San Diego Union-Tribune

A LIFE FULL OF LAUGHS

Comedy legend Bob Newhart, now 90 and working on new routines, reflects on his 1960 debut album and the long career that followed

- BY GEORGE VARGA

Bob Newhart, now 90, reflects on his 1960 debut album and the long career that followed.

Bob Newhart encountere­d a major setback when he recorded his chart-topping, Grammy Awardwinni­ng debut comedy album, “The Button-down Mind of Bob Newhart,” at a Texas nightclub in early 1960.

The setback had nothing to do with the fact that — until two weeks earlier — the former Chicago accountant had never done a single stand-up performanc­e in his life and was unknown to his Houston audience. Nor was it related to the fact that Newhart, who became a standout TV sitcom star in the 1970s, arrived in Texas with just three routines and had to quickly write three more for the flip side of his first album.

Instead, the setback came in the form of a very drunk man, seated in the front row. He repeatedly interrupte­d the neophyte comedian’s act, as the tapes were rolling, on the first evening of the deadpan Newhart’s two-day Texas nightclub stand. The fact that the performanc­e featured such future classics as “Driving Instructor,” “Nobody Will Ever Play

Baseball” and “Abe Lincoln vs. Madison Ave.” didn’t deter the drunk in the least.

“He kept yelling, throughout my set: ‘That’s a bunch of crap! That’s a bunch of crap! That’s a bunch of crap!’ ” a bemused Newhart recalled, speaking Monday from his home in Century City.

“We went and listened to the recording after the show, and you could hear the drunk better than you could hear me. That left the two Saturday night shows to record, which we did.”

Heckle-free, “The Button-down Mind of Bob Newhart” came out on May 6, 1960. Its soon-to-be-famous star was unaware of its release at the time.

“Four months after we recorded it, a friend of mine in Chicago asked me, ‘What ever happened to that comedy album you were going to do?’ ” Newhart said.

“I called Warner Bros. Records, and said: ‘Hi, I’m Bob Newhart. I recorded a comedy album for you and I’m calling to find out what happened to it.’ They said: ‘It’s selling great in Minneapoli­s!’ And it was. That was the first inkling I had that something was happening.”

The album topped the national Billboard sales charts. While it still held the No. 1 position, Newhart’s follow-up album, “The Button-down Mind Strikes Back,” was released.

It rose to the No. 2 spot on the Billboard charts, making him the first comedian to simultaneo­usly have the top two best-selling albums in the United States. In 1961, he also became a TV star with “The Bob Newhart Show,” a variety series. It aired for only a single season, but won a Peabody Award in the process.

His third album, “Behind the Button-down Mind of Bob Newhart,” came out in 1961, followed by “The Button-down Mind on TV” in 1962.

“All this material was stored up inside me and it just poured out until, probably, three years later. And then, all of a sudden, it didn’t pour out like that and took its time,” said Newhart, whose iconic use of a telephone in his routines was saluted in the 2017 debut episode of the hit TV series “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel.”

Newhart is one of the few comedians to have starred in two separate hit TV sitcoms a decade apart, first in the 1970s as a Chicago psychologi­st, then in the 1980s as a New England innkeeper. He was introduced to a new generation through his appearance­s on “The Big Bang Theory” (for which he won a 2013 Emmy Award for Outstandin­g Guest Actor) and its spinoff series, “Young Sheldon.”

As sharp and witty now at 90 as most comedians half his age, Newhart spoke for more than 40 minutes for this interview. Here are edited excerpts from that conversati­on.

Q:

To have your debut comedy album beat out Frank Sinatra, Harry Belafonte, Nat “King” Cole and two classical music releases for the Album of the Year Grammy Award, as you did in 1961, seems improbable.

How did you react to winning, and how did Sinatra, Belafonte and Cole react to your winning? A: I never found out how Frank felt about it. But I don’t think he was thrilled, because he was nominated for one of his great albums (“Nice ’n’ Easy,”). To get beat out by some kid who had never done a stand-up comedy act before, I don’t think he would have been too happy.

Q:

You were very good friends with Don Rickles, and Don was good friends with Sinatra. Were you friends with Sinatra, too? A:

Yeah, I got to know Frank after a while. We all had beach houses in Malibu and we’d go to their house, or they’d come to ours, or we’d both go to Don’s. I got to know Frank, and he was an incredible talent, but I kind of had a tiger by the tail.

Q:

Sinatra’s singing was similar to Miles Davis’ trumpet playing, in that they both let their music breathe, emphasizin­g the space between the notes as much as the notes. Your comedic timing used pauses very effectivel­y, especially in your routines that you conducted as telephone conversati­ons. Your delivery was always so relaxed. A: There is some kind of connection between music, math and comedy. I don’t know what it is, but I’m sure that it exists. The timing and the pauses are very important. You have to let the audience have time to give them an idea of what is being said at the other end of the conversati­on.

The secret — and I did not know this at the time I started doing the telephone routines — is that the audience is doing the heavy lifting. They’re supplying what you don’t hear. So when they applaud at the end, they’re really applauding themselves for figuring what the other end of the conversati­on was.

Marshall Mcluhan talked about ‘hot’ and ‘cold’ media. The phone made the routines a hot medium for the audience through their participat­ion in the conversati­ons. They were involved.

Q:

Comedy made a big shift around 1960 to a more contempora­ry and situationa­l approach, championed by a younger generation of performers. Were you aware of that shift at the time, or only in hindsight? A: I was aware of it, and it wasn’t just me. It was Mike Nichols and Elaine May, Shelley Berman, Lenny Bruce, Jonathan Winters and myself. Growing up, I was a huge fan of (the comedy duo) Bob and Ray, so what we did was a departure. All of a sudden, there was a social edge to comedy that I don’t think existed before . ... And it was largely because of the college students (in

our audience) at the time. I think most changes in the world come from college students, and then they become part of the establishm­ent. I always had the feeling that a stand-up comedian, at the time I started, was an iconoclast­ic kind of guy who was always finding something wrong with the system and making fun of it — an anarchist, really. Stand-up comedians are basically anarchists. They want to take the system and shake it all up.

Q:

Was it an advantage that you looked like a button-down member of the establishm­ent at the time? A: (laughing) Yeah, definitely! Of course, they couldn’t look at me (while listening to my records). But I had a stammer, which I still have, and that’s my way of talking.

Q:

Did your background as an accountant help you parse your recording and TV contracts? A: No, no, no! I always said that if I had stayed in accounting, the Enron corporatio­n would still be in business. Because no one could figure out my books. I wasn’t a great accountant, at all.

But it was math, which is part of comedy, and I was always good at math. It seemed like the simplest thing in the world . ... I gave myself a year; it was back to accounting if comedy didn’t work out.

Q:

You were doing stand-up dates on the road as recently as last fall. If the coronaviru­s crisis had not happened, would you be touring now? A: Yeah, it’s my first love, as long as I’m physically able to do it. The gratificat­ion is immediate, and the shock is immediate, too, when it doesn’t work!

I think that the impetus for me is having the danger of failing. Not to fail, but to succeed against the possibilit­y of failure . ... People say to me, “You’re 90, why do you keep doing stand-up?” And I always say, “Well, the alternativ­e is (like the classic 1950 movie) ‘Sunset Boulevard.’ ” You sit in your darkened den and Erich von Stroheim knocks on the door, comes in, and asks you, “What episode of ‘The Bob Newhart Show” or ‘Newhart’ do you want to watch?” I’m not ready for that.

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 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
ASSOCIATED PRESS
 ?? MICHAEL YARISH WARNER BROS. ?? Bob Newhart (left) as Professor Proton and Jim Parsons as Sheldon during Newhart’s guest appearance on the CBS sitcom “The Big Bang Theory.”
MICHAEL YARISH WARNER BROS. Bob Newhart (left) as Professor Proton and Jim Parsons as Sheldon during Newhart’s guest appearance on the CBS sitcom “The Big Bang Theory.”
 ?? ALEX WELSH THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Bob Newhart, pictured at his home in Los Angeles, was the first comedian to simultaneo­usly have the top two best-selling albums in the United States.
ALEX WELSH THE NEW YORK TIMES Bob Newhart, pictured at his home in Los Angeles, was the first comedian to simultaneo­usly have the top two best-selling albums in the United States.
 ??  ?? Bob Newhart’s debut album, “The Button-down Mind of Bob Newhart,” was released 60 years ago.
Bob Newhart’s debut album, “The Button-down Mind of Bob Newhart,” was released 60 years ago.

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