Carl Reiner Can’t Keep This Computer-Animated Alan Brady Under Wraps

With the debut of The Alan Brady Show, VFXWorld’s Bill Desowitz took the opportunity to talk with Hollywood legend Carl Reiner about his upcoming ventures into animation and his otherwise animated life.
Posted In | Magazines: VFXWorld

BD: Does this voice work remind you of radio at all?

CR: Oh, yes. I didn’t do a lot of radio. I started in radio with a workshop but the Army got me going before I could make a career of it. Believe it or not, my very first one was playing a ventriloquist for a [beer] commercial. And then I did a couple of cartoons for Ernie Pintoff, one was The Violinist [1959] that was very funny about a bird and a violin…

BD: Around the same time your buddy Mel Brooks did The Critic [1963].

CR: So I started in voice overs and did a couple of cartoons, and I remember my mother asking, ‘Which one are you?’ And I said, ‘I play the big bird.’ ‘But which one are you?’ ‘Ma, I’m the big bird. The big bird’s always me.’ But that was 100 years ago. I love doing voice overs because you’re given so many chances in a recording session. It’s a different kind of work, but it’s fun because you don’t need makeup and if they come to your house, you can do it in your underwear.

BD: How long did it take you to get into doing Alan Brady again?

CR: Two seconds. I hadn’t done Alan Brady for a few years. I did it on Mad About You. They asked me if I’d come on the show, and I said, no, I don’t want to come on any situation comedies. I don’t want to be unfaithful to my old show, so they said do Alan Brady. So I found him pretty fast again [as a young-looking 70-odd-year-old]. He’s in the recesses of my mind and he’s the Mr. Hyde that I never let out.

BD: Is he based on anybody real?

CR: He’s based on people I knew or heard about, and two were notorious for the treatment of the people around them: One was [Jackie] Gleason, who never spoke to his writers. I remember them telling me, ‘We never see him; we shove it under the door. And then hearing about Milton Berle — I never worked with him in those days from ‘48 on — when he had the whistle and the towel around his neck and screaming at everyone. There was a lot of yelling and screaming, but offstage he was one of the most giving people to his friends. But the clearest one was Phil Silvers doing Top Banana. That combination. You’re only as good as your villain, but I didn’t do [Alan Brady] that often. I was too busy writing. A lot of people think it was Sid [Caesar from Your Show of Shows]. The only thing I got from Sid was that he was a very big arbiter of the material. But if you go to lunch with a guy for nine years, you gotta like him.

BD: What about writing this new Alan Brady special? What was that like?

CR: That came out very quickly. As soon as they said do it — I think they originally thought of bringing back a live variety show — and said, ‘Naw, I don’t want to get back on television.’ And then they called a day or so later and said, ‘How about an animated Alan Brady?’ Immediately, I said that sounded like something — and I don’t think it took more than a day or so to figure out that he’s been around for 50 years, so I’ll do an anniversary show [with reality TV thrown in]. And it just flew out.

BD: And you’ve got Dick Van Dyke doing the voice of the old writer and Rose Marie doing the voice of the receptionist.

CR: He just came to give us the tip of the hat and Rosie, who’s always coughing. There was a joke that we didn’t get to use where he had smoke coming through the speakerphone. That’s what you can do in cartoons that you can’t do for real.

BD: So now you have to see how well the special’s received and if it gets picked up.

CR: I’m anxious to see the guts they have because that’s an expensive process. We’ll see.

BD: The good news is that The Dick Van Dyke Show is being viewed by a whole new generation on TV Land.

CR: Well, they’re dealing with nostalgia so they know. The smart thing they’re doing is putting on a bunch of Alan Brady episodes leading up to the special, so the people who don’t know him will. It’s a good time… his curmudgeonliness is back in fashion with Becker and a few other things.

Bill Desowitz is the editor of VFXWorld.







Comments


Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Use <!--pagebreak--> to create page breaks.

More information about formatting options

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.