Home United States USA — Art Carl Reiner: Still making us laugh

Carl Reiner: Still making us laugh

307
0
SHARE

Nearly 93, the funnyman behind TV classics like “The Dick Van Dyke Show” and movies like “The Jerk” has not stopped cracking us up
Carl Reiner started getting laughs on TV comedy more than 60 years ago. No wonder he’s an entertainment legend — a legend who’s lost none of his legendary wit, as Tracy Smith discovered when she came to call:
So how does Carl Reiner feel these days? “Like a 93-year-old,” he told Tracy Smith. “But I don’t feel it in my head. I walk around the block all day, so my legs are good. So, what is 93? The number’s scary!
“First thing in the morning, before I have coffee, I read the obits. If I’m not in it, I’ll have breakfast.”
At nearly 93, Reiner is in a shape people half his age might envy:
“My doctor says all my vital signs are perfect. I could live another hour!” he said.
He only sounds like he’s on borrowed time.
The truth is, Smith said, he is still productive. “You’re still writing. I mean, it’s not like you’re waiting around.”
“No, no. I wake up every morning anxious to get to my — what do you call it? We used to call it a typewriter. My computer!”
By any name, that keyboard is busy: Reiner’s just finished the fourth volume of his memoirs, “What I Forgot to Remember.” Clearly, the 12-time Emmy-winner has a lot to look back on.
Carl Reiner didn’t create TV, but he was there in the delivery room. As a writer and performer, he was a giant among giants. His co-writers on Sid Caeser’s “Your Show of Show” alone included Larry Gelbart (creator of the TV show “MASH”), comic genius Mel Brooks, and playwright Neil Simon.
In fact, he was on TV before he even owned a TV.
“Yes, we didn’t have a TV when I did ‘Show of Shows,” he said. “And we finally got a little seven-inch set and the kids used to watch it. And Robbie was four or five or six, and he said, ‘Say hello to me.’ And I said, ‘I can’t say hello on television, but when I do this — when I put my tie up in the finale while we’re saying goodbye — that’s for you.'” Reiner did it every night.
“How sweet is that?” asked Smith.
“Very!”
But after years of writing sketch comedy, Reiner had an idea for a show of his own: a sit-com about a New York City comedy writer (like him), who lived in the suburbs with an adorable family (like his).

Continue reading...