Larry Gelbart(1928-2009)
- Writer
- Producer
- Script and Continuity Department
The gift of provoking laughter came early to Larry Gelbart and has
never deserted him. His distinguished career as a writer of comedy
reads like a history of the art over the last 40 years. His writing
credits date back to the Golden Age of radio, thanks in part to his
father. The elder Gelbart was a barber in Beverly Hills who made it a
point to tell his clients, such as
Danny Thomas, what a funny
15-year-old son he had. As a result of his father's being his
unofficial agent, Larry became a professional comedy writer before
finishing high school. Shortly after being signed by the William Morris
Agency, he joined the writing staff of "Duffy's Tavern," working for
the man generally considered to be the hardest taskmaster in radio,
Ed Gardner. "Seventy writers went through the
mill while I was there," recalls Gelbart. "I was lucky because I was
young and everybody wanted me to make good. They were all my
godfathers." Gelbart left "Duffy's Tavern," to write for the "Joan
Davis Show." While doing that he was called into the Army. He served
with Armed Forces Radio Service for one year and 11 days, but it was a
most productive period. He wrote for the Army's "Command Performance,"
while continuing to write for
Joan Davis and
Jack Paar, who was then a summer
replacement for Jack Benny. He then went on
to write for Jack Carson and
Bob Hope, both on radio and television,
and he also contributed to the Red Buttons
TV show. In 1953 he joined the staff of TV's
Your Show of Shows (1950),
writing skits for Sid Caesar and
Imogene Coca in company with such fellow
master wits as Mel Brooks,
Carl Reiner and
Neil Simon. For that series Gelbart
won the Sylvania Award and two Emmy Awards. In the 1960s he began
writing for the theater. He wrote "My L.A." and "The Conquering Hero,"
and with Burt Shevelove tried his hand at
rewriting Plautus. The result was "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to
the Forum," a smash Broadway musical comedy starring
Zero Mostel that earned Gelbart and
Shevelove a 1962 Tony Award. When "Forum" moved to London, Gelbart and
his family went with it. During his nine-year stay there, he wrote the
comedy film The Wrong Box (1966), a
play called "Jump," and several television
scripts. Gelbart came back to Los Angeles to write the television
series M*A*S*H (1972) He was
responsible for 97 segments of that show, one of television's most
literate and entertaining efforts. Four years later he again dipped
into the classics and transformed Ben Johnson's "Volpone" into a
Broadway success, "Sly Fox," directed by
Arthur Penn and starring
George C. Scott. Gelbart's screen
credits include
The Notorious Landlady (1962),
Not with My Wife, You Don't! (1966),
Oh, God! (1977),
Neighbors (1981),
Movie Movie (1978) (directed by
Stanley Donen) and
Tootsie (1982), which earned him an
Academy Award nomination and best screenplay honors from the New York,
Los Angeles and National Film Critics organization.