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Sick In The Head: Conversations About Life And Comedy Part 9

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Paul Feig: I remember everyone at the network coming to my mom's funeral. And Judd getting some secret joy of "Good, I'm glad they're all here." It made me laugh: He's enjoying the fact that they had to come and see me in a diminished state.

Linda Cardellini: I was asked to go on David Letterman-a lifelong dream. So I fly to New York and I'm in the limousine on my way to the show and I got a call from my publicist, and she said, "I'm so sorry, honey, the show's been canceled." And I said, "David Letterman has been canceled?" And she said, "No, Freaks and Geeks."

Judd: I felt like a father to everybody, and I felt like everyone's world was about to collapse. I felt responsible, like I had to fight to have it survive so that their lives would be okay, so that their careers could get launched. And so to completely fail was devastating to me. And especially for Paul, because this was Paul's story.

Paul Feig: We were still in postproduction on the last three episodes. The network was like, "Finish them up," but we didn't have anywhere to show them.

Judd: We stayed in editing for months, obsessing over every detail, in both rage and depression, for a show that had been canceled. I was so upset, I herniated a disk and had to have surgery.



Paul Feig: And that's when we did that day at the Museum of Television and Radio in L.A., where we showed the four episodes that hadn't aired. That was the coolest thing ever, in a theater packed with fans, with every episode just rocking the house.

Samm Levine: Scott Sa.s.sa called me himself and said, "I loved the show. But at the end of the day, it's a business." I've been on a lot of canceled shows since then and I've never heard from the network president.

(Sa.s.sa had decided to cancel the show when he saw a rough cut for Paul's final episode, in which Lindsay, apparently headed for a summer school program, instead runs off with Kim to follow the Grateful Dead.) Scott Sa.s.sa: They show Lindsay traveling in the bus-I almost popped the tape out, because I thought I knew where they were going-and all of a sudden the bus goes by and the freaks are there in that van going to the Grateful Dead concert. And I thought, That's not how this thing should end.

Judd: I only found out later that when Scott Sa.s.sa saw the cut of the finale and he saw them get in the van he realized we would never do the things that would make the show commercial. That doesn't take away from the fact that Scott was the biggest supporter of the show; it's only good because he gave us all this creative leeway. But that's the funny thing about this work: You can do something you really like and someone else just looks at it and says, "I need to end this today."

Paul Feig: There was a moment when we got canceled where I was like, Thank G.o.d-I can't do this anymore, then immediately filled with regret: Oh, f.u.c.k! I love these characters! And I had so many things I wanted to do in the next season. It really is like losing your family. It's very bizarre.

Judd: Whenever I see an opportunity to use any of the people from Freaks and Geeks, I do it. It's a way of refusing to accept that the show was canceled. In my head, I can look at Knocked Up as just an episode of Seth's character getting a girl pregnant. All of the movies relate in my mind in that way, as the continuous adventures of those characters. The show was the kids' entire life. It was their high school: They're literally going to school on the set. They're falling in love on the set. It's actually happening. And those relations.h.i.+ps are still happening; they're still close.

Paul Feig: I'm still very friendly with them all. Judd was the one who really kept on working with everybody; he brought them along to their next level. I'm like the mom who sits at home and watches the kids become successful and takes great joy in their accomplishments.

Judd: Part of the problem of the show was it should have been on HBO. Everything that's popular now you might call "independent television." Mad Men is a little like indie TV. But there was no home for us in 1999. It wasn't niche television-you were competing against Regis Philbin hosting a game show.

Martin Starr: I can't express how fortunate I feel to have been a part of something so appreciated and so loved. I'd feel so sorry for myself if I had done a teen movie and people were quoting the dumbest lines in the world everywhere I went. I feel so fortunate that it's something I care so much about and that I can connect with the people that connect with it. I got really, really lucky.

This interview was originally published in Vanity Fair in January 2013 (Robert Lloyd/Vanity Fair; Conde Nast).

GARRY SHANDLING.

(1984).

From the beginning, Garry Shandling was one of my favorite comedians. I used to watch him religiously when he was the guest host on The Tonight Show, in the seventies, and he was basically an unknown comedian filling in for the legendary Johnny Carson. He slaughtered every time. Unlike most of my high school interviews, this one was conducted over the phone. Garry was in a hotel room at Lake Tahoe, preparing for a show that night, but he took the time to talk to me and, in the process, to lay out every single thing he intended to do in the rest of his career. All these years later, I look at it and think: Everything the guy said he would do, he did. The lesson here, for me, was that you have to have a dream before you can execute it. That the people who succeed are the ones who think through what the next stages of their careers might be, and then work incredibly hard, day after day, to attain their goals. They don't just flop around like fish. They have a vision, and they work their a.s.ses off to make it a reality.

Judd Apatow: So you guest-hosted The Tonight Show recently. That's a pretty big step up. It was the talk of the town. How did that come about?

Garry Shandling: I think I had done the show eleven times. And I had done well, fortunately, just about every time. What happened was that Albert Brooks was supposed to guest-host, but he got sick the day before and so they called me, twenty-four hours ahead of when the show was being taped, and said we'd like you to guest-host tomorrow night. I had twenty-four hours to prepare.

Judd: Really?

Garry: Yeah. I mean, it was very weird. But The Tonight Show has always been supportive of me. And they said, if the opportunity ever arose, I could be used as a guest host. But you really don't believe it until it happens. So I knew the opportunity existed, but I didn't think it was gonna happen that fast.

Judd: What kind of preparation would you do for the show? I mean, you're interviewing people, which is new to you. Plus, you have to have a ten-minute monologue okayed. How did you go about preparing all that?

Garry: It was interesting because I hadn't worked in about twelve days-which is a long time for a comic to go without working. Because you don't keep your chops up on the stage otherwise. So I a.s.sembled a monologue of material I had done before-there was nothing else to do. And I went out to two clubs that night, tried to figure out what I wanted to do for my monologue. And just try to get my feet back on the stage, because I hadn't worked in two weeks.

Judd: And when you watched it, were you happy?

Garry: Pretty much. I mean, it's hard for me to look at it and be objective. I can't see it. But it seemed like it went well, for my first time. I don't think it was, like, amazing or anything. Did you see it?

Judd: No, I didn't. I was doing interviews that night at the Improv. But you must have been scared to death, right?

Garry: Well, I wasn't real scared because I had mentally prepared for doing that all along. I mean, The Tonight Show has been so supportive of me. They made me feel comfortable, rather than putting me under pressure. They simply said, "We think you're the guy for this and we don't have any question that you can do a good job." That kind of support made me feel comfortable instead of frightened. There were certainly nerves.

Judd: What kind of feedback did you get? Did you get offers afterwards?

Garry: My manager doesn't tell me about all the offers. But I did get requests to do what we call personal appearance work, which is in clubs and stuff. And I guess there were some sitcom offers, but I'm just not that interested in that.

Judd: Acting is something you're not interested in doing?

Garry: I'm interested in acting, I just don't know in what vehicle yet. My immediate goal is to sell a show and get it on the air. A talk variety show. Something like The Tonight Show, I guess. Or David Letterman. I would like to do something more than a situation comedy. And I have a show in my mind that we're actually going to pitch to the networks when I get back off the road, which will be the end of October.

Judd: The Tonight Show was taking a major chance with you, because you're not really in the public eye. It's a big chance to put someone like you on there, as far as ratings go. Someone turns the TV on and sees you behind the desk- Garry: They were smart. Ratings-wise, they know I'm not going to get any ratings. But they were smart because they slipped me in when Albert Brooks had dropped out. The night before, they didn't even mention that I was going to be guest-hosting, so everybody who tuned in a.s.sumed it was Albert Brooks. And then I'm sure, out of curiosity, they watched for a while. I think, in their minds, they were taking a risk putting me in there. But I had pretty much proven that I was strong and in control of what I do. I think they felt that I could do it, and I think they were more than satisfied with how I did. It was exciting. It was very emotional.

Judd: So you're working bigger rooms these days. You're in Tahoe right now, right?

Garry: I'm in Tahoe, opening for Tony Orlando. But I've been doing big rooms for about two years.

Judd: And how does that compare to, you know, playing clubs in Los Angeles?

Garry: It's very different. For one thing, it depends who you're opening for and what kind of crowd they draw. Sometimes in these big rooms-like Reno, or Tahoe, or Vegas-they draw an older audience that's totally unlike what you find in a comedy club, which is generally younger, and a little hipper. So you work it differently. You have to work it in a broader, more commercial way. I have to take out most of my hip material. And some of my singles material has to go because it's been so long since some of these people have been single, they just don't relate to it.

Judd: How would you describe your type of humor?

Garry: Oh man, I can't see it objectively.

Judd: It's not that conventional. It's ideas and thoughts with observation. Some comedians now, they're just doing straight observational humor. But your act has a whole new dimension to it.

Garry: You should tell me what you think it is, because I'm always curious how people see it from the outside.

Judd: That's how I see it from the outside-you know, it's like your ideas on things, and I think it's great, just- Garry: The most important thing a comic can do is write from his insides. As cliche as that sounds, a lot of comics start out thinking that they just should write something funny. Which is not the answer. You have to write from personal experience. What you see on the stage is really how I am when I'm funny.

Judd: Like with your friends?

Garry: I can't see how it's different. All I know is when I watch, I go, Yeah, that's Garry. I write about my life, and then I exaggerate it because I do like to write jokes. You know, I was a comedy writer before I was a comedian.

Judd: Who did you write for?

Garry: I wrote for Sanford and Son; Welcome Back, Kotter; and The Harvey Korman Show. I wrote for about six sitcoms before I decided to do stand-up. So I have an ability to write jokes, which I like to do. Every now and then, I'll be writing about my life and I'll just think about a joke, and it's really just purely a joke.

Judd: What would be an example of how a piece of material developed?

Garry: I'll tell you an interesting story-I mean, this is unlike other material of mine. I do this joke in my act: I say, "I've heard every excuse for a woman not going to bed with me. I think I've heard them all. I remember this one girl actually said to me, 'Look, not with this Falkland Islands thing.'"

Judd: (Laughs) Garry: "And I said, 'That was over a year ago!' And she said, 'I still haven't gotten over it yet.' And I said, 'Well, I can understand that, Mrs. Thatcher.'"

Judd: (Laughs) Garry: I could tell you about the derivation of so many jokes. Because some of them take a year-literally-from the time I get an idea to the time I get the line exactly right. With the Falkland Islands joke, I originally wrote a joke where I would come out and say, "Boy, I'm just not meeting any women. I don't know if it's this Falkland Islands thing or what."

Judd: (Laughs) Garry: And then, as time went by, I changed it to "I've heard every excuse for a woman not going to bed with me. I remember this one girl said, 'Not with this Falkland Islands thing.'" Which is a little more hip, and gets a laugh. And I was telling David Brenner that joke, and he said, "At that point, you oughta say, 'That was over a year ago,' because that's funnier." And then I added, "Well, she still hasn't gotten over it yet." The Thatcher line came later. So it just kind of kept going, you know.

Judd: Can you tell me about another one?

Garry: Okay, there's one I'm working on now. I actually did this joke on The Tonight Show, but in a different way. It's just a stupid joke, really. But I said, "I went to a health food store recently and I've been taking bee pollen. b.u.mble bee pollen. It's supposed to increase your lovemaking stamina. So I've been taking about two thousand milligrams of bee pollen a day and, ah, the other night I woke up in the middle of the night and started to fling myself against the screen door."

Judd: (Laughs) Garry: "And I started to shout: 'Someone turn off the porch light!'" And it's interesting, because I don't know yet how this joke is ultimately going to evolve. I actually did this joke on The Tonight Show where I just said, "I took two thousand milligrams of bee pollen, and now I'm afraid that when I make love, I'm going to die right afterward."

Judd: Yeah.

Garry: Because that's what bees do. And then I said, "Or I'll wake up the next morning, and I'll be flinging myself against the screen door." And then I added the part about "turn off the porch light," which I think paints the picture of what bees do-which is go for the light, you know.

Judd: That is really great. When did this all begin, this interest in comedy?

Garry: When I was a kid. I had a total interest in comedians when I was ten years old.

Judd: Who were the comedians that you idolized?

Garry: Woody Allen is my idol, period. I mean, I think he's as funny as you can get. Others? I like a lot of people. Mort Sahl. He is hip and funny. d.i.c.k Shawn, Johnny Carson. I think he's underrated in a way. I think he's a really funny man.

Judd: Did you ever see Woody Allen work live in a club?

Garry: No. I grew up in Tucson, Arizona, where there's just nothing. I'd only seen comedians on TV. But my folks started going to Vegas when I was like thirteen, fourteen, fifteen, and I saw Joey Bishop and people like that there. And I actually remember knowing some of his jokes before he delivered them, and thinking, Oh man, he's doing old jokes. So it was always an instinct for me. But to answer your question there, I didn't see a real comedian in a club until I was like twenty. I went to see George Carlin, who I'm just a major fan of.

Judd: Who isn't?

Garry: And it's really a wonderful story. The first time I ever wrote any comedy material, I was nineteen. George Carlin was working in a club in Phoenix. This is when he had just let his hair grow long and he was starting to do honest material about his life and stuff. And I met him and I asked him to read my material, and to tell me what he thought. And he read my material. He was so supportive. He said, "I don't buy material, I write all my own material." But he gave me a lot of feedback and encouragement. Then, ten years later, I met George again and was able to thank him for that moment. He's a wonderful guy.

Judd: What kind of background did you have that you could just write this stuff?

Garry: I was an electrical engineering major, if you can believe that. And then I switched to marketing, and then I switched to creative writing. I finally got a degree in business and I went to graduate school for one year. And just took writing cla.s.ses. I'd always been a pretty good writer. It's just one of those things. I can sit down and fill a page pretty easily. And so I moved to L.A. and I didn't know exactly what direction I was going to take, and I met a guy who said, "Well, try writing a script and see what happens." I wrote a script for All in the Family that they didn't buy. But someone else saw it and said, "Wow, you have a lot of potential," and they helped me along. Then I wrote a script for Sanford and Son and they loved it, and started giving me work. It all went pretty fast. And I got pretty hot as a writer. People start to say, What would you like to write? What kind of show would you like to create?

Judd: Yeah.

Garry: But then I was sitting at the typewriter one day and I realized that this was not what I wanted to do the rest of my life. And so when I was twenty-eight, I sort of had a midlife crisis-you know, twenty-eight is midlife for a Jewish guy. I said, If I don't stop now and start doing stand-up...So I went to some real dive clubs, but it's real hard getting onstage when no one knew who I was.

Judd: Were there audition nights?

Garry: Yeah, I went to audition nights. I was working in discos and health food restaurants. It was bizarre.

Judd: Jerry Seinfeld, when I interviewed him, said that he did a disco and no one even knew he was performing.

Garry: I'm sure we've all had the same experiences. I worked a health food restaurant for about four months where people would just come in-there would be six people, eating rice and vegetables, and I would do forty minutes.

Judd: Only in Hollywood, I guess.

Garry: When you're first starting, it's just important to be on the stage. It doesn't matter if people respond, because you just have to get over your stage fright.

Judd: Was The Tonight Show the big break, as far as stand-up goes?

Garry: Yeah. They like me and they're supportive of me and they know that I work hard at what I do. I try to get better all the time. And I still don't think I'm near my potential.

Judd: You feel you have a ways to go?

Garry: Yeah, I don't think the things I'm doing on the stage now are what I'll be doing five years from now.

Judd: What will you be doing?

Garry: I hope it'll be even more honest than it is now, more personal. Because it takes time for people to get to know you. I mean, Richard Pryor is the perfect example. If you look at what he was doing ten or fifteen years ago, it's different than what he does now, because we know him. He can just get up and start talking about his life-and that's the funniest stuff.

Judd: What are your long-range goals?

Garry: Well, first of all, my long-range goal is to be funnier. It really is. And to get better, and to keep digging inside myself. Number two, I guess, is to find the right vehicle, either on television or film, that'll allow me to be funny in the way that I'm funny, you know.

Judd: Well, thank you very much.

Garry: I'm sorry I wasn't funny this morning.

Judd: This show is pretty serious.

Garry: Okay.

Judd: This is the comedy interview program that talks serious about comedy.

GARRY SHANDLING.

(2014).

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