager-companion Erin Fleming hustled out from the wings to force him into a chair, saying, "We're going to show A Night at the Opera."

Groucho muttered, "But I've already seen it," triggering an immense laugh at the one and only ad-lib of the evening.

Later, he stopped in mid-anecdote to request that his piano player (a then-unknown Marvin Hamlisch) do his Johnny Mathis impression. Hamlisch was startled, but, realizing it was Groucho's way of asking for a break, he launched into the imitation. When Mr. Marx tried to perform "Lydia, the Tattooed Lady," Hamlisch had to prompt him on many of the lines, helping him along the way a third-grade teacher might coach a pupil who had blanked on the poem he was supposed to memorize and recite.

Since this song had been in Groucho's repertoire for more than thirty years, the audience couldn't help but feel cold chills at the lapse. I think, if there had been a tactful way of stopping the show and polling those present on whether they wanted Groucho to continue or to be taken home and put to bed, the vote would have been unanimous for bed.

Instead, we all pretended that nothing was amiss and applauded Groucho long and loud. It was the greatest bit of acting I have ever seen performed by an audience.

During the show, movie cameras positioned throughout the star-packed house filmed Groucho's attempts and the audience reverberations. The film was supposed to wind up as a special for television, we heard. But it never did and it's not hard to guess why.

On the way out, Robert and I glimpsed George Burns getting into a limousine. We noted that — and could understand why — he was not lingering about, going backstage to congratulate the star. Years later, when I met Mr. Burns, I mentioned that evening to him.

"I'm known as a great liar," he said. "Everyone in show business knows it. I can see the worst show in the world and go backstage and say, 'You killed 'em! You were terrific!'"

He paused and added, "But even I couldn't pull it off that night."


We next find Mark and Groucho together on the evening of October 26, 1976. It was my second day as Story Editor of a TV show called Welcome Back, Kotter and it had already been an amazing thirty-six hours. In the midst of much hyper-activity, one of the secretaries mentioned off-handedly that Groucho Marx might be coming to that evening's taping. Like I really needed more excitement in my life that day.

There was a back-story to it all. The star of the show, Gabe Kaplan, often did Groucho impressions on the show. Nothing new there. Everyone does Groucho impressions, usually bad ones. It says something about Groucho's masterful timing that folks will recognize an imitation that is light years from his vocal pitch so long as it approximates his rhythm and includes a pantomime cigar.

Groucho saw Gabe do his impression and announced he was going to sue. This, also, was nothing new. Groucho threatened to sue everyone. In his later years, every time anyone had any sort of project that treaded even vaguely on the reputations of the Brothers Marx, there was at least a 50-50 chance that Groucho would take financial umbrage and threaten to have his barristers barrist. He once threatened to sue his son Arthur over an altogether-flattering, unauthorized biography.

At least a few of Groucho's most fervent, young fans were crushed when they approached him with fan-type projects only to be rudely rebuffed and threatened with legal action, albeit unfounded. Usually, such threats were quickly made and forgotten.

Once this round of legal threats were made and forgotten, Groucho was invited to pick a Tuesday — any Tuesday we were taping — to drop by and do a cameo walk-on appearance. As fate would have it, he picked my first Tuesday there.

We quickly wrote a joke. Here it was my second day as a staff writer on a TV show and I was writing a joke for Groucho Marx to tell. Something, I couldn't help but think, was wrong with this picture.

Around three o'clock, a call came in to confirm that Groucho would be there, that he would do the cameo walk-on, but that he wouldn't speak. Groucho, we were told, had recently decided never to speak in public again, having decided he was too old. Folks on the staff were a bit baffled: Have Groucho Marx on a show and not have him speak? One of the producers asked, "Are you sure we have the right Marx Brother?"

Nevertheless, the offer had been tendered and couldn't, in all politeness, be withdrawn. We switched around the closing scene so that Gabe did the joke, then a crowd of extras would part to reveal Groucho standing there. His sudden appearance, wordless though it would be, would be the topper to Gabe's joke. We hoped.

As we got closer to tape time, the cameo appearance was continually rumored as on-again, off-again. Nevertheless, the set was abuzz with celebrities. Lee Grant was there since her daughter, Dinah Manoff, was in the show that evening. So was Valerie Harper's daughter, Wendy Schaal. They had about four lines between them but have since done pretty well for themselves.

The studio audience was in bleachers, being warmed-up by comedian Mike Preminger. Mike was unnerved by all the noise in the wings and by conflicting signals he was getting as to how much time he had to fill before we'd be ready to roll tape. No one had told him about Groucho.

At about 8:15, a call came up to the writers' dressing room that Groucho was downstairs. (The writers got a dressing room so that they could be close in case of emergency rewrites. Executive Producer James Komack had a dressing room just off the stage but he vacated his for the evening and Groucho's name was inserted in the slot on the door.) We all traipsed down to see Groucho.

Our esteemed cameo guest was not feeling well and it was decided that he would not do the walk-on but would, instead, have his photo taken with the cast on the set. I'm still not certain if that was his decision or ours but one look at the man and you could see he was in no shape to go on-camera.

The shortest route from Groucho's dressing room was directly across the front of the bleachers, past where Mike Preminger was filling time, and through the center flap of the goldenrod curtain between the audience and the Kotter classroom set. With several people guiding him, Groucho was led out in front of the studio audience while cast and crew hustled around the other way to meet him behind the curtain.

Out front, the audience did not, at first, recognize Groucho Marx.

Mike Preminger looked over and saw an elderly gent, shuffling slowly towards him, interrupting in mid-joke. In a second or two, he sized up the situation and blurted out a quick introduction. The audience, responding to the name, burst into loud cheering and applause. "Thunderous" is the word that came to mind.

Groucho, making his way through the curtain flap, didn't hear them.

Behind the drape, cast members and crew members alike were introducing themselves to Groucho. He shook everyone's hand and mumbled "Nice to meet you," oblivious to whom he was actually meeting. He didn't seem to know where he was and he certainly didn't know which of the people gently pumping his hand were actors and which ones moved scenery for a living. He was steered to Mr. Kotter's chair in the classroom and gently eased into it as Gabe and the Sweathogs (John Travolta, Ron Palillo, Larry Hilton-Jacobs and Robert Heyges) crowded around.

Recalling Dick Cavett's warning to the audience on the record of Groucho's Carnegie Hall show, I warned the photog that Groucho was made dizzy by flash bulbs. He replied that there was plenty of light on the set and, besides, the way Groucho looked, these pictures would probably never be released. He was almost correct. Days later, when I phoned up the appropriate P.R. folks to procure a copy, I was told that no such photos existed. For years, I thought they'd been destroyed but decades later, some turned up — as everything does eventually — on the Internet.

As they went through the motions of taking the pictures, Groucho remained unmoving, unsmiling and about as unlike the fellow in Duck Soup as it would be possible to imagine. I found myself mentally repeating, "This is Groucho Marx," trying to get the notion to sink in. The Groucho I met at Hillcrest was the one I knew — older perhaps, and slower, but nonetheless recognizable.

This Groucho was not. I couldn't help but wonder, "Why is he here? What is he out to prove?" And just as I was wondering that, I overheard Erin Fleming pitching herself to our producer as an actress whose presence would do Kotter proud. Okay: Question answered.

The pictures done, Groucho was helped off the stage. Several people had already left, almost or actually in tears. "I don't want to see him like that," I heard a few of them say, exiting as quickly as they had eagerly arrived. Bobby Heyges was walking around saying, "How can I go on after seeing that?" Bobby was in no mood for comedy.

I got the idea to liberate the GROUCHO MARX sign from the dressing room door, an interesting memento. But, when I got there, someone else of like mind had beaten me to it. I arrived just in time to see Groucho and his entourage step slowly out the door to a waiting limousine.

In the months I worked on Kotter, I never heard anyone mention Groucho's visit again. You couldn't have found a person on the crew who would bet you a dime that the man who posed for photos with the cast would live another ten weeks, much less ten months. But he did.


I saw him one other time about two months later and he was even worse. The controversial Ms. Fleming was staging a series of carefully-planned spontaneous "drop-in" visits by everyone in Hollywood. A producer friend of mine had been invited and, figuring a Marxian authority might be of aid, he invited me along. On our way in, Jack Nicholson was coming out with the look of a man who has just been to pay his last respects to a dying aunt and, that unpleasantness over with, wanted to be anywhere else.

All the time we were there, Groucho just sat in a wheelchair next to his piano and muttered little wheezes of conversation, all — but for a short passage of Gilbert and Sullivan — inaudible. Everyone present took their lead from Erin, who, whenever Groucho would make any sort of noise, would nod and smile and pretend like she agreed wholeheartedly with whatever he had just said. Which is what we all did, chuckling with every reply, just in case what he said had been intended as funny.

Erin scurried about, talking long and loud about a scene she had done in a Woody Allen film. One day's acting work on a Woody Allen film apparently makes one an expert on all phases of comedy. We got out of there as fast as was even vaguely polite.


Eight months later, Groucho died in the literal sense. That mental leash, so concerned as it always is with propriety, stopped a lot of us from saying out loud, "Thank God!" But we all felt it — all of us who'd ever felt even remotely close to Hugo Z. Hackenbush.

I'm not quite certain why any of us loved him as we did. He was not, by anyone's accounts, a particularly nice man. Harpo, everyone agrees, was — but Groucho often seemed compelled to live up (or down) to his name. He so alienated everyone in his life that, near the end, the only one left to care for him was an aspiring actress who only seemed able to get acting work when she was shoving an aged Groucho out on stage in front of her.

Groucho's famed wit could account for what we felt about him — but much of it was, after all, the work of top writers. He'd had men like George Kaufman, Morrie Ryskind, S.J. Perelman, Irving Brecher and Harry Ruby concocting his stage and screen dialogue and later, when he did the You Bet Your Life game show, ostensibly ad-lib, a whole slew of closet writers constructing contestants' remarks and snappy Groucho comebacks. He was by no means helpless in this department, but he sure had enough help to tar up his fame as one of America's great wits.

No, I think what Groucho meant to any of us was irreverence. What the man was didn't matter. On screen, he lived with a healthy disrespect for all things serious and born of pretense. Small wonder that his greatest foil was Margaret Dumont, whose screen presence denoted High-Society affectation and not much else.

Groucho never took anything too seriously, his own image in particular…which is why it was so unnerving to see him, in his declining days, subsisting only on the respect that others felt for him. The Master of Irreverence had finally been reduced…to Reverence.

The happiness of film is that the best gets remembered and the worst, forgotten. That's why everyone always thinks that TV was better years ago: They remember only their favorite shows. Groucho left a legacy of very funny movies and TV shows, most of which are readily available. If they aren't all as popular as they deserve to be these days, it's only because everyone who could possibly care about them is sick of them. They're there, though, for future generations.

They'll be able to watch Animal Crackers and the like, never having to witness Groucho's declining years. Just as they'll be able to listen to Elvis Presley records without thinking of the later Elvis…the Elvis who died the same week as Groucho.

Elvis was grotesquely overweight in his final years of touring. He packed Las Vegas showrooms full of Elvis worshipers who paid ticket prices straight out of the ozone layer. On stage, The King performed his greatest hits, accompanied by a good band and a group of back-up singers who aided him with the notes he could no longer reach.

Even with this help, the "King" still delivered a show so short that, when he left the stage, everyone knew it was just a fake bow-off and he'd be coming back for ten more numbers. Only he wasn't coming back: Elvis exited directly to a waiting limousine. His fans would be standing and cheering in the showroom, waiting for him to return and finish the high-priced concert. Then, over the P.A. system, once they were sure the limo was away, the hotel would announce, "Elvis has left the building…thank you and good-night." The crowds were always, to say the least, stunned.

Having been raised with what I hope is a proper human reverence for life and the feelings of others, I can't help but say that the death of Elvis Presley at age 42 was a terrible tragedy and loss.

But deep within me, parts affected in many ways by my contacts with Groucho Marx, have to wonder if maybe Elvis, by dying when he did, didn't do himself and his fans a terrific favor.

From the E-Mailbag…

jameskomack01

I mentioned my old employer, TV producer Jimmie Komack here. This prompted questions from Dave Harvey…

As is often the case when I read your posts, it prompts some additional internet browsing. I looked up James Komack on Wikipedia and IMDB, and was wondering if you could answer a couple questions.

Do you have any knowledge of the Milton Berle illegitimate son story? Did Mr. Komack ever verify or refute this story?

Komack was a highly successful writer/producer for a long time, but for the last decade or so of his life, he has zero IMDB credits. Was that Hollywood ageism at work, or something else?

Thanks for your always engaging website.

Well, I didn't know Jimmie all that well. During the season I worked for him on Welcome Back, Kotter, he and our star Gabe Kaplan weren't, to put it politely, quite getting along; you know, the way Israel and Palestine don't quite get along. The Kotter staff more-or-less broke into two camps — the Komack camp and the Kaplan camp — and my partner and I were on the Kaplan side.

Despite this, I got along okay with Jimmie and liked him even though there was no real reason to. He seemed to get a kick out of the fact that I knew his background, dating back to when he was a stand-up comic and about as far down that ladder as you could possibly be. He had an amazing career, working his way up to an actor, then a director, then a producer and finally the executive producer of a few hit shows.

He struck me as very savvy at knowing how to appease the networks at that moment…and that's about the only skill of his I ever saw. I'd be very surprised if any of the dozens of writers he employed over the years would say, "That Jimmie Komack…he knew comedy." His three big producing successes (The Courtship of Eddie's Father, Chico and the Man, and Welcome Back, Kotter) all struck me as cases where he let someone else run the show…and was wise enough to have it be the right someone. After that, it was a lot of short-term flops and failed pilots especially when he got more involved.

One day while I was working for him, he had two new series cancelled…on the same day. ABC cancelled Mr. T and Tina starring Pat Morita. NBC cancelled, without ever airing a single episode, a series called Snip! starring David Brenner. Both axed the same day. I remembered that back when Komack had appeared in the Broadway play and movie of Damn Yankees, he'd had a line where he said, "Three for five! Three for five!" His character was proud that he'd gotten three hits in five "at bats." So I went into his office and called out, "Three for five, Jimmie! Three for five!"

There are moments in this world when you start to say something and just as you pass the Fail Safe moment — the point where there's no stopping yourself — you realize maybe it's the precise wrong thing to say. As I reached that moment, I caught a clearer glimpse of his expression. He looked like his whole family had died and I knew he wouldn't laugh at what was already coming out of my mouth. Indeed, he did not. He stared at me with horror and hatred as if to say, "Why are you bothering me in my hour of grief?"

Then a very long four seconds later, he "got it" — he still had three hits out of five series he'd sold through his own company — and he started laughing uproariously. I remember that because in all the time I worked for him, it was the only time I said or wrote anything he seemed to think was funny.

One day, he asked me into his office and in an odd way, quizzed me if everything was all right with me, personally. Was I happy? Was I depressed? I told him apart from the insane hours I was working, everything was peachy. He said, "Well, you know…if you ever have a problem, personal or professional, you can come to me. My door is always open if you just want to talk." I had no idea what that was all about. Neither did several others in the office who heard similar things from him. A week or two later, the star of Chico and the Man committed suicide and we all went, "Aha!"

He was very pragmatic and realistic about where he was in the TV business. He used to say, "When I get cold, I'll get ice cold." After a bunch of shows beyond his three hits failed, he got ice cold. I don't think he suffered from ageism at all. I think he just had too damn many flops. When your ratio goes out of whack like that, buyers wonder if you've lost your touch…or maybe never really had one in the first place. Either way, they don't line up to buy from you.

The next-to-last time I saw him, he was about to direct the third Porky's movie and he was talking about how this would be his comeback (he didn't use that word) and how he'd be back again. The film was roundly disliked and didn't do much business…and I think that was it for Mr. Komack. He didn't do much of anything after that.

The last time I saw him was during the '88 Writers Guild strike. There was a big upcoming vote and some of us who wanted the then-on-the-table offer to be defeated were scurrying to amass proxies from members who wouldn't be attending the meeting. I was working at WGA HQ and Jimmie came in with his. He wanted to entrust his vote to someone who'd vote against the offer and when he found out I could be that person, he came over and gave it to me. It was a brief but awkward conversation as he was not in great health or spirit. I'm surprised he made it to '97, which is when he died. Some time before then, he tried and failed a few times to assemble a Welcome Back, Kotter reunion TV-movie.

We never discussed the Berle rumor and I guess I need to explain what that's all about. In his 1975 autobiography, Milton Berle "revealed" that he'd once gotten a prominent actress pregnant and that she'd had the baby but convinced another man (one who married her) that it was his. The actress, her husband and the baby were all unnamed in the book but Berle said that the kid had grown up to be a prominent TV producer with several hits on the air. This has led some people to deduce it was Jimmie Komack.

Jimmie never mentioned it to me but I don't believe it. For one thing, the timetable doesn't work out. Berle was born in 1908 and Komack in 1924, and the story Berle tells in his book of getting this woman pregnant did not occur when he was 16 years old; more like in his mid-to-late-twenties. Secondly, in the book Berle talks about how a "kid" who claimed to be a TV producer approached him at a charity event about maybe appearing in a pilot he was producing.

Berle didn't know who the kid was, didn't think he was legit and brushed him off. Only later did Uncle Miltie find out the "kid" had several hit shows on…and that he was the son of that actress — i.e., his son. What's wrong with that tale? Everything, starting with the fact that Berle and Komack had traveled in many of the same circles for years and must have crossed paths many times before that charity event. Also, Komack was fifty years old when he had his second hit (Chico and the Man) — hardly a kid — and I don't think his mother was in show business.

So who was Berle's illegitimate son? My guess is no one. I think he made the whole thing up, just as he probably made up the story he told in the same book about coming out to Hollywood as a kid and playing the newsboy opposite Charlie Chaplin in Tillie's Punctured Romance. Berle had three children, all adopted, and he was hypersensitive to rumors that he was gay. People do whisper such things when you spend half your career prancing about in women's clothing and acting like a campy drag queen.

I do know I never saw Komack taking after his alleged father like that. Then again, like I said, I didn't know him that well.

The Archie Pilot

This is a rerun of an item that first ran on this blog on September 27, 2003. It's about two pilots that were done in the seventies that attempted to turn the Archie comic books into an hour-long live-action prime-time TV series. I was peripherally involved as they were done by the company for which I was writing Welcome Back, Kotter.

Contrary to what has been reported elsewhere, I was not a writer on either, though I turned down an offer to work on the second. I was an unbilled consultant on the first. What happened was that the Komack Company had obtained the rights to do these special-pilots and Jimmie Komack had this odd notion of how to approach doing an adaptation of an existing property. His view was that it should be done by writers and producers who were completely unfamiliar with the source material so their minds were uncluttered by what had been done before.

While I was working there, he also did a pilot that brought back the not-dissimilar character of Dobie Gillis. Dobie's creator Max Shulman had co-written a pilot script for the revival — a real good one, I thought, that updated the property but still captured what was great about the old series. ABC assigned the project to Komack's company and Komack used the Shulman script to attract the necessary actors from the original version — Dwayne Hickman, Bob Denver, Frank Faylen and Sheila James. Then, once they were committed, he tossed out the Shulman script and had a new one written by two writers who'd never seen the original show. (If you think I'm making this up, read Dwayne Hickman's autobiography.)

Jimmie took a similar approach to turning Archie into a TV show. The creative staff he engaged were not totally unfamiliar with the property but he urged them not to read the old comics and to instead work from a rough outline someone had written about who they were. This did not sit well with John Goldwater, who ran and co-owned the Archie company and who regarded himself as the creator of the feature. One day, Komack called me in and said, "You know all about comic books, don't you?" I said I did. He said, "Archie Comics?" I said I did. Later that day, he brought me into a meeting with Mr. Goldwater, who was visiting from New York, and introduced me as his resident Archie expert and consultant.

The meeting went roughly like this. I was introduced to Mr. Goldwater and I managed to get in that I'd written many comic books and that I'd apprenticed with Jack Kirby. Mr. Goldwater was impressed at the mention of Jack, who'd worked for his company a few times. We spoke for a few minutes and somehow, I managed to wedge in a nice nugget of trivia. Kotter was sharing a stage then with a new ABC sitcom called Fish, a spin-off of Barney Miller starring Abe Vigoda. I mentioned that Abe Vigoda's brother Bill Vigoda had been a top artist for Archie. "Is that true?" Jimmie asked. Goldwater nodded it was true…and since he was impressed that I knew a lot about Archie Comics, Jimmie decided to quit while he was ahead and send me back to work. So I never got to talk much with John Goldwater. Later, Jimmie did consult with me on a number of points including some of the final casting. But I didn't write on the shows, nor was I credited on them. Here's the interesting (I think) story I posted here about them in 2003…

encore02

Okay, I promised this story. But first, let me note that Gary DeJong did some research and unearthed the info that the first of the two Archie pilots done in 1976-1977 aired on December 19. 1976 and starred Audrey Landers as Betty, Hilary Thompson as Veronica, Mark Winkworth as Reggie, Derrel Maury as Jughead, Jane Lambert as Miss Grundy, Susan Blu as Midge, Jim Boelson as Moose, Whit Bissell as Mr. Lodge, Michelle Stacy as Little Jinx, Tifni Twitchell as Big Ethel and Amzie Strickland as Mrs. Lodge. Byron Webster played Mr. Weatherbee and Gordon Jump (whose passing started this discussion) played Archie's father. In other words, referencing the earlier anecdote, Gordon Jump came in to audition for Mr. Weatherbee and got the part…then, since the producers couldn't properly cast the role of Archie's father, they moved Jump to that slot and put their second-choice in as Mr. Weatherbee. As I recall, the role of Archie's father was much larger than the role of Mr. Weatherbee so that may explain the decision.

Who played the title role of Archie Andrews? Well, that's the story I wanted to tell. After extensive auditions and screen tests, they picked a young man with brilliant red hair but no real acting experience, at least on television. Somehow, things didn't work out. I never heard exactly what happened but suddenly, the role of Archie was being played by the producers' second choice, an actor named Dennis Bowen who had appeared a few times on Welcome Back, Kotter. (Kotter was produced by the same company. Dennis played the recurring role of Todd Ludlow, an honors student who sometimes heckled the Sweathogs.)

archiepilot

The Archie pilot was an odd mix of sitcom and variety show. It was an hour in length and there were blackouts and little, self-contained storylines of about ten minutes each. Between these, the focus would shift to a rather generic rock band that played bubble-gum style music. The whole thing was being targeted for the 7:00 Sunday evening slot and I recall a lot of argument over how many scenes there could be of Betty, Veronica and a number of good-looking female extras in swimwear and sleepwear. The writers had scripted a number of quick jokes at a swimming pool, and one of the short stories involved the boys crashing a slumber party that Veronica was throwing at the Lodge mansion. Both had been planned expressly to get the ladies into scanty outfits, which the ABC programming department encouraged. At the same time, their Standards and Practices folks ran around demanding less-revealing bikinis and nighties. Some of the best jokes in the show wound up being cut because the girls were showing a half-inch too much of their physiques.

The mix of sitcom and sketches didn't quite work. There was a second pilot with the same cast and pretty much the same idea and it didn't work, either. As I recall, the main change from the first one was that they replaced the generic rock band with one comprised of Archie, Betty, Jughead, etc. Danny "Neil's brother" Simon was the head writer on this try.

Anyway, the great story, the one I wanted to get to, was what happened because they replaced Archies in the first pilot. Somehow, the ABC publicity department never got the word and all the p.r. they issued for the show contained the name of the first actor, the one who was replaced during rehearsals. Poor Dennis Bowen had to endure publicity photos that displayed his face but identified him as the first guy. A few years ago when the Archie comic book folks published a book on the character's history, they said the first guy had played the role.

What happened to that first redheaded guy? Well, he eventually got a TV series, then he left it and made some movies. Now, he's back with another TV series. Can you guess who it is?

The Hank-Dobie Connection

Vince Waldron (a fine author, whose website is a haven for us sitcom fanciers) writes in reference to our earlier item on the series, Hank

Just saw the Hank piece question, on which I have no more to add. (I think that one may have been before my time.) However, I did have a "wait a minute!" moment when I saw the publicity graphic you included in your listing, which showed Hank pondering one of life's ponderables next to a statue of Rodin's Thinker. Surely I'm not the only fan of old tv who found the juxtaposition of Hank and thinker more than a tad reminiscent of a motif frequently employed in the opening bumper of another series that featured a campus cut-up named Dobie.

Yeah, that's interesting. I don't recall "The Thinker" ever being a part of the TV series. It may have turned up only in that one publicity photo, which Hank star Dick Kallman also used on the cover of a record album he had out at the time. Hard to believe though that no one involved with Hank realized they were replicating a key visual from The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis, which had gone off the air not long before and was still quite visible in reruns.

…although I'll tell you an odd thing. One of the producers of Hank (and I think he directed some of them) was my old boss, Jimmie Komack. And in 1977, when CBS hired Komack to produce a revival of Dobie Gillis, Jimmie enraged Max Shulman, Dwayne Hickman and everyone else involved in the old show by bragging that he'd never seen the original series. Hickman, Bob Denver, Frank Faylen and Sheila James all signed on to the pilot/special because Max Shulman had co-written (with Eric Cohen) a very funny script that was true to the spirit of the original but, I thought, quite accessible to anyone who didn't know the old show. It also struck me as quite contemporary, but Komack decided that everyone involved was too fixated on replicating a series no one remembered and he was worried it wouldn't be modern…so he tossed the Shulman-Cohen script and had a new one written by two other writers who didn't particularly recall the old series.

The result was a deservedly-unsold pilot called, appropriately enough, Whatever Happened to Dobie Gillis? and if you ever run into Dwayne Hickman and want to see him turn a lovely shade of scarlet, ask him about it. (Actually, don't, 'cause he's a very nice guy. Here's a link to his website, by the way. His autobiography, which you can purchase there, is a pretty good book.)

I guess this really has nothing to do with the Hank photo but in the world of weblogging, if something pops into your head, you post it. By the way, the above story has one of those EC Comics endings. A few years later, when Jimmie might have been trying to sell a new sitcom to CBS, he had a teensy problem: The guy you pitched to then at CBS was Dwayne Hickman.

While I'm posting: Tom Wittick wrote to ask if I knew anything about Dick Kallman. Well, I know he was a musical performer before and after his time in Hollywood. He spent a lot of time after Hank playing the Robert Morse role in productions of How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, then he replaced Tommy Steele in the lead of Half a Sixpence on Broadway, then took it on the road for a while. He worked a lot actually, bouncing around between movie and TV parts and stage, plus he also played Vegas a lot. Somewhere in the mid-seventies, performing dried up and he became a dealer in rare paintings and antiques until 1980 when he was killed in a robbery of some of his wares. Sad ending for a pretty talented guy.