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Ken Shapiro, Director of Chevy Chase Debut Film ‘The Groove Tube,’ Dies at 76

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Former actor also directed Chase in 1981 comedy „Modern Problems“
Ken Shapiro, writer and director of Chevy Chase’s debut film “The Groove Tube,” died of cancer at age 76, TheWrap has learned.
Released in 1974, “The Groove Tube” was a cult hit indie comedy that satirized TV with a series of lewd skits and parodies of commercials. Among them was the skit “Koko The Clown,” a parody of “Bozo The Clown” in which Shapiro, in full clown attire, reads erotica during the show’s “Make-Believe Time.” The film launched the careers of Chase and Richard Belzer, the latter of whom appeared alongside Shapiro in another famous skit from the film called “The Dealers,” about a pair of sleazy pot dealers who are introduced with a send-up of 70s TV show intros.
Also Read: Rance Howard, Ron Howard’s Father, Dies at 89
Born in Newark, NJ, Shapiro got his start in showbiz at a young age as a part of Milton Berle’s “Texaco Star Theater.” Later, in 1967, Shapiro laid the groundwork for “The Groove Tube” with an off-Broadway comedy show called “Channel One,” which he created with Chase that became the basis for the film’s news broadcast skit, “Channel One Evening News.” That skit, in turn, inspired the long-running “Saturday Night Live” segment “Weekend Update.” The “Weekend Update” sign-off catchphrase, “Good night, and have a pleasant tomorrow,” came from the film and was adopted by Chase.
After Chase found mainstream success with “SNL,” he reunited with Shapiro to make the 1981 comedy “Modern Problems,” in which Chase plays a down-on-his-luck air traffic controller who gets telekinetic powers from a nuclear waste spill and uses it to strike back at those who wronged him.
Shapiro died at his home in Las Cruces, NM, and is survived by his wife, Kelly, as well as two daughters, a stepdaughter, and four grandchildren.
Hollywood’s Notable Deaths of 2017 (Photos)
A look back at some of the notable people we’ve lost this year. Getty Images
Tony Rosato
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William Peter Blatty
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Dick Gautier
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Jimmy “Superfly” Snuka
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Miguel Ferrer
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Lee O’Denat aka „Q“
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Mary Tyler Moore
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Mike Connors
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Barbara Hale
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John Hurt
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Richard Hatch
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Brenda Buttner
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Neil Fingleton
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Bill Paxton
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Robert Osborne
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Joni Sledge
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Chuck Berry
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Bernie Wrightson
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Jimmy Breslin
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Darlene Cates
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Don Rickles
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Charlie Murphy
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Erin Moran
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Jonathan Demme
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Michael Mantenuto
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Powers Boothe
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Brad Grey
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Roger Ailes
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Gregg Allman The organist and singer for The Allman Brothers, Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductee Gregg Allman died peacefully in his sleep at his home in Savannah, Georgia, at the age of 69, according to his official website. Allman helped create the Southern Rock genre, and received the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 2012.
Lisa Spoonauer
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Adam West
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Martin Landau
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George Romero
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Sam Shepard
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Robert Hardy
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Barbara Cook
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Joseph Bologna
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Dick Gregory
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Jerry Lewis
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Thomas Meehan
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Richard Anderson
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Shelley Berman
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