El Dorado News-Times

Comedy legend Carl Reiner turns Emmy shot into punchline

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LOS ANGELES (AP) — Ask 12-time Emmy Award winner Carl Reiner how it feels to be nominated again, and he fires back a wisecrack.

"I'm impressed with myself," says the droll, 96-year-old creator (or "96 and a half," per his exacting count) of the TV classic "The Dick Van Dyke Show."

Is he excited at all about the possibilit­y of nabbing yet another trophy at next month's ceremony? Reiner is nominated as host-narrator of "If You're Not in the Obit, Eat Breakfast," a documentar­y about how perennial high achievers, including Mel Brooks and Tony Bennett, both 92, stay vibrant.

The comedy mastermind refuses to turn serious. He mock-complains that a baker's dozen Emmy trophies couldn't be evenly divided among his four children as part of their inheritanc­e.

The patriarch can be forgiven for not dwelling on his prime-time Emmys, a varied lot of honors for writing, directing, acting and performing that stretch from a 1957 acting award for Sid Caesar's variety show "Caesar's Hour" to 1995, when he won for a guest star turn in "Mad About You." As a moviemaker, Reiner collaborat­ed with top talent including Steve Martin in comedies including "The Jerk" and "The Man with Two Brains."

Reiner, the oldest-ever Emmy nominee, is willing to look in the rearview mirror, but only to fuel new work.

"When I finish anything, I have to start a new project or I have no reason to get up. Most people are that way — if they have something to do, they hang around," said Reiner.

Non-fiction books that tend toward part-memoir, part-research are his chief focus these days, with titles including "I Remember Radio" and "Approachin­g Ninety-Six: The Films I Love Viewing & Loved Doing." Reiner's work in progress is "I Remember Television, Which When I'm Awake I Never Don't Watch."

What are his programs of choice?

"Anything on the news that will tell me maybe (Donald) Trump will go," said Reiner, whose daily routine includes posting a tweet critical of the president and his policies.

For sheer entertainm­ent, he picks older films including favorite "Random Harvest," a 1942 romance starring Greer Garson and Ronald Colman that he strongly urges any movie fan to watch.

Reiner is nonchalant when asked about a campaign to get him recognized by Guinness World Records as the oldest Emmy nominee. But he eagerly shares his theory on why some people are funny. It's environmen­t — being exposed to humor as a youngster, as he was to the Marx Brothers and other comic luminaries — and simple biology.

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