At a recent breakfast with a good writer friend – the “good”
describing both the writer and our friendship – he informed me that he had
written a play about himself as a young writer embedded in the staff of idiosyncratic
veterans. And by “idiosyncratic” he
meant borderline meshugah. (Yiddish for crazy. Although some of the writers were Irish.)
The following incident
took place forty-two years ago, this summer.
So you know I can reliably nurture a grievance.
I told him it was a great idea for a play – a work is always
more resonant when writing from personal experience. I told myself
– silently – that I could have
written that play, having endured similar
experiences early in my career. The only
difference between my good writer friend and me was that he did it and I didn’t. Which would only
bother me if I cared.
Did I care? At that
moment, a little. But truth be told,
I’ve got bigger fish I have left
unfried.
Besides, I prefer doing this. You tell one story, and you go home, or if
you are home, you go out.
A whole play? That’s like
seventy-six blog posts. With the same
characters, a compelling storyline and a blockbuster resolution.
I lost confidence just writing
those words.
So here’s todays “one story” our conversation brought to
mind. Which I shall try to keep
brief. Yeah, right. Two hundred and forty-one words, and I
haven’t even begun yet.
Okay.
After writing on two Lily Tomlin specials, which turned out…
“Move it along.”
Okay.
I was a young writer on a Flip Wilson special, teamed up on the first day with a longtime, respected
writer named Don, who was nineteen years my senior in age, and even more so in
experience. We had been given the “go-ahead”
to write a sketch idea we’d come up with concerning a “Nature”-documentary
filmmaker and his accompanying cameraman, assigned to wait for “as long as it
takes” to “capture” some (likely apocryphal) exotic, miniscule insect emerging
from its burrow.
We wrote it together.
It was pretty good. A team of professional
filmmakers, one an optimist, the other a pessimist, the pessimist railing
against the excruciating boredom – because, after days of round-the-clock
surveillance, the thing had not yet come out – and the optimist’s unshakable certainty
– confident it eventually would.
(You can guess which of those characters I brought
brilliantly to life.)
To my surprise, after some initial jitters collaborating
with an “Old Pro” – who was twenty-five
years younger than I am today – I found myself successfully pulling my weight. I pitched a commendable share of jokes, a lot
of which made it into the script. (Don,
understandably, being the final “arbiter of inclusion.”)
A brief but necessary digression.
Producer Lorne Michaels had this one idea for a show, which
served him well later in his career:
A comedy ensemble.
Sound familiar?
This time, however, Lorne upped the conceptual ante. He would surround then popular comedian Flip
Wilson with a troupe of comedy All-Stars:
Richard Pryor, Lily Tomlin and Peter Sellers.
Consistent with the “ensemble concept”, these superstar
stalwarts would be featured in some sketches and play subsidiary roles in
others.
So far, so “Revue-like.”
Then Peter Sellers flew in from London, immediately announcing
that he would not play subsidiary roles in anything. (Or one of two guys waiting for a bug to come
out.) His instructions as to what he would do were definitively simple:
“I play a bumbling detective. Or a character who breaks things.”
Otherwise, he was going home.
Given this deal-breaking ultimatum – I always hate when
performers I revere behave like idiot prima
donnas – we immediately went back to work.
Another writer threw together a “bumbling detective” sketch, while Don
and I cranked out “a character who breaks things” routine: a clumsy auctioneer who breaks every priceless antique he touches – which I believe was my idea, but
maybe not, but I’ll take credit for it anyway, because I’m angry.
And here’s why.
When the new sketches were completed, the next step was to
take them to Peter Sellers at the Beverly
Hills Hotel, where, as instructed, we would perform them out loud for his
approval. The prevailing stakes were
substantial. He likes them – he stays. He doesn’t – he’s in a car to the airport.
During the last moment before departure, veteran temporary
partner Don calls me aside and conveys two words that will be forever etched in
my consciousness:
“You go.”
That’s right.
“Senior Writer on the Team” Don had wimped out, “pulled
rank” and dispatched “The Kid.”
It was I who would
be reading a “physical comedy” sketch in which there was virtually no dialogue
to the incomparable star of The Pink
Panther and The Mouse That Roared.
I was nervous because of what was on the line. But my predominant feeling was rage, at Peter
Sellers, for putting us through this torturous ordeal, but even more so at Don.
I mean, the man’s like, decades in the business, and I’m,
you know, four months out of Toronto.
Shouldn’t he be
going and not me?
Well, I went, reading the “Auctioneer Sketch’s” ubiquitous stage
directions in a quivering voice – a combination of “Stage Fright” and
resentment – and we awaited his response, which was this:
Peter Sellers would remain in the show.
I, by rights, should have been happy and gratified.
But instead, I was furious at Don.
And despite the salving element of time,
I still am.
Please, Earl, do more of these posts! This was delightful. I'm not just saying this because I like seeing my name in the list of comments on your blog. I like how you took us down the path of working with an older more experienced partner, past the idea of your writing a sketch for a Flip Wilson special AND for Peter Sellers and around the fact that it saved the special but ended up with why you were mad at both your partner and Mr. Sellers. This is like creating the world's most powerful rocket to launch your car into space. Both are ripping yarns with a wonderful, whimsical result.
ReplyDeleteThis is why I read your blog every day - for chance of reading posts like this one.
Thank you.