Funny Old Guys: Review
Over Tuna and Toast, They Discuss Final Chapters
From Los Angeles Times, 9/11/02
By Paul Brownfield
The lunch lasted an hour or two and featured a shouting match between
Fred Freiberger and Dr. Norman Lavet. This being a regular Tuesday lunch
of aging Jewish men, the argument started with Israel but ended up on
Iraq, with Freiberger and Lavet exchanging heated words. The other men
at the table watched, as used to this as to the tuna fish. A TV in the
far corner was broadcasting the horse racing from Del Mar. Finally, Leon
Roth, a former professor at the USC film school, spoke.
"For whatever it's worth," he said, for the benefit of a reporter
who had joined the men today, "there were a couple of guys here who
were very funny."
They are former motion picture and television writers--men, for the most
part, who are out of the game, but not before they contributed mightily
to the pantheon of televised entertainment. They made good money if not
silly money. They wrote for "All in the Family," "The Flying
Nun," "Chico and the Man." They wrote movies including
"If It's Tuesday, This Must Be Belgium."
It is a not uncommon milieu in Los Angeles, these informal gatherings
of older writers in delis and cafes; this one happens every Tuesday at
the Mulholland Tennis Club, up in the hills, the San Fernando Valley in
the distance.
In 1998, David Zeiger wanted to film the men. The result, the documentary
"Funny Old Guys," is 40 minutes long and will screen for the
next seven days at Laemmle's Monica 4-Plex in Santa Monica, as part of
the Doctober Fest, a documentary film festival.
"Funny Old Guys" starts out as you might expect, given that
Zeiger began with the intention of capturing the banter among seven or
eight writers whose careers encompass everything from the Hollywood blacklist
to "The Love Boat."
Unexpectedly, one of them, Frank Tarloff, a blacklisted screenwriter who
left the country for 12 years and went on to win an Academy Award for
the 1964 film "Father Goose," as well as write for "The
Danny Thomas Show" and "The Dick Van Dyke Show," discovers
his cancer has recurred. Suddenly, Tarloff faces mortality, and the lunches
take on a new tone.
So, too, does the film, as Tarloff gamely allows Zeiger to document his
dying process.
In an interview recently at the Mulholland club, as Zeiger and The Times
waited for the funny old guys to show up for lunch, the filmmaker talked
not only about Tarloff's mortality but the health issues that continue
to catch up to the group. Mike Morris, whose resume reads like the entire
programming schedule for Nick at Nite ("All in the Family,"
"McHale's Navy," "The Smothers Brothers Show"), has
Alzheimer's. "We literally caught the last phase of his lucidity,"
Zeiger said.
Zeiger's father, Irv, was one of the founders of the tennis club in the
late '60s. David Zeiger worked on "Funny Old Guys" as he was
shooting and editing "Senior Year," a 13-part documentary following
15 seniors at Fairfax High School that aired on PBS earlier this year.
"Senior Year" was an ambitious, all-consuming work, Zeiger said,
and so "Funny Old Guys" became a kind of escape. He shot much
of it with a hand-held camera, a microphone set up on a stand and hanging
over the table. Zeiger futzed with the mike as he ate his lunch.
On this particular Tuesday, the lunch group included David Shaw ("The
Defenders," "Playhouse 90," "Quincy"), Bernie
Kahn ("Get Smart," "Love American Style"), Lavet,
Freiberger (everything from "Bonanza" to "Starsky &
Hutch") and Roth. Bernie West was supposed to be here but was with
his wife, who had taken ill.
The food came--scoops of tuna over greens, eggs and toast, a turkey burger.
Kahn, one of the group's younger members, said he had just seen the new
movie "Full Frontal." "Just an awful movie," he said.
"I was in pain watching this movie."
"How were the locations?" Lavet asked.
"The locations?" Kahn said. "What do you mean?"
"My son was the location manager."
What about "Road to Perdition"? The table was unimpressed.
"Hanks, who I love, I think just walked through that part,"
Freiberger said. "Now you're pulling for murderers. At least in 'The
Godfather,' which was a dangerous picture which I loved, you're rooting
for the crooks against the cops. But a wonderful picture! This was just
nothing."
One of the more moving parts of "Funny Old Guys" is the decision
to stage Tarloff's memorial service before he dies, so that he too can
attend. A sign goes up at the Mulholland Tennis Club. Over lunch, however,
Tarloff didn't come up much. He was gone, and the guys were pressing on,
talking into the teeth of another hot day.
Shaw said: "Last week, I got two checks from the Writers Guild, in
separate envelopes." One check was for $334. The other for $335.
The statements were almost identical.
The guild guy told him to keep the one for $335.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

