The News-Times

George Carlin’s comedic journey takes the stage in HBO doc

- Photos and text from wire services

For comedians of a certain age, there was one album that was worn out on the turntable, dutifully memorized and acted out. That was George Carlin’s signature “Class Clown.”

“The way George Carlin looked at the world and broke it down taught so many of us how to be comedians,” said Judd Apatow. “He injected the software into our brains about how to think as a comic.”

Apatow and Michael Bonfiglio have teamed up to honor Carlin, the dean of countercul­ture comedians, by directing the two-part HBO documentar­y “George Carlin’s American Dream.” The first half of the two-part documentar­y airs Friday, with the second on Saturday.

“For most people, he is on our Mount Rushmore of comedy,” said Apatow, whose contributi­ons include “The 40Year Old Virgin” and “Knocked Up.” “He is definitely one of the best thinkers but also writers and performers that comedy

has ever had.”

The documentar­y traces the rise and multiple rebirths of Carlin, from mainstream, groomed comic in a skinny tie and slicked-back hair to bearded, longhaired provocateu­r.

That change — from playing a mocking hippie-dippy weatherman on variety shows to a more authentic comedian talking about power, language and human foibles — took its toll.

“He took a big hit financiall­y,” said Apatow. “He was making $12,500 a week in Las Vegas in the late ‘60s. That’s crazy money. And it went from that to getting paid almost nothing in coffeehous­es in Greenwich Village.”

The documentar­y also plainly discusses

Carlin’s wicked coke habit and personal turmoil. Kelly Carlin, the comedian’s daughter, would have it no other way.

“I think we’re all better off when we take people off a pedestal — not to take them down, but to raise ourselves up to their level. We are all humans here trying to figure out our way,” said Kelly Carlin, who co-executive produced the series.

The documentar­y charts Carlin’s reinventio­ns against the backdrop of huge social changes — Watergate, Vietnam, Reaganomic­s, hippie culture, among them. It also documents his fallow early ‘80s when he was in the comic wilderness before a Carnegie Hall show reignited his career. Carlin died in 2008.

 ?? Associated Press ?? The late comedian George Carlin, star of the HBO documentar­y “George Carlin’s American Dream,” airing May 20 on HBO.
Associated Press The late comedian George Carlin, star of the HBO documentar­y “George Carlin’s American Dream,” airing May 20 on HBO.

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