 ©
1986 Times Mirror Co. Los Angeles Times; January 17, 1986
Retrospectives
His Specialty; Hero Worship Pays for Comedy Buff
By
Deborah Caufield
When
the producers of tonight's George
Burns 90th Birthday Special (8 p.m., Channels
2 and 8) needed assistance locating vintage footage
of the comedian, they turned to a seemingly unlikely
source -- a 26-year-old. However, Robert Weide is hardly
representative of his age group. While his peers grew
up idolizing rock stars or sports figures, Weide worshiped
comedians who were in their prime before he was even
born.
To
date, Weide has parlayed his particular hero worship
into two highly successful retrospectives -- a PBS special
on the Marx Brothers
and an HBO special on the history
of stand-up comics.
In
the process, he has become Hollywood's de facto expert
on vintage comedy clips.
"So
far I've been fortunate; every project I've done has
been something I've personally been interested in,"
Weide said the other day during an interview at his
tiny Whyaduck Productions'
Beverly Hills office suite. In the case of the Burns
special, Weide's biggest payoff was spending a morning
with the comedian.
"I've
long admired Burns," he said. "But usually when you
meet someone that you've long admired, you're setting
yourself up for a disappointment. But meeting George
Burns was everything you'd want meeting him to be. He
has lost nothing upstairs."
Weide
joked that, "I always thought, 'Well, they must prop
him up at the last minute and shoot him full of steroids
and just pray that he doesn't slip up.'
"But
there was none of that. In some ways he was more lucid
and funnier and charming than I'd ever perceived him
to be. We told vaudeville stories back and forth, and
I think he was sort of amazed that this kid knew so
much about that era. I was able to keep up."
Weide
has had plenty of practice "keeping up," ever since
he saw his first Marx Brothers movie (Duck Soup)
in junior high school.
"The
Marx Brothers were really my first loves in film. They
were the ones who inspired me to seek out a living in
the area of film," he recalled.
At
19, Weide had already petitioned the Corporation for
Public Broadcasting for a grant to produce a retrospective
on the comedy team while he continued his efforts to
be admitted to the USC film school.
"I'm
very proud to say that I am a three-time USC film school
reject (two more than Steven Spielberg)," he joked.
"The punch line is now I'm a guest speaker there each
semester."
His
academic ambitions thwarted, Weide found out through
a friend that Charles Joffe and Jack Rollins, Woody
Allen's producers, were looking for a runner. He applied
and was hired on the spot.
Although
his duties were basically those of an errand boy, Weide
said he had "great fun. They (Rollins and Joffe) had
the Mount Rushmore of comedy under management. While
I was there I met Billy
Crystal, Martin Short, Robin Williams, David Letterman
and Dick Cavett."
When
Rollins and Joffe found out about Weide's efforts to
put together the Marx
Brothers retrospective, they gave him much-needed
assistance in procuring necessary film clips from studios.
"Getting
clips from Universal and MGM was impossible," Weide
recalled. "Those studios basically hired people to answer
the phone and say 'go away' when people called with
requests like mine. Joffe cut through all of that with
one phone call."
Weide's
production, The Marx
Brothers in a Nutshell, finally aired on public
television in 1982 and remains the 22nd highest-rated
show in PBS history.
Weide
returned to work for Rollins and Joffe, this time as
their head of development.
Shortly
thereafter, he sold a show to HBO on stand-up comics
and gave up his developmental duties to direct the production.
It, too, was considered a success.
One
might think it would be only a matter of time before
Weide would be compiling such shows for network television.
Outside of lending assistance to other specials, however,
Weide has not taken that path, expressing disdain for
the networks' "blooper" shows.
Currently
he is putting the final touches on a W.
C. Fields special that will be broadcast on PBS
this spring. "The next project I want to do is a three-part
special on Mort Sahl,
Lenny Bruce and Dick
Gregory. Would any network touch that?"
Obtaining
the clips for each project, Weide maintained, is the
easiest part of his job. "There's very little mystery
to it; it just comes from being a fan and seeking it
out on my own," he said. "You just need a basic working
knowledge."
On
the Burns special, for example, Weide said that he "checked
filmographies to start, but in many cases ownership
had changed hands so I had to track it down. I finally
found a majority of them with a private collector in
New York.
"It
was gratifying to see the audience respond so well to
the Burns clips," he added, referring to the taping
last week at the Beverly Theatre. "In the age of MTV
quick cuts, it was amazing to watch one segment which
featured George and Gracie Allen dancing with Fred Astaire
that was all one take -- there were no stunt dancers
spliced in."
Weide
acknowledged that he faces the danger of becoming typecast
only as a "nostalgia" film maker. "I don't see myself
as strictly a clip show or documentary producer," he
maintained.
"My
vision encompasses more than that. It's just the way
I've been able to make a living up until now. There
are still a couple more people I want to pay tribute
to, then I'd like to break out and get into feature
films.
"I
think part of the reason that I've done as much hustling
as I've done at this age is that I'm acutely aware of
the fact that we get old and then we're gone.
"It's
really driven home when you look at this material and
see that you can be "immortal" like Groucho Marx and
still wind up an old man confined to a hospital bed.
On some subliminal level that has driven me to hurry
up and get it all down."
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