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Andy Kaufman

Andy Kaufman
Andy Kaufman:
Andy Kaufman as Latka Gravas

<tr><td style="text-align:left;">Birth name</td><td>Andrew Geoffrey Kaufman</td></tr>

Born January 17, 1949
New York City, New York, USA
Died May 16, 1984
Los Angeles, California, USA
Height 6'
Other name(s) Tony Clifton
Official site http://andykaufman.jvlnet.com/
Notable roles Latka Gravas on Taxi

Andrew Geoffrey Kaufman (January 17, 1949May 16, 1984) was a Jewish New York-born American entertainer. Though many refer to him as a comedian, Kaufman did not self-identify as one. He disdained telling jokes and engaging in comedy as it was traditionally understood. He was one of the most famous practitioners of anti-humor or dada absurdism. He was also a composer. He graduated in 1971 from the now-defunct Grahm Junior College where he studied television, and completed projects that influenced his later work. He practiced transcendental meditation.


Contents

Biography

Kaufman was born in New York City on January 17, 1949, the first son of Stanley and Janice Kaufman. He grew up in Great Neck, New York, and began performing at the age of 7. He attended Boston's Grahm Junior College for one year, and then began performing stand-up comedy at various small clubs along the East coast. Throughout his entire professional career, Kaufman kept his day job bussing tables at Jerry's Famous Deli.[citation needed]

Career highlights

Kaufman first caught major attention with a character named "Foreign Man". Foreign Man, who claimed to be from "Caspiar" (a fictional island in the Caspian Sea), would appear on the stage of comedy clubs and lip-synch one line — "Here I come to save the day" — from the theme from "Mighty Mouse", tell a few lame jokes, and perform a number of bad impersonations (Archie Bunker, Richard Nixon, etc). For example, he might say in a phony accent, "I would like to imitate Meester Carter, de President of de United States." He would then say in the same voice, "Hello, I am Meester Carter, de President of de United States. Thenk you veddy much." The audience would be torn between outrage at seeing such a bad act, and sympathy for the hapless entertainer, who would cry on stage once heckled enough. At that point, Foreign Man would announce "And now I would like to imitate the Elvis Presley," turn around, take off his jacket, slick his hair back, and launch into an Elvis Presley impersonation so good that Elvis Presley himself would describe it as his favorite. [citation needed] The audience would realize they had been tricked, which became a trademark of Kaufman's comedy.

Andy Kaufman:Andy Kaufman as Elvis, on a cover of a video tape
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Andy Kaufman as Elvis, on a cover of a video tape

Kaufman also made a name for himself as a guest on NBC's Saturday Night Live, starting with the inaugural 11 October 1975 show. He would do routines from his comedy act, such as the Mighty Mouse Foreign Man character, the Elvis impersonation, etc. After he angered the audience with his female wrestling routine, the SNL audience voted to ban Kaufman from the show for good, though it was never made clear whether or not this was a gag.

Kaufman made ten appearances on David Letterman's morning and late-night shows, including one where he claimed to be homeless and begged the audience for money and one where he talked about his adopted children, who turned out to be three full grown African American men.

He appeared in his first theatrical film God Told Me To in 1976, where he portrayed a murderous policeman. He also appeared in several others, including as a televangelist in the 1980 film In God We Tru$t.

Laurie Anderson worked alongside Andy Kaufman for a time in the 1970s, acting as a sort of straight woman in a number of his Manhattan and Coney Island performances. One of these performances included getting on a ride that people stand in and get spun around. After everyone was strapped in Kaufman would start saying how he did not want to be on the ride in a panicked tone and eventually cry. Anderson later described these performances in her 1995 album The Ugly One with the Jewels.

"Latka"

Kaufman reprised a version of the Foreign Man character, now named Latka Gravas, for the Taxi sitcom in 1978. Kaufman hated sitcoms and was not thrilled with the idea of being on one. In order to allow Kaufman to demonstrate some comedic range, his character was given multiple personality disorder, which allowed Kaufman to randomly portray other characters. In one episode, Kaufman's character came down with a condition which made him act like Alex Reiger, the main character played by Judd Hirsch.

On a few occasions, audiences would show up to one of Kaufman's performances requesting to see Latka. Kaufman would punish these audiences with the announcement that he was going to read The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald to them. The audience would laugh at this, not realizing that Kaufman was serious and would proceed to read the book to them.

The name "Latka" derives from "latkas" which are fried potato pancakes, commonly eaten in celebration of the Jewish holiday Chanukah.

"Tony Clifton"

Andy Kaufman:Jim Carrey as Andy Kaufman as Tony Clifton in Man on the Moon

Another well-known Kaufman character is Tony Clifton, an abusive lounge singer. Clifton began "opening" for Kaufman at comedy clubs and eventually even performed concerts on his own around the country. Sometimes it was Kaufman performing as Clifton, sometimes it was his brother Michael or his friend Bob Zmuda. For a brief time, it was unclear to some that Clifton was not a real person. News programs actually interviewed Clifton as Kaufman's opening act. The interviews would usually turn ugly whenever Kaufman's name came up, because Clifton would claim that Kaufman was using him to get rich.

Clifton was, at Kaufman's insistence, famously hired for a guest role on Taxi, but after throwing a tantrum on stage, had to be escorted off of the ABC studio's lot by security guards. Much to Kaufman's delight, this incident was reported in the local newspapers.

"Inter-Gender Wrestling Champion"

Kaufman grew up admiring professional wrestlers and the world that they perform in. For a brief time, Kaufman began wrestling women during his act and was the self-proclaimed "Inter-Gender Wrestling Champion of the World". He offered $1,000 reward to any woman who could pin him. Later, after a challenge from professional wrestler Jerry Lawler, Kaufman would step into the ring (in the Memphis, Tennessee wrestling circuit) with a man - Lawler himself. Lawler's ongoing feud included an apparent broken neck for Kaufman as a result of a piledriver by Lawler, and a famous on-air fight on a July 28, 1982 episode of the Late Night with David Letterman television show.

Kaufman and Lawler's famous feud and wrestling matches were later confirmed to have been staged, or a "work", as the two were actually friends. The truth about it being a work was kept secret for more than 10 years after Kaufman's death, until the Emmy nominated documentary A Comedy Salute to Andy Kaufman aired on NBC in 1995. Coincidentally, Jim Carrey is the one who reveals the secret, and would later go on to play Kaufman in the 1999 film Man on the Moon. In a 1997 interview with the Memphis Flyer, Lawler claimed he had improvised during their first match and the Letterman incident. Officials at St. Francis Hospital affirmed that Kaufman's neck injuries were real. In his 2002 biography "It's Good to Be the King...Sometimes," Lawler detailed how they came up with the angle and kept it quiet but did relate that Kaufman's explosion on Letterman was the comedian's own idea.

The Fridays incident

In 1981, Kaufman made a couple of memorable appearances on Fridays, a variety show on ABC that was similar to SNL. Kaufman's first appearance on the show proved to be the most memorable one. During a sketch about four people out on a dinner date who excuse themselves to the restroom to smoke marijuana, Kaufman broke character and refused to say his lines.

The other comedians were embarrassed by the position that Kaufman had put them in on a live television show. In response, Michael Richards walked off camera and returned with a set of cue cards and dumped them on the table in front of Kaufman. Andy responded by splashing Michael Richards with water. Show emcee, comedian Jack Burns stormed onto the stage, leading to a brawl on camera before the show finally cut away to commercial. The entire incident was a gag conceived by Andy Kaufman, but how many people were in on the joke has never been clear.

Regardless, Kaufman appeared the following week in a videotaped apology to the home viewers. Later that year, Kaufman returned to host Fridays. At one point in the show, he invited a Lawrence Welk Show gospel and standards singer Kathie Sullivan on stage to sing a few gospel songs with him and announced that the two were engaged to be married and talked to the audience about his newfound faith in Jesus. It was also a hoax.

The Carnegie Hall "milk and cookies" show

On 26 April 1979, Kaufman appeared at Carnegie Hall in a renowned performance which included his usual routines, such as "Foreign Man", his Elvis impersonation, "The Cow goes Moo" song and wrestling women. But the show had some surprises as well.

At the beginning of the performance, Kaufman invited his "grandmother" to watch the show from a chair he had placed at the side of the stage. At the end of the show, she stood up, took her mask off and revealed to the audience that she was actually comedian Robin Williams in disguise. Kaufman also had an elderly woman (named Eleanor Cody Gould) appearing to have a heart attack and dying on stage, after which he reappeared on stage wearing a Native American headdress and performed a dance over her body, seeming to revive her.

The performance is most famous for Kaufman ending the show by actually taking the entire audience, in 35 buses, out for milk and cookies. He invited anyone interested to meet him on the Staten Island Ferry the next morning, where the show continued.

This kind of performance art - not stand-up comedy - is what Andy Kaufman is most known for.

Death

Kaufman died in Los Angeles on May 16, 1984 of renal failure, caused by metastasized large cell carcinoma, a rare kind of lung cancer, and was interred in the Beth David Cemetery in Elmont, New York (Long Island). He was initially diagnosed with the disease in December 1983, after several family members at a Thanksgiving dinner that year were growing concerned over his persistent coughing. He was committed to fighting the disease from his diagnosis until his death. Despite massive amounts of emergency radiotherapy, the cancer had by then spread. His last stand for medical therapy was "psychic surgery", performed in Baguio, Philippines.

Because he kept the true nature of his health a secret -- almost until the day he died -- fans have, over the years, doubted Kaufman's death, thinking that he staged it as the ultimate Andy Kaufman stunt. Friends and family said that Andy never smoked, didn't drink regularly, and was also a vegetarian. At the time, lung cancer was considered very rare for non-smokers to contract, and it is also rare in people under 50. Kaufman himself even said that if he were to fake his death, he would return 20 years later. On May 16, 2004, his surviving friends threw a 'Welcome Home Andy' party for him.

It was only after Kaufman's death that it was revealed he had a daughter, Maria, who was given up for adoption. She never knew her biological father.

Claims of Resurfacing

Some information in this article or section has not been verified and may not be reliable.
Please check for any inaccuracies, and modify and cite sources as needed.

Andy Kaufman allegedly told at least eleven people - including Bob Zmuda - that he wished to fake his own death prior to his passing. This has caused some fans to believe Kaufman is still alive. A screenplay Kaufman was working on at the time of his death was about a character who claimed to have lung cancer and faked his death.

Andy lost his hair around the time of his death. This was believed to be due to cancer treatment; however, according to the website AndykaufmanLives.com, Andy's girlfriend at the time later claimed to have shaved his head with a razor. Andy's sister later commented after his death that she found it odd that the doctor who diagnosed Andy with cancer had been wearing tennis shoes, sparking debate amongst fans as to whether Andy had paid off an actor friend to pose as a doctor. There are many such rumors involving Andy's "hoax" death, and the 1999 Jim Carrey film Man on the Moon even references these rumors by including an open ending in which Andy may or may not still be alive. Bob Zmuda has acknowledged "death hoax" rumors over the years quite tongue-in-cheek, admitting that Andy and he had discussed faking his death at times and that Andy seemed "obsessed with the idea," but he maintains the opinion that Andy truly did die and his death was not faked. Zmuda claims he doesn't think Andy would be cruel enough to go this long without making contact with his family if he were still alive. But he also acknowledged the idea that Kaufman could have faked his death in 1984 and died later on of some other cause.

Steve Rocco

Since Andy's passing, a blog surfaced in 2004 chronicling his comeback. [1] However, these claims were revealed to be false. In light of recent revelations it seems the blog's author was Steve Rocco, a man charged by the OC Weekly of actually being Kaufman himself (these allegations were made prior to the revelation of Rocco being involved with the hoax blog). Rocco was revealed as the author of the blog due to a press release issued through the same company he has used in the past to promote his website, AndyKaufmanLives.com. The press release issued by Rocco claimed that the blog was a hoax and had been managed by a boy named Enrique. Enrique is one of Rocco's pseudonyms on the website Andy Kaufman Lives dot com. Rocco's press release also claimed to have been issued by Andy's friends and family - among them, Bob Zmuda - but this was false information. Zmuda had nothing to do with the press release, and in fact the site's URL is still online; presumably, if charges had been brought against the blog's owner, the site would have been taken offline. It is unclear why Rocco would want to sabotage his own blog and reveal it as a hoax or why he would even author it to begin with.

The OC Weekly has claimed that Rocco, currently a reclusive school board trustee on the Orange Unified School District, is Andy Kaufman.[2]

Rocco manages numerous websites affiliated with Kaufman, and uses over ten aliases on these sites. He currently goes by the moniker "KING" and claims to be in possession of evidence proving once and for all that Kaufman is alive. He has posted some of this evidence - including personal photographs from Kaufman's family album - online.

Some fans believe Rocco is working for Bob Zmuda and the website AndyKaufmanLives.com is a "game" of sorts set up to honor Andy and provide his fans with a source of entertainment. This is supported by the fact that Rocco is in possession of many personal items of Kaufman, and appears to have had the support of Bob Zmuda when he began the Andy Kaufman Returns blog. (Due to the fact that Zmuda never pressed charges or acknowledged the fact that Rocco's press release - which falsely quoted Zmuda - was fake.)

Puzzlementary Productions

Some fans believe Andy's friends are currently operating an elaborate gag in honor of his notorious practical jokes he used to play. Puzzlementary Productions issued a statement against The OC Weekly (see above category) for claiming one of its owners, Steve Rocco, was Andy Kaufman.[3]

Puzzlementary is also owned by Huey Williams and Nathan Richards - both names of which are characters that had been used by Kaufman while he was alive. Additionally, Rocco operated AndyKaufmanReturns.blogspot.com, which was allegedly shut down in 2004 due to a cease-and-desist issued by Andy's family - however, the press release was determined to be fake after it was revealed that it had been posted by Rocco himself, operating on the free press release website PRWeb.com. The press release mentioned the person who had elaborated the hoax was named Enrique - this is the pseudonym Steve Rocco uses on his website, AndyKaufmanLives.com. According to a Whois database search, Puzzlementary Productions is listed as the owner of the domain name.

There are many other clues and "in-jokes" on AndyKaufmanLives.com, some of which are detailed on the OC Weekly website.[4]

Trivia

Filmography

Andy Kaufman:Andy Kaufman (right) in the film God Told Me To
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Andy Kaufman (right) in the film God Told Me To

Acting:

Writing:

Composing:

Producing:

Playing Himself:

Notable TV Guest Appearances:

In Wrestling

Managers

Footnotes

  1. ^ Andy Kaufman Returns blog
  2. ^ OC Weekly, "Will The Real Steve Rocco Please Stand Up?"
  3. ^ OC Weekly article on Steve Rocco and Andy Kaufman
  4. ^ OC Weekly website discussing the in-jokes on andykaufmanlives.com
  5. ^ IMDB poll on celebrities faking their own deaths

Further reading

Categories


Articles with unsourced statements | Wikipedia articles needing factual verification | Fictional immigrants to the United States | American stand-up comedians | American professional wrestlers | Jewish American actors | Jewish American comedians | American vegetarians | Lung cancer deaths | 1949 births | 1984 deaths | Hollywood Squares panelists | People from Nassau County, New York | People from Long Island

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