HarryCarter Posted June 30, 2020 Report Share Posted June 30, 2020 A genius has left us. đ˘   Quote  Carl Reiner, Multifaceted Master of Comedy, Is Dead at 98 Mr. Reiner was a gifted comic actor, but he spent most of his career slightly out of the spotlight â writing, directing and letting others get the laughs. By Robert Berkvist and Peter Keepnews Updated 10:38 a.m. ET BREAKING  Carl Reiner, who as performer, writer and director earned a place in comedy history several times over, died on Monday night at his home in Beverly Hills. He was 98. His death was confirmed by his daughter, Annie Reiner. Mr. Reiner first attracted national attention in 1950 as Sid Caesarâs multitalented second banana on the television variety show âYour Show of Shows,â for which he was also a writer. A decade later he created âThe Dick Van Dyke Show,â one of the most celebrated situation comedies in television history, and teamed with Mel Brooks on the hugely successful â2000 Year Old Manâ records. His novel âEnter Laughingâ became both a hit Broadway play and the first of many movies he would direct; among the others were four of Steve Martinâs early starring vehicles. He won praise as an actor as well, with memorable roles in films like âThe Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Comingâ and, more recently, âOceanâs Elevenâ and its sequels. But he spent most of his career just slightly out of the spotlight, letting others get the laughs. His contributions were recognized by his peers, by comedy aficionados and, in 2000, by the Kennedy Center, which awarded him the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor. He was the third recipient, after Richard Pryor and Jonathan Winters. In his performances with Mr. Brooks and before that with Mr. Caesar, Mr. Reiner specialized in portraying the voice of sanity, a calm presence in a chaotic universe. But despite his claim to the contrary, he was never âjust the straight man.â âHe was a comedian himself, and he truly understood and still understands comedy,â Mr. Caesar said of Mr. Reiner in his book âCaesarâs Hoursâ (2003), written with Eddy Friedfeld. âMost people still donât realize the importance of a straight man in comedy, or how difficult that role is. Carl had to make his timing my timing.â Mr. Reiner was, Mr. Caesar added, âthe best straight man Iâve ever worked with.â As part of a stellar supporting cast that also included Imogene Coca and Howard Morris, Mr. Reiner proved his versatility week after week on âYour Show of Shows,â which ran from 1950 to 1954 on NBC and established the template for sketch comedy on television. He played everything from a harried commuter to a frenzied rock ânâ roller to an unctuous quiz-show host. But he is probably best remembered as an interviewer, solemnly posing questions to a mad professor, a spaced-out jazz musician or some other over-the-top character played by Mr. Caesar, and adding to the humor simply by being serious. Mr. Reiner contributed behind the scenes as well. He took part in the frenzied writing sessions that shaped the show, bouncing jokes off the walls of the writersâ room with the likes of Mr. Brooks and Neil Simon. From left, Jeanne Bal, Mr. Reiner, Imogene Coca and Mr. Caesar in a 1958 rehearsal.Sam Falk/The New York Times âI became a writer because of that room,â he recalled. âIâd say something and somebody would yell: âWhat do you know? Youâre not a writer.â So I became a writer.â He characterized his later career moves with similar self-effacing humor in an NPR interview: âI acted like a director. I acted like a producer. I sat in front of a typewriter and acted like a novelist.â Mr. Reinerâs association with Mr. Caesar encompassed three different series: After âYour Show of Showsâ the two worked together on âCaesarâs Hour,â which had a three-year run on NBC, and âSid Caesar Invites You,â a failed attempt to recapture the âShow of Showsâ spirit that lasted less than one season on ABC in 1958. The Party Piece The next phase of Mr. Reinerâs career found him again in the role of deadpan interviewer. This time the interviewee was Mr. Brooks. âThe 2000 Year Old Manâ began as an act Mr. Reiner and Mr. Brooks performed for friends at parties. When they put in on record, it became a phenomenon. There were ultimately five â2000 Year Old Manâ albums, one of which won a Grammy and all of which are treasured by comedians and comedy fans. Mr. Brooks was the star of the largely improvised routines, reflecting on what it was like to be two millenniums old (none of his thousands of children ever visited) and reminiscing about historical figures like Sigmund Freud (âHe was a good basketball player; very few people know thatâ) and Shakespeare (âHe had the worst penmanship I ever saw in my lifeâ). But it was Mr. Reiner who came up with the questions that lit Mr. Brooksâs comedic fuse. Indeed, it was Mr. Reiner who spontaneously started the ball rolling one day during a quiet moment in the Caesar writersâ room. âI turned to Mel and I said, âHereâs a man who was actually seen at the crucifixion 2,000 years ago,ââ he told The New York Times in 2009, âand his first words were âOh, boy.ââ Mel Brooks and Mr. Reiner in 1973, taping a â2000 Year Old Manâ album. The routines began as an act the pair performed at parties. D. Gorton/The New York Times âI always knew if I threw a question to Mel he could come up with something,â Mr. Reiner said. âI learned a long time ago that if you can corner a genius comedy brain in panic, youâre going to get something extraordinary.â As Mr. Brooks put it, âI would dig myself into a hole, and Carl would not let me climb out.â In 1960, the same year he and Mr. Brooks made their first album, Mr. Reiner wrote and starred in a pilot for a TV series, based on his own life, about a writer who works in New York for a larger-than-life, difficult-to-please comedian. The show, âHead of the Family,â was not picked up. It became a series only when it was recast with Dick Van Dyke as the central character. The workplace scenes in âThe Dick Van Dyke Showâ â featuring Morey Amsterdam and Rose Marie as Mr. Van Dykeâs fellow writers, with Mr. Reiner making occasional appearances as their boss â were inspired by Mr. Reinerâs time with Sid Caesar (although Mr. Reiner insisted that his character was only partly based on Mr. Caesar). The domestic scenes, with Mary Tyler Moore as Mr. Van Dykeâs wife, were set in New Rochelle, N.Y., where Mr. Reiner lived at the time, and Ms. Mooreâs character was modeled on his wife, Estelle. Mr. Reiner later attributed the showâs success to the choice of âsomebody with more talent to play me.â Seen on CBS from 1961 until 1966, âThe Dick Van Dyke Showâ won a total of 15 Primetime Emmy Awards for its cast and crew, five of them for Mr. Reiner as writer and producer. (He won nine Emmys in his career, including two for his on-camera work on âCaesarâs Hour,â one as a writer on a 1967 special that reunited the âShow of Showsâ cast and one for a guest appearance, as Alan Brady, on an episode of the sitcom âMad About Youâ in 1995.) It is widely regarded as one of the greatest sitcoms of all time. Mary Tyler Moore and Mr. Reiner on âThe Dick Van Dyke Showâ in 1965. The show won 15 Primetime Emmys, five of them for Mr. Reiner as writer and producer.CBS, via Getty Images Someone else once again played Mr. Reiner, or a character very much like him, on Broadway and in the movies. âEnter Laughing,â his autobiographical novel about a stage-struck delivery boy from the Bronx who decides to become an actor, was published in 1958 and adapted for the stage by Joseph Stein, another former member of the Caesar writing staff. With Alan Arkin in the lead role, it opened in 1963 and ran for more than 400 performances. When âEnter Laughingâ was sold to Hollywood, Mr. Reiner shared screenwriting credit with Mr. Stein for the 1967 film adaptation, starring Reni Santoni. It was Mr. Reinerâs third produced screenplay, after âThe Thrill of It Allâ (1963) and âThe Art of Loveâ (1965). More important, it was the first film he directed. That same year he made his Broadway debut as a writer and director with âSomething Different,â the story of a playwright suffering from writerâs block. It received generally good reviews (Walter Kerr of The New York Times praised Mr. Reinerâs ânifty habit of approaching a gag at high speed, passing it on the outside, and then noticing where it went in the rearview mirrorâ) and had a respectable three-month run. By that time, however, Mr. Reinerâs focus had shifted westward. He had already appeared in a number of Hollywood movies by the time he and his family moved to Beverly Hills in the late 1960s, and he would continue to show up onscreen occasionally. But for the next three decades, most of his work in Hollywood was done behind the scenes. From Actor to Director and Back Carl Reiner was born in the Bronx on March 20, 1922, to Irving Reiner, a watchmaker, and Bessie (Mathias) Reiner. After graduating from Evander Childs High School in the Bronx, he went to work as a machinistâs helper and seemed headed for a career repairing sewing machines. Then one day his older brother, Charlie, mentioned seeing a newspaper article about a free acting class being given by the Works Progress Administration, the New Deal jobs agency. Carl tried his hand at acting, found he was good at it, hung up his machinistâs apron and joined a theater troupe. He also acted in summer stock. During World War II, Mr. Reiner served in an Army entertainment unit that toured American bases in the South Pacific. After his discharge he joined the road company of the musical revue âCall Me Misterâ as the comic lead, and within a year he was in the Broadway production. In the 1949-50 television season he was a regular on âThe Fifty-Fourth Street Revue,â a variety series, and in 1950 he was back on Broadway in âAlive and Kicking,â where he caught the eye of Max Liebman, the mastermind of âYour Show of Shows.â Mr. Reiner married Estelle Lebost in 1943. She died in 2008. In addition to his daughter, an author and psychoanalyst, he is survived by his sons, Rob, known for directing âWhen Harry Met Sally,â âA Few Good Men,â âThis Is Spinal Tapâ and numerous other films and for his role as Archie Bunkerâs son-in-law on the groundbreaking sitcom âAll in the Family,â and Lucas, a painter and filmmaker; and five grandchildren.  Mr. Reinerâs first major box-office success as a director was âOh, God!â (1977), starring George Burns as a very down-to-earth deity. Two years later he teamed with Steve Martin, then at the height of his fame as a comedian, for what proved to be a mutually rewarding collaboration. Mr. Reiner first directed Mr. Martin in âThe Jerkâ (1979), a film largely inspired by Mr. Martinâs manic stand-up act. The critical response was lukewarm, but the movie was a box-office smash and now often shows up on lists of the best American comedies. âThe Jerk,â âDead Men Donât Wear Plaidâ (1982), âThe Man With Two Brainsâ (1983) and âAll of Meâ (1984) defined Mr. Martinâs onscreen persona as a lovable goofball and made him a movie star. They also established Mr. Reiner as an imaginative director â especially âDead Men Donât Wear Plaid,â a black-and-white spoof of film noir set in the 1940s, in which he integrated vintage clips featuring actors like Humphrey Bogart and Barbara Stanwyck into the action. Mr. Reiner returned to Broadway twice after moving west, but neither visit was triumphant. In 1972 he directed âTough to Get Help,â a comedy by Steve Gordon about a black couple working in an ostensibly liberal white household, which was savaged by the critics and closed after one performance. In 1980 he staged âThe Roast,â by Jerry Belson and Garry Marshall, two writers he had worked with on âThe Dick Van Dyke Show.â That play, about a group of comedians who expose their darker instincts when they gather to roast a colleague, ran for less than a week The movies he directed after he stopped working with Mr. Martin â among them âSummer Rentalâ (1985), with John Candy, and âSibling Rivalryâ (1990), with Kirstie Alley and Bill Pullman â did only somewhat better. In his 70s, he decided that filmmaking demanded âjust too much energy.â He gave it up after making âThat Old Feelingâ (1997), with Bette Midler and Dennis Farina. But he remained active in front of the camera, notably as a crook lured out of retirement by the prospect of sharing in the loot from a Las Vegas casino robbery in Steven Soderberghâs 2001 remake of the Frank Sinatra caper film âOceanâs Eleven.â He reprised the role in âOceanâs Twelveâ (2004) and âOceanâs Thirteenâ (2007). On television he had recurring roles on the sitcoms âHot in Clevelandâ and âTwo and a Half Menâ and guest-starred on âParks and Recreation,â âHouseâ and other series. He also did voice-over work for a number of cartoon shows. Mr. Reiner wrote a number of books in addition to âEnter Laughing,â including novels, childrenâs books and several memoirs, among them âMy Anecdotal Lifeâ (2003), âI Remember Meâ (2013) and âToo Busy to Dieâ (2017). His daughter said another book would be published soon. In 2017 he was prominently featured in âIf Youâre Not in the Obit, Eat Breakfast,â a documentary about people who remained active into their 90s. And in his last years he maintained an active Twitter account, which he used primarily for political commentary. A photo showing Mr. Reiner, Mr. Brooks and Annie Reiner wearing âBlack Lives Matter T-shirtsâ was posted on Twitter this week. Toward the end of âI Remember Me,â Mr. Reiner said a friend of his had recently asked if he had thought about retiring. Noting that his role on âHot in Clevelandâ gave him âthe opportunity to kiss Betty White â thrice â and on the lips,â he offered a succinct response: âRetire? I may be old, but I am not crazy!â Derrick Bryson Taylor contributed reporting.    https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/30/arts/television/carl-reiner-dead.html I'm absolutely in shock. He was tweeting up a storm yesterday (and it was definitely always him sending out those tweets!) and did an interview in the last week. He was the greatest! 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Freddie2 Posted June 30, 2020 Report Share Posted June 30, 2020 Poor Carl didn't get to outlast the administration he so artfully and frequently tweeted about. The pictures of Carl and Mel hanging out on Saturday are extra heartwarming knowing that it would be their last time together. It's almost unbelievable, considering how active and present he'd been right up until the end. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mot Morenzi Posted July 1, 2020 Report Share Posted July 1, 2020 A devastating loss. And who among todayâs crop could ever be considered a worthy successor to the likes of him? The giants of yesteryear are irreplaceable. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
HarryCarter Posted July 3, 2020 Author Report Share Posted July 3, 2020 Tonight at 8:00pm, CBS will be re-airing the colorized âCoast to Coast Big Mouthâ and âOctober Eveâ Dick Van Dyke Show episodes with a new intro from Dick. CBS Sunday Morning will interview Dick about Carl on Sunday. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Freddie2 Posted July 11, 2020 Report Share Posted July 11, 2020 Carl's final on-screen performance, recorded just four days before his passing, was part of a recreation of son Rob Reiner's The Princess Bride for the much-maligned new app Quibi. All-in-all, it's a terrific way to go out. I certainly got choked up. https://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2020/07/carl-reiner-final-performance-the-princess-bride Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Harrison Posted July 13, 2020 Report Share Posted July 13, 2020 I believe this leaves the actual star (of The Dick Van Dyke Show) which is Dick Van Dyke as the last surviving adult cast member. (Not including the kid-actor who played their son, Ritchie). So sad to see so many talented people from TV yesteryear pass away one by one. Like Dick Van Dyke now, Barbara Eden is also the last surviving cast member of her I Dream of Jeannie TV series. Tom Lester was last surviving cast member of Green Acres earlier this year until he passed away. It seems now that the casts of many situation comedies from the 60s have either all passed away or there's just one or two remaining (of course, there's a few exceptions). Anyways, Carl Reiner was a genius. I hate to see him go but he did leave a great legacy behind with The Dick Van Dyke Show.      Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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