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Was This Man a Genius?: Talks with Andy Kaufman
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Was This Man a Genius?: Talks with Andy Kaufman Hardcover - 2001

by Julie Hecht

  • Used
  • Hardcover

Description

Random House, April 2001. Hardcover. USED Good/Good Jacket.
USED Good
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Details

  • Title Was This Man a Genius?: Talks with Andy Kaufman
  • Author Julie Hecht
  • Binding Hardcover
  • Edition First Edition
  • Condition USED Good
  • Pages 192
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher Random House, Westminster, Maryland, U.S.A.
  • Date April 2001
  • Bookseller's Inventory # 558826
  • ISBN 9780375504570 / 0375504575
  • Weight 0.66 lbs (0.30 kg)
  • Dimensions 8.17 x 5.51 x 0.78 in (20.75 x 14.00 x 1.98 cm)
  • Library of Congress subjects Kaufman, Andy
  • Library of Congress Catalog Number 00062720
  • Dewey Decimal Code B

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From the publisher

Julie Hecht was born in Manhattan. She is the author of Do the Windows Open?, a collection of stories, all of which appeared in The New Yorker. Her stories have also been published in Harper’s, and she has won and O. Henry Prize. In 1998 she was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship. She lives on the east end of Long Island in the winter and in Massachusetts in the summer.

Categories

Excerpt

Not Funny

"I just want the audience to have a wonderful, happy feeling inside them and leave with big smiles on their faces," Andy told me with a blank stare the first time I met him. "I can't help it if people laugh, I'm not trying to be funny," he explained. He said that he felt insulted when he saw reviews calling him a comedian. "I wouldn't mind being compared to Charlie Chaplin or W. C. Fields," he said sadly. "But I don't find most comedy funny."

People were surprised when they heard Andy speak on TV for the first time. He spoke with a foreign accent, but it was impossible to be sure what kind of accent it was, because it sounded in between Pakistani and Jamaican. Someone with the name "Andy Kaufman" was probably from New York, not Pakistan, and this made the accent even more mysterious.

"No one else would have me when I got put on Saturday Night Live in 1975," Andy told me when I met him. After the first show, when the cast appeared to wave good-bye, Andy wasn't there. The time he did come out, at the end of one of the later shows, he stood by himself and stared into the camera. He wore a gray hooded sweatshirt with the hood on his head.

"I wasn't trying to be funny," he said when I asked about the the sweatshirt. "I was dressed to leave and they said to come out onstage for the good-byes, so I did. This is what I really wear outside. I can't help it if people think it's funny."

It hadn't been easy to get to talk to Andy for the first time. "What's it for, some kinda movie magazine or what?" Andy's manager, George Shapiro, asked me over the phone from Beverly Hills. I explained what, but George wasn't impressed. "Yeah, well, Andy doesn't like to do these things, and he's gonna be very busy when he's in New York for Town Hall. But, listen, he's also gonna perform the same week at his high school, in Great Neck, and this is a great triumph for him, because he was so shy in high school. You can go out there and talk to him for a few minutes after the concert." I realized that a number of people in Beverly Hills spoke with New York accents.

Media reviews

“Kaufman may have met his match." --The New York Times

“Fascinatingly loopy . . . . a one-of-a-kind close-up of the brilliantly nutty entertainer.” --Elle

"A revelation . . . the journey is as rewarding as the destination."
--Newsday

“Sad, canny funny rambles you don't want to end . . . . Hecht creates comedy, like Buster Keaton's, of forbearance. " --The Washington Post



From the Trade Paperback edition.