Maher, Shandling Attend Carlin Memorial
George Carlin may have been one of comedy’s biggest stars, but his memorial was a smalland privateaffair.
Roughly 150 people, among them Garry Shandling, Bill Maher and Carlin’s former stand-up partner, Jack Burns, turned up at a private memorial for the late comedian in Los Angeles Sunday, which was closed off to both the public and the media.
“It was a very, very light event, as he wanted it,” Carlin’s only child, daughter Kelly Carlin McCall, told the Associated Press after the two-hour event. “He wanted a lot of laughter. I’d say 90 percent of it was laughing and just remembering what he brought to us in his funny way.”
The celebrated comic died of heart failure June 22 at age 71.
McCall said Shandling spoke during the service of a “life-changing moment” he experienced nearly 40 years ago, when, as a college student, he sought out Carlin. The comedian not only agreed to read Shandling’s material but encouraged him in his career.
“He went out of his way to make sure friends and family members, if they needed anything, he was there for them,” McCall told the AP.
Meanwhle, Kenny Rankin sang “Here’s That Rainy Day,” while Spanky McFarlane, from the ’60s pop group Spanky and Our Gang, sang “Coming Home.”
Carlin’s older brother, Patrick, and partner, Sally Wade, were also among the mourners. During the service, a montage of clips from the controversial funnyman’s 51-year career was shown, with Carlin himself speaking over the footage.
“He was a complete man,” McCall said. “He was more than just the seven words you can never say on television.”
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The George Carlin of the 1960s
For most, memories of George Carlin on television come from his many HBO specials starting from the 1970s and continuing up until the present day. For others, it was his appearance during the very first Saturday Night Live back in 1975. But, there was another George Carlin that many don’t remember. That is the very young George Carlin from the 1960s.
Before the beard, and the long hair, and the swearing and his “the world is doomed” attitude, George Carlin was a traditional suit-and-tie stand-up comic. He began by teaming up with comedian Jack Burns in the late 1950s, then eventually went his own way. During that time he came up with a number of famous routines including “The Indian Sergeant,” “The Hippy-Dippy Weatherman,” and “Wonderful WINO.” Many of these routines would be performed on shows like The Tonight Show (both the Jack Paar and Johnny Carson versions) and the Ed Sullivan Show.
After the jump you’ll see two examples of his mid-60s television appearances.
The first one may or may not be from the Ed Sullivan Show. Either way, it features Carlin performing “The Indian Sergeant.” The second video is from a 1966 episode of The Tonight Show, with Carlin as Al Sleet — the Hippie-Dippie Weatherman. The Tonight Show video will probably more familiar to those viewers who have spent numerous early morning hours watching television since it was part of the Tonight Show DVD infomerical that aired for several years.
Five favorite George Carlin HBO routines
When I posted about George Carlin’s death early Monday morning, I made a couple of mistakes, mainly due to a combination of shock and tiredness:
1) I said that Carlin “passed away.” Anyone who’s listened to Carlin’s comedy knows that he hated euphemisms like “he passed away.” So, let me correct things right now: George didn’t pass away or leave this earth. He died.
2) I really didn’t convey how ingenious his comedy was. His observations of even the smallest of human foibles and his examinations of how we use the English language were always among the funniest routines he would do, even funnier than the ones about politics or religion or anything else that happened to chap his ass that year.
I knew about Carlin mostly through his albums, because I didn’t have HBO (Occupation: Foole was the first Carlin album I ever heard, and I still think it’s the best). But, thanks to HBO and YouTube, I can give you — in no particular order — my five favorite Carlin routines … well, at least the ones that aired on TV:
Baseball and Football: This is probably Carlin’s best known bit, aside from “The Seven Words You Can Never Say on TV.” It certainly is the one the die-hard fans like the best. Why? Because it’s Carlin in a nutshell: his observations of human behavior paired with precise use of language provides the audience a routine they laugh and applaud at because they not only find it funny, but find it painfully and utterly true as well. It’s also a favorite because it’s the routine that Carlin tinkered with the most over the years. He did an early form of the routine on the first episode of Saturday Night Live in 1975, and I heard him do it again at a concert in 1999. But this version, which in this video is from the 1990 special Doin’ It Again, is the one I like the best, mainly because of how polished and considered his use of language and voice inflection is, which heightens the comedy.
Stuff: After listening to Occupation: Foole, I sought out other Carlin albums. The first one I bought on my own was A Place for My Stuff, which was a 1981 album that combined live bits (like one about being a “Picky Eater”) with studio bits recorded with the help of Denny Dillon (my favorite: the game show called “Asshole, Jackoff, Scumbag!”). A few years later, he did a similar special called Carlin on Campus, featuring some animation and a couple of different routines (including an 1980s version of “Baseball and Football”). In both cases, his ruminations of “Stuff” and how people are so devoted to it was my favorite bit. It’s one of his more acute and detailed observations about the human condition, especially when he explains how people take a “smaller version” of their stuff so they’re comfortable on vacation.
This version is from a Comic Relief episode, but it’s pretty much the same as the one from Carlin on Campus (love the list of essential items at the end):
Have a Nice Day: Until Carlin on Campus, Carlin’s albums and HBO specials didn’t coincide. So, even though this routine is from Carlin at Carnegie, I first heard it on the album A Place for My Stuff. Yet another exploration of the things people say to each other that are utterly ridiculous. “If I’m in a particularly jaunty mood, I’ll tell them ’I’m not unwell, thank you,’ which pisses them off because they have to figure it out for themselves.”
Sports: Carlin loved sports, as his constant tinkering with “Baseball and Football” showed. But this routine, from 1986’s Playin’ With Your Head, is just as considered and detailed. It goes over Carlin’s rules as to what should be a sport and what shouldn’t (”Remember, it’s my rules; I make ’em up.”). One of my favorite parts is how he breaks down the game of volleyball: “Racketless team ping-pong played with an inflated ball and a raised net while standing on the table.”
Things You Never See: This one is also from Doin’ It Again, and I list it for one sentence and one sentence only. I won’t repeat it here, but it has to do with a hot poker and chopping something off. I first heard that line when Carlin performed at William Paterson College in 1989, and I almost choked on my own spit, I was laughing so hard. Carlin’s ability to put words together in unique and funny ways always were my favorite parts of his routines.
If you notice, there aren’t any recent Carlin routines on this list. During most of the ’90s and ’00s, Carlin was in his angry “the human race is doomed” phase, which just wasn’t as funny as the more observational stuff. Not that he didn’t have any good recent routines — his observations on death and how people deal with it were funny as hell — but I think the earlier ones were less angry and a bit more precise. And I didn’t put any of his “Seven Words” routines because, well … they’re funny, but much broader than the ones than are my favorites. Of all the “Seven Words” routines he’s done, the best one is “Filthy Words” off Occupation: Foole, which you can hear here (staring around the four-minute mark) and here.
What are your favorites? Let me know in the comments.
