Gary Austin, founder of the Groundlings, dies at age 75
LOS ANGELES—Gary Austin, who founded the Los Angeles improv company the Groundlings—a troupe that launched the careers of Paul Reubens, Will Ferrell, Lisa Kudrow and Melissa McCarthy—died Saturday in Los Angeles at age 75 after battling cancer.
The Groundlings shared the news of Austin’s death at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center on its Facebook page, writing, “Thank you for giving us a dream, a voice, a legacy and a family.”
Turning to improv and standup comedy after earning a degree in theater arts at San Francisco State in 1964, Austin, a native of Oklahoma, cut his sketch-comedy teeth as a member of the San Francisco troupe the Committee. He later relocated to L.A. and founded the nonprofit Groundlings company in 1974.
With Austin as its artistic director, the Groundlings’ approach to comedy was decidedly cutting-edge. In an article in the Los Angeles Times prior to the official debut of the Groundlings, then-Times theater critic Sylvie Drake predicted, “This could be the start of something big.”
Indeed, it wasn’t long before the Groundlings’ influence was being felt across the comedy world, and its membership quickly grew. Among its earliest members were such future stars as Craig T. Nelson, Tim Matheson and Pat Morita.
When Lorne Michaels was casting his new NBC sketch comedy show “Saturday Night Live” in 1975, he plucked Groundlings member Laraine Newman to be part of the original lineup—the first of several Groundlings to go on to find fame on “SNL.” Austin himself was invited to join the cast but turned Michaels down to stay with the Groundlings.
Over the years, many memorable characters would spring from the stage of the Groundlings, including Reubens’ Pee-wee Herman, Cassandra Peterson’s sultry horror-movie host Elvira, Julia Sweeney’s androgynous Pat, and Ferrell and Cheri Oteri’s irritatingly effervescent cheerleaders.
Austin left the Groundlings in late 1979, going on to serve as artistic director of the Gary Austin Workshops in Los Angeles, Seattle and Washington, D.C., but he returned on several occasions over the years to direct Groundlings shows.