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- <text>
- <title>
- (Oct. 19, 1992) Profile:Billy Crystal
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Oct. 19, 1992 The Homestretch: Clinton in Control
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PROFILE, Page 66
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Having struggled from warm-up act to headliner, Billy Crystal
- evokes the demons of comedy in a new movie, giving the perfect
- Oscar host a shot at his own Oscar
- </p>
- <p>By Margaret Carslon/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> Ask Billy Crystal how he got started, and he will say in
- the living room, where as the youngest and shortest of three
- boys, he was also the loudest. "After dinner, we would perform
- for 20 or so relatives impressions of Aunt Rose with the
- sagging upper arms and Uncle Max with the pants the size of New
- Jersey." He learned show-biz patter, pulling his chair alongside
- the old Magnavox TV and pretending to be the next guest on the
- Jack Paar show, peeking down Jayne Mansfield's dress and
- rolling his eyes, flacking his latest gig. "You know, Jack, I'm
- really looking forward to eighth grade. A lot of interesting
- transfers, some hot new teachers--it's going to be a good
- year."
- </p>
- <p> He graduated to stand-up after listening to comedy albums
- his father would bring home from his job at Commodore Music, a
- record label and store in Manhattan. For visits to Grandma's
- house on Thanksgiving, Mom packed a suitcase with costumes: the
- three Crystal Boys would do Ernie Kovacs' Nairobi Trio and take
- turns as Mel Brooks' 2,000-Year-Old Man.
- </p>
- <p> His wonder years in Long Beach, on Long Island, N.Y.--the loud relatives, the overtanned mah-jongg ladies at the
- swimming pool, the horseradish and stuffed cabbage, the
- vacations in the Catskills--are at the heart of his new movie,
- Mr. Saturday Night, which he wrote, directed, produced and
- starred in, quite an achievement for someone who didn't know
- what a key grip was seven years ago. Crystal set out to portray
- someone who embodied the idols of his youth--Milton Berle,
- Jack E. Leonard, Alan King--yet exuded the fear of failure
- that makes some comics do themselves in, onstage and personally,
- instead of waiting for life to do it to them.
- </p>
- <p> Crystal says he is not Buddy, although he makes him so
- instantly recognizable in his Nipsey Russell loungewear and
- pinkie ring, in his scathing put-downs and maudlin
- sentimentality, that the character seems to come from the inside
- out. Crystal says he only wanted to show "the terrorist inside
- each of us, who can ruin things at any moment." But like many
- people for whom affection comes easily, Crystal may have felt
- driven to test his positives. "It was easy to like Harry [in
- When Harry Met Sally...] and Mitch [the mid-life ad guy in
- City Slickers], but not Buddy. I wanted to elicit the complex
- affection for someone who does rotten things but who is not a
- rotten man."
- </p>
- <p> It may only have been possible for Crystal to portray this
- wrinkled, self-absorbed baby with a cigar once he was safely
- beyond such a fate himself. At 44, he is now at the top not only
- professionally--considered in the same breath with Steve
- Martin and Robin Williams--but personally as well, uncommonly
- secure in a business where ego tremors routinely register 9.8
- on the Richter scale. He has lived in the same house in Pacific
- Palisades, Calif., for 12 years, been married to the same woman
- for 22. He has scarcely missed a volleyball game of either
- daughter: Jennifer, 19, who is now studying acting in London;
- and Lindsay, 15. An exciting Saturday is when his good friends,
- director Rob Reiner and his wife, come over, or when he goes to
- root for Los Angeles' basketball underdogs, the Clippers. "For
- a star," says Reiner, who directed him in Harry, "he's the most
- normal man in America."
- </p>
- <p> Crystal attributes his contentment to Janice Goldfinger,
- the hometown girl he married in 1970. "I fell in love with the
- right person, a person I knew and who knew me. I still want to
- make her laugh." He was a full-time father before it was
- fashionable, changing diapers during the day and playing clubs
- at night, while Janice worked as assistant to the dean of
- theater at Nassau Community College on Long Island. "I loved
- those years of being Mr. Mom. One of the saddest days in my life
- was when Jennifer said, `Dad, I can wash my own hair.'"
- </p>
- <p> His hunger for family comes in part because when he was
- 15, his father dropped dead after bowling a 200 game on lane
- 13. "All the fun went out of the house then," says Crystal's
- brother Rich, a producer at Hearst television. "My mother adored
- my father, and she could barely manage." From then on, part of
- what propelled Crystal was the desire to make his mother happy
- again. He became the school comedian, memorizing Bill Cosby's
- routines and performing them so well at assemblies that when
- classmates heard the actual recordings they joked that Cosby was
- stealing Crystal's material. The three brothers, including Joel,
- the oldest, who teaches at the high school they all attended,
- did the old routines at a surprise 75th birthday party for
- their mother back in their Long Beach living room.
- </p>
- <p> For years after that, it looked as if Crystal, like Buddy,
- might never break into the big time. He started out in a group
- called 3's Company, which appeared in between folk singers doing
- whaling songs at coffeehouses and never attracted much of a
- following. In 1974 he earned so little and had such high
- expenses that the IRS came calling. The auditor found the $2,200
- in travel receipts in order but asked Janice why in the world
- he kept at it for only $4,000 a year. "It's in his blood," she
- sighed.
- </p>
- <p> A rare shot at instant stardom--an appearance on the
- season premiere of Saturday Night Live in 1975--misfired when
- producer Lorne Michaels cut his spot from six minutes to one and
- Crystal pulled out. "It was awful," says Crystal. "Gilda
- [Radner] walked me to the elevator. I was crying all the way
- home on the Long Island Railroad, the tears running down the
- makeup." While friends Chevy Chase and John Belushi went on to
- become household names, he had to settle for a spot on ABC's
- wacky series Soap, playing television's first prime-time
- homosexual. Then came the ill-conceived Billy Crystal Comedy
- Hour in 1982, which NBC promoted as a male version of the Carol
- Burnett show. "We were up against The Love Boat and first-run
- movies without much network backing," Crystal remembers. "I
- learned in the trade press that the show was canceled after only
- two episodes." He scraped himself up off the floor and went back
- on the road. He appeared in a few successful HBO specials, was
- a guest host on Saturday Night Live. He became a headliner
- instead of a warm-up act, sought after for his character turns
- rather than his one-liners.
- </p>
- <p> Finally in 1985, he was invited to be a regular on SNL. It
- was the turning point of his career. His Fernando character set a
- new indoor speed record for trajectory from late-night sketch to
- universally understood wisecrack. Today people still beg him to
- flash the insincere smile of the fading, macho heartthrob of the
- '50s and intone, "You know, dahlings, it is better to look good
- than to feel good." By Monday morning, from junior high
- cafeterias to white-shoe law firms, "Excuuuse me" had been
- replaced by "You look maaahvelous." He also struck gold with
- Willie, the nerdy messenger with a knack for misfortune, who
- wails in a high voice, "I hate when that happens," and with
- Ricky, the hapless Vietnam vet who never escapes the
- neighborhood, for whom everything is "unbelieeevable."
- </p>
- <p> "That season," Crystal says, "lifted an anvil off my
- heart. It made other things possible." Like working his way up
- the emcee ladder from the Grammys to the Oscars. The Oscars
- were thrilling for the kid who once sat glued to the
- black-and-white set with the family, shrieking, "There's Loretta
- Young! Look, over there, Alan Ladd's getting out of that limo!"
- His mother Helen remembers Billy grasping his toothbrush like
- a mike, "thanking all the little people who made this possible."
- In the morning, she would put notes under the cereal bowl--"Gregory Peck in To Kill a Mockingbird"--for the Oscars
- awarded after he fell asleep.
- </p>
- <p> It is Crystal's ability to think funny that makes him the
- perfect Oscar host. After Jack Palance was named Best Supporting
- Actor for City Slickers and broke into a he-man display of
- one-handed push-ups, Crystal kept a tally through the evening
- of Palance's imaginary aerobic progress ("Jack has just
- bungee-jumped off the HOLLYWOOD sign"). Following a huge
- production number from the movie Hook with dozens of children
- suspended from the ceiling, Crystal remarked, "You know, Palance
- is the father of all those kids." Reacting to the biggest glitch--when 1920s director Hal Roach, instead of just taking a bow,
- stood at his seat with no microphone and gave a long, inaudible
- speech for his Honorary Award for lifetime achievement--Crystal gracefully joked, "The reason we couldn't hear Mr. Roach
- is that he is used to working in silent movies."
- </p>
- <p> For a hugely successful comedian, Crystal is singularly
- without attitude--not as angry as Richard Pryor, nor as
- frantic as Robin Williams, nor as political as Jay Leno, not
- alienated or crude or macho. His humor bursts the bubble of ego
- without destroying anyone's dignity. He doesn't seem to have an
- enemy in the business, which partly accounts for the success of
- Comic Relief, his annual TV show with Whoopi Goldberg and
- Williams, which raises millions of dollars for the homeless.
- </p>
- <p> He proved that his comedy was universal in Midnight Train
- to Moscow, the first TV comedy special of the glasnost era, a
- one-hour pastiche of sketches taped live at Moscow's Pushkin
- theater and interspersed with his search for his Russian
- ancestors (he finds and dances with his Aunt Sheila.) He wins
- over the audience, even getting them to stand and sit in an
- approximation of the human wave that could pass muster on a bad
- night at Shea Stadium. He mimes a debate between Gorbachev and
- Yeltsin, offers a tribute to Charlie Chaplin set to Tchaikovsky
- and, in general, plays on the small-world theme. "I was raised
- thinking you were the enemy," he tells the Russian audience.
- "You were raised thinking I was the enemy. We were both wrong.
- [Pause.] It's the French."
- </p>
- <p> For someone so preoccupied with aging and loneliness,
- Crystal doesn't have to worry about either. Offstage, he cuts
- a youthful figure in his uniform of jeans and T-shirts, with his
- impish face and wiry, still athletic build (in high school he
- won two letters in baseball and one each in basketball and
- soccer). With the success of his movies, particularly the
- box-office smashes Harry and City Slickers, he may never have
- to go back on the road, which he found unbearably lonely.
- "There's a scene in Mr. Saturday Night where Buddy is having
- dinner with his wife in the hotel bathroom, the toilet seat
- covered with white linen and crystal, while the baby sleeps in
- the next room. That's Janice and me." When the girls got older
- and Janice couldn't go along, he would drive all night to get
- back home. "Doing stand-up, you live for 8:05 p.m. The rest of
- the day is waiting. Some of my worst moments were being alone
- in the room and the phone at home is busy."
- </p>
- <p> Playing Buddy Young put him face-to-face, literally, with
- his older self, at least for the 53 days he was in old-age
- makeup. The transformation was so complete that for Janice, who
- was with him on location for much of the shooting--including
- the five hours each day getting into the makeup and the two
- hours getting out--Buddy Young became as familiar as Billy.
- After he had finished another 20-hour day of filming at the boat
- pond in Manhattan's Central Park, Janice came up behind him and
- protectively took one arm in hers and slipped the other around
- his shoulder. They looked for all the world like an old couple
- walking off into the sunset.
- </p>
- <p> That's what Crystal wants now. "I'm on indefinite
- vacation," he swears. He putters in his garden tending the
- zucchini. He says he never used humor the way Buddy did, as a
- straight-arm to keep people away, but he admits he once had a
- craving, now banished, for "that extra hug you can only get from
- strangers." Not needing hugs and wanting to be known more for
- his movies than his stand-up skills have so far kept Crystal
- from agreeing to be the host of the Academy Awards for the
- fourth year in a row. "I love being Captain of Show Business for
- one night a year, but it is hard to keep doing it better," he
- says. Gilbert Cates, producer of the Oscars show, says Crystal
- is "brilliant at it, an absolute joy to work with, and a
- trouper. He did the show last year with the flu and a fever of
- 102." If Crystal does it, he makes Oscar history--the only
- host eligible to win awards as Best Actor, Director, Writer and
- Producer. But if he doesn't win, there's always next year. He's
- considering City Slickers II.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-