Times Colonist

Bob Newhart has a new gig — talk-show host

- BILL KEVENEY

He’s one of the true kings of TV, stand-up and recorded comedy, but his regular-guy approachab­ility is signified by a simple salutation: “Hi, Bob!”

The frequently heard phrase from The Bob Newhart Show is the appropriat­ely welcoming title of Audible’s new audio series (available now at Amazon’s Audible.com/HiBob), in which Newhart compares notes on comedy with a generation of stars who followed him.

Newhart, 88, engages in relaxed, informativ­e and (least surprising­ly) funny chats about comedy careers with actors Will Ferrell and Lisa Kudrow; talkshow hosts Jimmy Kimmel, Sarah Silverman and Conan O’Brien; and writer-director Judd Apatow.

The legendary star of two sitcom classics (including the later Newhart, in which he played a Vermont innkeeper), displays an ingratiati­ng modesty by assuming listeners want to hear more from his guests.

“I had to stop Judd and Conan a couple of times. I said, ‘I’m supposed to be interviewi­ng you,’ ” he says. “Judd was asking me all the questions: ‘You know, you had that first album. … ’ I said, ‘Judd, wait a minute. This is about you, not me.’ He said, ‘Well, you’re more interestin­g than I am.’ ”

Newhart, the first comedian to win the Grammy for best album (1960’s The Button-Down Mind of Bob Newhart), plans to do more chatting. (Zach Galifianak­is is on his wish list).

But he turned down an opportunit­y to appear on another comic-conversati­on show, Jerry Seinfeld’s Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee.

“I saw Don [Rickles] do it,” Newhart says of his close friend, who died last year and is the title and topic of Newhart’s reminiscen­ces in one Hi Bob! chapter. “Jerry approached me, and I didn’t think it was my thing. I probably should have done it, in watching it. It sounded like something, I don’t know, [that was] more Don than me.”

Newhart has connection­s to some of his guests. Before Friends, Kudrow appeared as the wife of one of the famed Darryl brothers on the Newhart finale, considered by many to have the best series-ending twist ever.

Ferrell, who co-starred with Newhart in 2003’s Elf, share some laughs discussing not-so-successful, precomedy financial careers, Newhart as an accountant and Ferrell as a bank teller.

As Newhart explains in a 1960s stand-up clip in the series, “I had kind of a strange theory of accountanc­y. I had always felt if you got within two or three bucks of it … ” he says, trailing off as the audience roars.

“But this never really caught on.”

As Ferrell tells Newhart facetiousl­y, “We’re both great with numbers.”

Newhart also knows something about the hosting work done by Kimmel, O’Brien and Silverman because he was a frequent guest host for Johnny Carson on The Tonight Show.

“After the monologue, you really had to interview people — singers, actresses, comedians, authors. Having done it 80 times and from watching Johnny, you learned how to do it,” says Newhart, who still does an occasional stand-up show and gueststars on The Big Bang Theory, for which he won an Emmy Award.

Stories range from light to serious.

Silverman talks about the progress women have made overcoming stand-up barriers, and Kudrow discusses the dismissive­ness and condescens­ion women in entertainm­ent have faced.

 ?? RICHARD SHOTWELL, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Bob Newhart: Comedian started as an accountant.
RICHARD SHOTWELL, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Bob Newhart: Comedian started as an accountant.

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