Andy Kaufman

This article is about the entertainer. For the former basketball player, see Andy Kaufmann.
Andy Kaufman

Kaufman in the early 1980s
Born Andrew G. Kaufman
(1949-01-17)January 17, 1949
New York City, U.S.
Died May 16, 1984(1984-05-16) (aged 35)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Cause of death Lung cancer
Nationality American
Occupation Actor, performance artist
Years active 1971–1984 (his death)
Television As Latka Gravas in Taxi (1978–1983)

Andrew G. "Andy" Kaufman (January 17, 1949 – May 16, 1984)[1] was an American entertainer, actor, writer, and performance artist. While often referred to as a comedian, Kaufman did not consider himself as such.[2] He disdained telling jokes and engaging in comedy as it was traditionally understood, referring to himself instead as a "song-and-dance man". "I'm not trying to be funny," he once said in a rare introspective interview. "I just want to play with their heads."[3][4]

After working in small comedy clubs in the early 1970s, Kaufman first came to the attention of a wider audience in 1975, when he was invited to perform portions of his act on the first season of Saturday Night Live. His Foreign Man character was the basis of his role as Latka Gravas on the hit television show Taxi, on which he appeared from 1978 until 1983.[5] During this time, he continued to tour comedy clubs and theaters in a series of unique performance art / comedy shows, sometimes appearing as himself and sometimes as obnoxiously rude lounge singer Tony Clifton.[6] He was also a frequent guest on sketch comedy and late-night talk shows, particularly Late Night with David Letterman.[6] In 1982, Kaufman brought his professional wrestling villain act to Letterman's show with a staged encounter with Jerry "The King" Lawler of the Continental Wrestling Association (although the fact that the altercation was planned in advance was not publicly disclosed for over a decade).

Kaufman died of lung cancer at age 35 in 1984.[7] However, because pranks and elaborate ruses were major elements of his career, persistent rumors have circulated insisting that Kaufman faked his own death as a grand hoax.[6][8] His body of work maintains a cult following and he continues to be respected for his original material, unique performance style, and unflinching commitment to character.[6][9]

Early life

Kaufman was born on January 17, 1949 in New York City, the oldest of three children. His mother was Janice (née Bernstein), a homemaker and former fashion model, and his father was Stanley Kaufman, a jewelry salesman.[10] Kaufman, along with his younger brother and sister, grew up in a middle-class Jewish family in Great Neck, Long Island.[11] He began performing at children's birthday parties at age 9, playing records and showing cartoons.[12] Kaufman also spent much of his youth writing poetry and stories, including an unpublished novel titled The Hollering Mangoo, which he completed at age 16.[13] Following a visit to his school from Nigerian musician Babatunde Olatunji, Kaufman began playing the bongos.[14] After high school graduation, Kaufman took a year off before enrolling at the now defunct two-year Grahm Junior College[15] in Boston.[16] There he studied television production and starred in his own campus television show, Uncle Andy's Fun House.[5] He also began performing at coffee houses and developing his act, as well as writing a one-man play, titled Gosh (later renamed God and published in 2000).[16] After graduating in 1971, he began performing stand-up comedy at various small clubs along the East Coast.[17][18]

Career

Foreign Man and Mighty Mouse

Kaufman first caught major attention with a character known as Foreign Man, who spoke in a meek, high-pitched, heavy-accented voice and claimed to be from "Caspiar", a fictional island in the Caspian Sea.[18] It was as this character that Kaufman convinced the owner of the famed New York City comedy club The Improv, Budd Friedman, to allow him to perform onstage.[19][20] As Foreign Man, Kaufman would appear on the stage of comedy clubs, play a recording of the theme from the Mighty Mouse cartoon show while standing perfectly still, and lip-sync only the line "Here I come to save the day" with great enthusiasm.[21] He would proceed to tell a few (purposely poor) jokes and conclude his act with a series of celebrity impersonations, with the comedy arising from the character's obvious ineptitude at impersonation. For example, in his fake accent Kaufman would say to the audience, "I would like to imitate Meester Carter, de president of de United States" and then, in exactly the same voice, say "Hello, I am Meester Carter, de president of de United States. T'ank you veddy much."

At some point in the performance, usually when the audience was conditioned to Foreign Man's inability to perform a single convincing impression, Foreign Man would announce, "And now I would like to imitate the Elvis Presley", turn around, take off his jacket, slick his hair back, and launch into a rousing, hip-shaking, unexpectedly excellent rendition of Presley singing one of his hit songs, one that Presley himself described as his favorite.[22] Like Presley, he would take off his leather jacket during the song and throw it into the audience, but unlike Presley, Foreign Man would immediately ask for it to be returned. After the song's finale, he would take a simple bow and say in his Foreign Man voice, "T'ank you veddy much."

Portions of Kaufman's Foreign Man act were broadcast in the first season of Saturday Night Live. The Mighty Mouse number was featured in the October 11, 1975, premiere, while the joke-telling and celebrity impressions (including Elvis) were included in the November 8 broadcast that same year.[23]

Latka

Main article: Latka Gravas
Arguably his best known act, Andy Kaufman's "Foreign Man" persona was later adapted as the "Latka Gravas" character for the ABC sitcom, Taxi. Though Kaufman's performances on the show were widely praised, even garnering him two Golden Globe Award nominations, Kaufman greatly disliked sitcoms and was unhappy about being so closely identified with Latka, which led him to clash frequently with the show's cast and crew.

Kaufman first used his Foreign Man character in nightclubs in the early 1970s, often to tell jokes incorrectly and do weak imitations of famous people before bursting into his Elvis Presley imitation. The character was then changed into Latka Gravas for the ABC's Taxi sitcom, appearing in 79 of 114 episodes from 1978 to 1983.

Bob Zmuda confirms this: "They basically were buying Andy's Foreign Man character for the Taxi character Latka."[24] Kaufman's long-time manager, George Shapiro, encouraged him to take the gig. "My feeling was that it would be a nice boost for his career ... and he would be playing a character that he knew very well, the Foreign Man—this particular character speaks poor English in Taxi and his name is Latka Gravas." Kaufman disliked sitcoms and was not happy with the idea of being in one, but Shapiro convinced him that it would quickly lead to stardom, which would earn him money he could then put into his own act. Kaufman agreed to appear in 14 episodes per season, and initially wanted four for Kaufman's alter-ego Tony Clifton. After Kaufman deliberately sabotaged Clifton's appearance on the show, however, this part of his contract was dropped.[7]

His character was given multiple personality disorder, which allowed Kaufman to randomly portray other characters. In one episode of Taxi, Kaufman's character came down with a condition that made him act like Alex Reiger, the main character played by Judd Hirsch. Another such recurring character played by Kaufman was the womanizing Vic Ferrari.[25]

Taxi was a show with a large audience, and Kaufman was widely recognized as Latka. In the fictionalized version of Kaufman's life, Man on the Moon, Kaufman would punish such audiences by reading the novel The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald to them. The film depicted audiences laughing at this, not realizing that he was serious, with Kaufman proceeding to read the entire book to them in passive-aggressive frustration, despite most of the audience members' departure.[21] In reality, Kaufman's act was lighthearted and funny: he would read a few pages, after which he would ask the audience if they wanted him to keep reading, or play a record. When the audience chose to hear the record, the record he cued up was a recording of him continuing to read The Great Gatsby from where he had left off. He never actually read (or played) the entirety of The Great Gatsby to an audience, but he sometimes liked to claim that he had.

Sam Simon, who early in his career was a writer and later showrunner for Taxi, stated in a 2013 interview with Marc Maron for the WTF podcast that the story of Kaufman having been generally disruptive on the show was "a complete fiction" largely created by Bob Zmuda. Simon maintained that Zmuda has a vested interest in promoting an out-of-control image of Kaufman. In the interview Simon stated that Kaufman was "completely professional" and that he "told you Tony Clifton was him", but he also conceded that Kaufman would have "loved" Zmuda's version of events.[26]

Kaufman was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor in a Series, Limited Series, or Motion Picture Made For Television for Taxi in 1979 and 1981.[27]

Tony Clifton

Main article: Tony Clifton

Another well-known Kaufman character is Tony Clifton, an absurd, audience-abusing lounge singer who began opening for Kaufman at comedy clubs and eventually even performed concerts on his own around the country. Sometimes it was Kaufman performing as Clifton, sometimes it was his brother Michael or Zmuda. For a brief time, it was unclear to some that Clifton was not a real person. News programs interviewed Clifton as Kaufman's opening act, with the mood turning ugly whenever Kaufman's name came up. Kaufman, Clifton insisted, was attempting to ruin Clifton's "good name" in order to make money and become famous.

As a requirement for Kaufman's accepting the offer to star on Taxi, he insisted that Clifton be hired for a guest role on the show as if he were a real person, not a character.[7] After throwing a tantrum on the set, Clifton was fired and escorted from the studio lot by security guards. Much to Kaufman's delight, this incident was reported in the local newspapers.[28]

Carnegie Hall show

At the beginning of an April 1979 performance at New York's Carnegie Hall, Kaufman invited his "grandmother" to watch the show from a chair he had placed at the side of the stage. At the end of the show, she stood up, took her mask off and revealed to the audience that she was actually comedian Robin Williams in disguise.[29] Kaufman also had an elderly woman (named Eleanor Cody Gould) appear to have a heart attack and die on stage, at which point he reappeared on stage wearing a Native American headdress and performed a dance over her body, "reviving" her.[30][31]

The performance is most famous for Kaufman's ending the show by actually taking the entire audience, in 24 buses, out for milk and cookies. He invited anyone interested to meet him on the Staten Island Ferry the next morning, where the show continued.[32]

TV specials

The Taxi deal with ABC included giving Kaufman a television special/pilot. He came up with Andy's Funhouse, based on an old routine he had developed while in junior college. The special was taped in 1977 but did not air until August 1979, on ABC. It featured most of Andy's famous gags, including Foreign Man/Latka and his Elvis Presley impersonation, as well as a host of unique segments (including a special appearance by children's television character Howdy Doody and the "Has-been Corner").[33] There was also a segment that included fake television screen static as part of the gag, which ABC executives were not comfortable with, fearing that viewers would mistake the static for broadcast problems and would change the channel—which was the comic element Kaufman wanted to present.[34] Andy's Funhouse was written by Kaufman, Zmuda, and Mel Sherer, with music by Kaufman.[35]

In March 1980, Kaufman filmed a short segment for an ABC show called Buckshot. The segment was just over six minutes long and was called Uncle Andy's Funhouse. It featured Kaufman as the host of a children's show for adults, complete with a peanut gallery and Tony Clifton puppet.[36]

In 1983 a very similar-looking show to Andy's Funhouse and Uncle Andy's Funhouse was filmed for the PBS's SoundStage program, called the The Andy Kaufman Show. It featured a peanut gallery like the previous shows, and opens in the middle of an interview Kaufman is doing in which he is laughing hysterically. He then proceeds to thank the audience for watching and the credits roll.

Fridays incidents

In 1981 Kaufman made three appearances on Fridays, a variety show on ABC that was similar to Saturday Night Live. In his first appearance, during a sketch about four people out on a dinner date who excuse themselves to the restroom to smoke marijuana, Kaufman broke character and refused to say his lines.[37]

In response, cast member Michael Richards walked off camera and returned with a set of cue cards and dumped them on the table in front of Kaufman who responded by splashing Richards with water. Co-producer Jack Burns stormed onto the stage, leading to a brawl on camera before the show abruptly cut away to a commercial.[38] Richards has claimed that this incident was a staged practical joke that was known only to him, associate producer Burns, and Kaufman but no one else on the cast or crew.[39] However, Melanie Chartoff, who played Kaufman's wife in the sketch, has stated that she, Maryedith Burrell, and Richards were all told by Burns, just prior to airtime, that Kaufman was going to break the fourth wall.[40]

In continuation of the joke, Kaufman appeared the following week in a videotaped apology to the home viewers. Later that year, Kaufman returned to host Fridays. At one point in the show, he invited a Lawrence Welk Show gospel and standards singer, Kathie Sullivan, on stage to sing a few gospel songs with him and announced that the two were engaged to be married, then talked to the audience about his newfound faith in Jesus (Kaufman was Jewish). That was also a hoax.[41] Later, following a sketch about a drug-abusing pharmacist, Kaufman was supposed to introduce the band the Pretenders. Instead of introducing the band, he delivered a nervous speech about the harmfulness of drugs while the band stood behind him ready to play. After his speech, he informed the audience that he had talked for too long and had to go to a commercial.

Professional wrestling

Inspired by the theatricality of kayfabe, the staged nature of the sport, and his own tendency to form elaborate hoaxes, Kaufman began wrestling women during his act and was the self-proclaimed "Inter-Gender Wrestling Champion of the World," taking on an aggressive and ridiculous personality based upon the characters invented by professional wrestlers. He offered a $1,000 prize to any woman who could pin him.[42][43] He employed performance artist Laurie Anderson, a friend of his, as a stooge in this act for a while.[44]

Kaufman initially approached the head of the World Wrestling Federation, Vince McMahon Sr., about bringing his act to the New York wrestling territory.[45] McMahon dismissed Kaufman's idea as the elder McMahon was not about to bring "show business" into his Pro Wrestling society.[45] Kaufman had by then developed a friendship with wrestling reporter/photographer Bill Apter.[45] After many discussions about Andy wanting to be in the Pro Wrestling business, Apter called Memphis wrestling icon Jerry "The King" Lawler and introduced him to Kaufman by telephone.[45]

Later, Kaufman would finally step into the ring (in the Memphis wrestling circuit) with a man—Lawler himself.[21] Kaufman taunted the residents of Memphis by playing "videos showing residents how to use soap" and proclaiming the city to be "the nation's redneck capital."[21] The ongoing Lawler-Kaufman feud, which often featured Jimmy Hart and other heels in Kaufman's corner, included a number of staged "works", such as a broken neck for Kaufman as a result of Lawler's piledriver and a famous on-air fight on a 1982 episode of Late Night with David Letterman.[46][47] For some time after that, Kaufman appeared wearing a neck brace,[21] insisting that his injuries were much worse than they really were. Kaufman would continue to defend the Inter-Gender Championship in the Mid-South Coliseum and offered an extra prize, other than the $1,000: that if he were pinned, the woman who pinned him would get to marry him and that Kaufman would also shave his head.[48]

Eventually, the feud and wrestling matches were revealed to have been staged works,[49] and the two to be friends. This was not disclosed until more than 10 years after Kaufman's death, when the Emmy-nominated documentary A Comedy Salute to Andy Kaufman, aired on NBC in 1995. Jim Carrey, the one who revealed the secret, later went on to play Kaufman in the 1999 film Man on the Moon. In a 1997 interview with the Memphis Flyer, Lawler said he had improvised during their first match and the Letterman incident. Although officials at St. Francis Hospital stated that Kaufman's neck injuries were real, in his 2002 biography It's Good to Be the King ... Sometimes, Lawler detailed how they came up with the angle and kept it quiet. Even though Kaufman's injury was legitimate, the pair pretended that the injury was far more severe than it was. He also said that Kaufman's furious tirade and performance on Letterman was Kaufman's own idea, including when Lawler slapped Kaufman out of his chair. Promoter Jerry Jarrett would later recall that for two years, he would mail paychecks to Kaufman, with payments comparable to what other main-event wrestlers were getting at the time, but Kaufman never cashed any of them.[50]

Kaufman also appeared in the 1983 film My Breakfast with Blassie with professional wrestling personality "Classy" Freddie Blassie, a parody of the art film My Dinner With Andre. The film was directed by Johnny Legend, who employed his sister Lynne Margulies as one of the women who appears in the film. Margulies met Kaufman for the first time on camera, and they later became a couple, living together until Kaufman's death.

In 2002, Kaufman became an unlockable character in the video game Legends of Wrestling II and a standard character in 2004's Showdown: Legends of Wrestling. In 2008, Jakks Pacific produced for their WWE Classic Superstars toy line, an action figure two-pack of Kaufman and Lawler, as well as a separate figures release for each of them.

Appearances

Although Kaufman made a name for himself as a guest on NBC's Saturday Night Live, his first prime time appearances were several guest spots as the "Foreign Man" on the Dick Van Dyke variety show Van Dyke and Company in 1976.[51] He also appeared four times on The Tonight Show from 1976 to 1978, and three times on The Midnight Special in 1972, 1977, and 1981. In the 1977 edition, Kaufman performed a song titled "I Trusted You" (which features only those three words, repeated over and over, as lyrics), while in 1981 he is shown sitting in the audience during a performance by Tony Clifton (although it was obvious Kaufman was not in the audience during the sketch).

His SNL appearances started with the first show, on October 11, 1975. He made 16 SNL appearances in all, doing routines from his comedy act, such as the Mighty Mouse singalong, Foreign Man, and the Elvis impersonation. After he angered the audience with his female-wrestling routine, Kaufman in January 1983 made a pre-taped appearance (his 16th) asking the audience if he should ever appear on the show again, saying he would honor their decision. SNL ran a phone vote, and 195,544 people voted to "Dump Andy" while 169,186 people voted to "Keep Andy".[52] Kaufman never again appeared on the show live, but Saturday Night Live did air a tape of him thanking those who had voted for him to appear again.

During the SNL episode with the phone poll, many of the cast-members stated their admiration for Kaufman's work. After Eddie Murphy read both numbers, he said, "Now Andy Kaufman is a friend of mine. Keep that in mind when you call. I don't want to have to punch nobody in America in the face", and Mary Gross read the Dump Andy number at a rate so fast that audiences were unable to catch it. The final tally was read by Gary Kroeger to a cheering audience. As the credits rolled, announcer Don Pardo said, "This is Don Pardo saying, 'I voted for Andy Kaufman.'"[53]

Kaufman made a number of appearances on the daytime edition of The David Letterman Show in 1980, and 11 appearances on Late Night with David Letterman in 1982 and 1983.

He made numerous guest spots on other television programs hosted by or starring celebrities like Johnny Cash (1979 Christmas special),[54] Dick Van Dyke,[51] Dinah Shore,[55] Rodney Dangerfield,[56] Cher,[57] Dean Martin,[58] Redd Foxx,[5] Mike Douglas,[5] Dick Clark,[59] and Joe Franklin.[60]

He appeared in his first theatrical film God Told Me To in 1976, in which he portrayed a murderous policeman.[61] He appeared in two other theatrical films, including the 1980 film In God We Tru$t, in which he played a televangelist,[62] and the 1981 film Heartbeeps, in which he played a robot.[63]

Laurie Anderson worked alongside Kaufman for a time in the 1970s, acting as a sort of straight man in a number of his Manhattan and Coney Island performances. One of these performances included getting on a ride that people stand in and get spun around. After everyone was strapped in, Kaufman would start saying how he did not want to be on the ride in a panicked tone and eventually cry. Anderson later described these performances in her 1995 album, The Ugly One with the Jewels.[64]

In 1983, Kaufman appeared on Broadway with Deborah Harry in the play Teaneck Tanzi: The Venus Flytrap.[65][66] It closed after just two performances.[67][68]

In 1984, Kaufman made his final professional appearance on a TV show called The Top. The executive producer was Harold Ramis, the producer was Paul Flattery, and it was directed by David Jove (aka David Sniderman). It starred Dan Aykroyd, Bill Murray and Rodney Dangerfield, with music from Cyndi Lauper, The Romantics and The Hollies. Kaufman was not the original host; that was Chevy Chase who, dressed as a "punk" of the era, got into a physical altercation with an audience member during the opening monologue and immediately left the taping. Ramis got Andy to shoot the host segments at a later date.

Personal life

Kaufman never married. He had a daughter, Maria Bellu-Colonna, who was born in 1969 out of wedlock to a high-school girlfriend and placed for adoption.[69] Bellu-Colonna learned in 1992 that she was Kaufman's daughter when she traced her biological roots by winning a petition of the State of New York for her biological mother's surname. She soon reunited with her mother, grandfather, uncle, and aunt.[70] Kaufman has a granddaughter who briefly appeared in Man on the Moon, playing his sister as a young child.[71]

He met his partner Lynne Margulies on the set of My Breakfast With Blassie in 1982 and they remained together until Kaufman's death in 1984. She later co-directed the 1989 Kaufman wrestling compilation I'm From Hollywood, as well as published the 2009 book Dear Andy Kaufman, I Hate Your Guts!.[72][73]

On December 5, 1969, Kaufman learned Transcendental Meditation at college.[74][75] According to a BBC article, Kaufman used transcendental meditation 'to build confidence and take his act to comedy clubs'. For the rest of his life, Kaufman meditated and performed yoga three hours a day.[76] He trained as a teacher of transcendental meditation in Majorca, Spain, from February to June 1971.[74]

Illness and death

At Thanksgiving dinner on Long Island, New York, in November 1983, several family members openly expressed worry about Kaufman's persistent coughing. He claimed that he had been coughing for nearly a month, visited his doctor, and been told that nothing was wrong. When he returned to Los Angeles, he consulted a physician, then checked himself into Cedars-Sinai Medical Center for a series of medical tests. A few days later, he was diagnosed with an extremely rare type of lung cancer.

After audiences were shocked by his gaunt appearance during January 1984 performances, Kaufman acknowledged that he had an unspecified illness which he hoped to cure with natural medicine, including a diet of all fruits and vegetables, among other measures. Kaufman received palliative radiotherapy, but by then, the cancer had spread from his lungs to his brain. His final public appearance was at the premiere of My Breakfast With Blassie in March 1984, where he appeared thin and had a partially shaved head.[77] The following day, he and Lynne Margulies flew to Baguio, Philippines, where as a last resort, Kaufman received treatments of a New Age procedure called psychic surgery.

Kaufman died at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles on May 16, 1984.[78] He was 35 years old.[5][7] Some reports stated that Kaufman was 36.[79][80]

Death-hoax rumors

Kaufman had often spoken of faking his own death as a grand hoax, with rumors persisting, often fueled by sporadic appearances of Kaufman's character Tony Clifton at comedy clubs following the comedian's death.[81] In 2013, responding to an outbreak of rumor following the appearance of an actress who claimed to be Kaufman's daughter and that the comedian was still alive, Los Angeles County Coroner's office re-released Kaufman's death certificate.[1][81][82][83]

"Clifton" performed a year after Kaufman's death at The Comedy Store benefit in Kaufman's honor, with members of his entourage in attendance, and during the 1990s made several appearances at Los Angeles nightclubs. Jim Carrey, who portrayed Kaufman in Man on the Moon, stated on the NBC special Comedy Salute to Andy Kaufman that the person doing the Clifton character was Bob Zmuda. Kaufman's official website states that his death was not a hoax.[84]

In 2014 Zmuda and Lynne Margulies, Kaufman's girlfriend at the time of his death, co-authored the book Andy Kaufman: The Truth, Finally, which states that Kaufman's death was indeed a prank, that Kaufman remained alive and would soon be revealing himself as his upper limit on the "prank" was 30 years.[85]

A feature-length documentary, Kaufman Lives, is in production as of the mid-2010s. It covers the legend that Kaufman faked his own death. The film is directed by the English artist John Lundberg and Roland Denning.[86]

Legacy and tributes

Comedian Elayne Boosler, who dated and lived with Kaufman and who credits him with encouraging her to do comedy, wrote an article for Esquire in November 1984, in his memory.[87][88] She also dedicated her 1986 Showtime special Party of One to Kaufman.[89] An audio recording of Kaufman offering encouragement to Boosler is featured in the intro.[90]

In 1992, the band R.E.M. released the album Automatic for the People, which featured the Andy Kaufman-themed song "Man on the Moon".[91][92] The video for the song also featured footage of Kaufman.[93] On March 29, 1995, NBC aired A Comedy Salute To Andy Kaufman. This special featured clips of many of Kaufman's performances, as well as commentary from some of his friends, family, and colleagues.[6] Comedian Richard Lewis in A Comedy Salute to Andy Kaufman said of him: "No one has ever done what Andy did, and did it as well, and no one will ever. Because he did it first. So did Buster Keaton, so did Andy."[94] Carl Reiner recalled his distinction in the comedy world:

Did Andy influence comedy? No. Because nobody's doing what he did. Jim Carrey was influenced—not to do what Andy did, but to follow his own drummer. I think Andy did that for a lot of people. Follow your own drumbeat. You didn't have to go up there and say 'take my wife, please.' You could do anything that struck you as entertaining. It gave people freedom to be themselves." Reiner also said of Kaufman: "Nobody can see past the edges, where the character begins and he ends.[95]

Jim Carrey portrayed Kaufman in the 1999 biopic film Man on the Moon, directed by Miloš Forman; the film took its title from the band R.E.M.'s song of the same name. R.E.M. also did the score for the film and recorded another Kaufman tribute song, "The Great Beyond."[96] Carrey's portrayal was met with critical acclaim, earning him a Golden Globe Award for his performance. Forman named his twin sons, born in 1998, Andrew and James, after Kaufman and Carrey.[97][98] In July 2012, Kaufman's play Bohemia West was staged in Providence, Rhode Island.[99] Comedian Vernon Chatman compiled and produced Kaufman's first album, Andy and His Grandmother—via Drag City in 2013.[100]

Andy Kaufman is one of the featured celebrities in the 2005 children's book Different Like Me: My Book of Autism Heroes.[101] Actress Cindy Williams, who was good friends with Kaufman, devoted an entire chapter of her autobiography Shirley, I Jest!: A Storied Life to him.[102][103] The Chris Gethard Show paid homage to the Kaufman's Fridays incident in a goof on an episode with comedian Brett Davis throwing water on someone's face.[104] At The Comedy Store comedy club in Los Angeles there is a neon likeness of Kaufman on display. The club also features on their menu the "Andy Kaufman Special," which consists of "two cookies and a glass of ice cold milk."[105] The rock group "Vic Ferrari Band" took its' name from Kaufman's Taxi character.[106][107] According to executive producer Bill Oakley, the 1996 The Simpsons episode "Bart the Fink," in which Krusty the Clown fakes his death, was partially inspired by the rumors of Andy Kaufman's own faked death.[108] Al Jean, co-creator of the animated series The Critic, has stated that the first season drawing of Jon Lovitz's Jay Sherman character was loosely based on Andy Kaufman.[109]

For the 2015 Andy Kaufman Award show, Two Boots Pizza created a special Andy Kaufman pie.[110] As of 2016, they still feature a Tony Clifton pie on their menu.[111] In 2015 a bottled fragrance was created, called "Andy Kaufman Milk & Cookies" in honor of Kaufman.[112][113] German filmmaker Maren Ade stated that her 2016 film Toni Erdmann, which was nominated for the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival, was partially inspired by Andy Kaufman and his Tony Clifton character.[114][115][116] Since 2004, The Andy Kaufman Award competition has been held annually as "a showcase for promising cutting-edge artists with fresh and unconventional material, for those willing to take risks with an audience, and for those who do not define themselves by the typical conventions of comedy."[117]

Filmography

Television

Date Title Notes
June 1972 Kennedy at Night[74] local Chicago show; Kaufman's first appearance as Elvis
June 6, 1974 The Dean Martin Comedy World[74][118] Kaufman's national television debut
June 20, 1974 The Joe Franklin Show[74][119]
October 11, 1975 Saturday Night Live[74][120] first episode of SNL; performed "Mighty Mouse"
October 25, 1975 Saturday Night Live[74] performed "Pop Goes The Weasel"
November 8, 1975 Saturday Night Live[74] Foreign Man
January 17, 1976 Monty Hall's Variety Hour[74]
February 28, 1976 Saturday Night Live[5][74] performed "Old MacDonald Had A Farm"
June 23, 1976 The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson[74] Steve Allen guest-hosted
September 20, 1976 – December 30, 1976 Van Dyke & Company[74][121] Kaufman appeared in 10 weekly episodes
January 12, 1977 The Mike Douglas Show[5]
January 15, 1977 Saturday Night Live[74] Foreign Man/Elvis
January 17, 1977 Dinah![74] Foreign Man
January 21, 1977 The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson[74]
February 7, 1977 Dinah! Kaufman sings "Kiss, Kiss, Kiss"
March 3, 1977 The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson[74][122]
March 4, 1977 The Midnight Special sings "I Trusted You"
May 30, 1977 Stick Around[74] pilot for sitcom (aired once); was filmed March 29, 1977
1977 The 2nd Annual HBO Young Comedians Show
August 4, 1977 The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson Elvis and drumming
August 15–19, 1977 The Hollywood Squares[74] Kaufman appeared on one week's worth of shows; was filmed in June 1977
September 15, 1977 The Redd Foxx Comedy Hour[74][123] aired November 3, 1977
October 15, 1977 Saturday Night Live[74] sings "Oklahoma," "Oh, The Cow Goes Moo," and does Elvis
December 10, 1977 Saturday Night Live[74] Foreign Man
January 3, 1978 Variety '77: The Year in Entertainment[74] plays congas, sings, dances, and attempts to levitate a woman
February 20, 1978 The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson[74] Steve Martin guest-hosted; Kaufman's last Tonight Show appearance
March 11, 1978 Saturday Night Live[74] reads The Great Gatsby
March 14, 1978 Bananaz[74] local Columbus, Ohio television show
April 11, 1978 The Mike Douglas Show[5][74]
September 12, 1978 – June 15, 1983 Taxi[5][74] production on the sitcom began on July 5, 1978; last episode was filmed February 18, 1983
November 21, 1978 The Dating Game[74] as contestant "Baji Kimran"
November 29, 1978 Dick Clark's Live Wednesday[74]
February 24, 1979 Saturday Night Live[74] yodels
April 3, 1979 Cher...And Other Fantasies[74]
June 30, 1979 The Lisa Hartman Show[124] (the date for this special has often been incorrectly given as 1976)
August 20, 1979 The Tomorrow Show[74] Kaufman's first wrestling match with a woman on national television
August 28, 1979 Good Morning America
August 28, 1979 Andy's Funhouse[74] ABC special; originally taped July 15, 1977
September 19, 1979 Dinah![74] drunken, egg-throwing Tony Clifton
October 20, 1979 Saturday Night Live[74] wrestles for the first time on SNL
November 17, 1979 Saturday Night Live[74]
November 22, 1979 Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade[74]
December 6, 1979 A Johnny Cash Christmas[54][74] Foreign Man/Elvis/Santa
December 13, 1979 The Merv Griffin Show[74]
December 22, 1979 Saturday Night Live[74] appears with "Nature Boy" Buddy Rogers; wrestles women
January 25, 1980 The Merv Griffin Show[74] aired January 29, 1980
June 12, 1980 Andy Kaufman at Carnegie Hall[5][74] the April 1979 concert was broadcast on Showtime
July 18, 1980 Uncle Andy's Funhouse (Buckshot segment)[36][74] filmed March 1, 1980
September 26, 1980 The Merv Griffin Show appeared with Marty Feldman
October 14, 1980 The David Letterman Show[74] tells Letterman he's been sleeping in doorways; Letterman abruptly cuts him off
October 15, 1980 The David Letterman Show[74] shows up disheveled; begs audience for money
January 23, 1981 The Midnight Special Hosted; performed much of his repertoire
February 20, 1981 Fridays[74][125] Kaufman hosts; the infamous fight episode
February 27, 1981 Fridays[74][126] videotaped apology from Kaufman
March 3–6, 1981 Barbara Mandrell and the Mandrell Sisters[74] was taped in March; unclear when or if Kaufman's segment aired*
March 25, 1981 The Midnight Special[74] introduces Tony Clifton
April 16, 1981 The Slycraft Hour[74] NYC cable access show with Bob Pagani
June 8, 1981 The Merv Griffin Show[74] Tony Clifton
August 31, 1981 The Merv Griffin Show[74] Tony Clifton
September 18, 1981 Fridays[127][128] Kaufman introduces his fiance, Kathie Sullivan; they sing & he discusses his Christianity
October 28, 1981 Good Morning America[74]
October 29, 1981 An Evening at the Improv[74] hosted
December 11, 1981 The Merv Griffin Show
January 30, 1982 Saturday Night Live[74] in a sketch as Elvis
February 8, 1982 1981: The Year in Television[129] briefly interviewed by Dick Cavett
February 17, 1982 Late Night with David Letterman[74] Kaufman's first appearance on Late Night; talks about doing Elvis after his death; wrestling talk
February 18, 1982 Late Night with David Letterman[74] Tony Clifton (thought at the time to be Kaufman; later revealed to be Zmuda)
March 30, 1982 Late Night with David Letterman[74]
April 1, 1982 Late Night with David Letterman[74] brief appearance in greenroom; promotes Lawler match
April 14, 1982 Good Morning America[74]
April 15, 1982 The John Davidson Show[74]
May 7, 1982 Hour Magazine[74][130] aired May 11, 1982; Kaufman appears with his brother and sister
May 15, 1982 Saturday Night Live[74] appears with Taxi castmates; discusses the Lawler wrestling match
May 17, 1982 Late Night with David Letterman[74]
June 25, 1982 The Merv Griffin Show[131] Orson Welles guest-hosts; Welles expresses his fondness for Taxi
July 28, 1982 Late Night with David Letterman[5] the infamous Lawler/Kaufman slap fight
September 17, 1982 The Fantastic Miss Piggy Show Tony Clifton
September 30, 1982 Catch a Rising Star's 10th Anniversary[74] filmed August 19, 1982
October 23, 1982 Saturday Night Live Kaufman was due to appear in this episode, but was cut by producer Dick Ebersol.
October 30, 1982 Saturday Night Live Kaufman was due to appear in this episode, but was cut due to showing up late.
November 17, 1982 Late Night with David Letterman[74] dressed in turban, he sings "Rose Marie"
November 20, 1982 Saturday Night Live[74][132] Kaufman is voted off the show, 195,544 to 169,186
January 7, 1983 Late Night with David Letterman[74] appears with his parents; calls grandmother in Florida
January 22, 1983 Saturday Night Live[74] videotape of Kaufman, thanking viewers who voted for him
February 23, 1983 Late Night with David Letterman[74] appears with Freddie Blassie; sings Jambalaya (On The Bayou)
May 2, 1983 CWA Wrestling
May 26, 1983 Up Close with Tom Cottle[74] interview
July 9, 1983 CWA Wrestling
July 15, 1983 The Andy Kaufman Show[74] PBS Soundstage
July 16, 1983 CWA Wrestling
July 23, 1983 CWA Wrestling
July 30, 1983 CWA Wrestling
August 6, 1983 CWA Wrestling
August 13, 1983 CWA Wrestling
September 22, 1983 Late Night with David Letterman[74] introduces his adopted children; does Elvis for the final time
November 7, 1983 Superstars of Comedy Salute the Improv aired February 12, 1984; does laundry, plays congas, and sings "Rock Island" from The Music Man
November 17, 1983 Late Night with David Letterman[74] plays scene from The Big Chill; brings adopted kids on again; final Letterman appearance
November 19, 1983 CWA Wrestling
November 29, 1983 Rodney Dangerfield: I Can't Take It No More[74] Filmed November 7, 1983
January 26, 1984 The Top[74] Kaufman's final television appearance

Film

Date Title Role Notes
1976 God Told Me To[133] Police Officer
1980 In God We Tru$t[5] Armageddon T. Thunderbird
1981 Heartbeeps[5] ValCom-17485
1983 My Breakfast with Blassie "Himself"
1986 Elayne Boosler: Party of One[90] (Archived voice)
1989 I'm From Hollywood "Himself"
1999 Man on the Moon (Archived singing)

Bibliography

Three books of Kaufman's writings have been posthumously published:

References

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External links

Wikiquote has quotations related to: Andy Kaufman

Further reading

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