Times Colonist

Apatow pays tribute to mentor Shandling

- MARK KENNEDY

NEW YORK — After Garry Shandling died two years ago, his longtime friend Judd Apatow went through emails he and the comedian had recently shared. Then he started bawling.

“I realized that every single time I asked him for anything or wanted him to come to some event or to read something for me, he said yes every single time,” Apatow said. “It really made me cry.”

Shandling was 66 when he died of a heart attack. The groundbrea­king comedian, who was not far from the neurotic characters he played, had dedicated his last years to consciousl­y encourage and mentor his friends and fellow comedians, but Apatow hadn’t realized the full extent of his generosity.

“He had a lot of conflicts with people, but he was also trying very hard to figure it all out so he could do better,” Apatow said. “He was a complete, complex human being with all the flaws and all the greatness as anybody else in the world.”

Apatow decided to memorializ­e his friend in an appropriat­e way. Shandling, who mastermind­ed a brand of phoney docudrama with The Larry Sanders Show, is now the subject of Apatow’s four-hour HBO documentar­y called The Zen Diaries of Garry Shandling.

The film includes interviews with James L. Brooks, Linda Doucett, David Duchovny, Sacha Baron Cohen, Jay Leno, Kevin Nealon, Conan O’Brien, Bob Saget, Sarah Silverman and Jeffrey Tambor. The documentar­y airs in two parts on Monday and Tuesday.

While four hours sounds like a lot, Apatow goes deep, drawing on 30 years of Shandling’s intimate diaries and notes, childhood movies, stand-up performanc­es and raw footage. Michael Cera reads the diary entries, which show a man trying to quiet his demons. “You are scared of awakening. Let go of that,” one entry reads.

“It was very difficult to sit down and read his diaries,” Apatow said. “It was like living in Garry’s head for a while. I felt all his pain and his joy.”

The Larry Sanders Show was the forerunner to a new kind of painfully awkward, authentic comedy that would inspire The Office, Curb Your Enthusiasm, Arrested Developmen­t and a generation of comedians.

Shandling played an insecure and spineless late-night TV talk-show host with a regular habit of watching his show in bed at night. Shandling had already made a name for himself with the comedy series It’s Garry Shandling’s Show, in which the actors routinely broke the fourth wall to comment on what they were up to.

Apatow had a long history with Shandling, interviewi­ng the comic when he was a 16-year-old high-school student doing a radio show on Long Island. He went on to write for Shandling, direct episodes of The Larry Sanders Show and considered his Freaks and Geeks a version of The Larry Sanders Show, only set in high school.

The Zen Diaries of Garry Shandling explores the developmen­t of both hit TV shows and delves into Shandling’s childhood, his tortured romance with Doucett, his messy break with former manager Brad Grey and the time he became a target of private eye Anthony Pellicano.

Nealon praises the documentar­y, calling Apatow “a skilled surgeon when it comes to putting the right things in there. He could have made it an eight-hour documentar­y and we still would have been riveted to it.”

 ??  ?? Judd Apatow considered his Freaks and Geeks a version of The Larry Sanders Show, only set in high school.
Judd Apatow considered his Freaks and Geeks a version of The Larry Sanders Show, only set in high school.
 ??  ?? Garry Shandling died of a heart attack two years ago. He was 66.
Garry Shandling died of a heart attack two years ago. He was 66.

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