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By Susan Silver

The Poster Arrived for Hotpants in Hollywood!

Hollywood in Hotpants-Shirley Jones-Susan Silver writerI am so excited to have gotten my Posters for the book today! I just love the illustration that my great artist, Joey Helberg did. It’s starting to be real now and the book is actually coming sooner than I thought! So be on the lookout in a couple weeks and I will be posting all the information for you to buy. thanks,

 

 

 

TV GUIDE - Susan Silver in Hot Pants

THIS PICTURE WAS THE ORIGINAL IN THE TV GUIDE THAT INSPIRED US!

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By Susan Silver

Lenny Bruce and Me, Part Two

Lenny_Bruce and Susan Silver WriterThink, fish out of water, Little Annie Fannie goes to grad school. I spoke at a Brandeis Academic Conference on Lenny Bruce.  I have never have heard the word “trope” spoken so often. And please, can we retire the phrase “unpack” unless it’s about travel and luggage. Still, I met some really smart, interesting people and learned a lot, as well as treasuring Lenny Bruce even more than before.

By mistake the first morning, I got into the wrong van from the hotel to the Conference and was soon joined by Kitty, her entourage and Christy Hefner, daughter of Hugh, who had been so instrumental in supporting the exhibit as
well as Lenny’s early days in Playboy Magazine and on Playboy After Dark appearances, when others wouldn’t book him.

Christy had attended Brandeis and was thus another link to obtaining the papers.

It was a tad uncomfortable introducing myself as someone who had once gone out with her father…but Kitty was sweet and gracious.  The next day I took the other van however, just in case.

Some of the papers presented in various panels were about “Ancestors and Descendants,” borscht belt to Charlie Hebdo, how he later influenced those like George Carlin, Richard Pryor.  An actual Cantor sang a Bob Dylan song which was a tribute to Lenny (with harmonica!) Others were titled “Censorship and Law”, “Religions and Reason” covered blasphemy and humor in post War America…and even “Jewish Humor and the Holocaust” which led to a very interesting dinner conversation to say the least.

I treasured my Lenny encounter all these years and after the Conference, even more. How amazing that I met him. He was truly an Icon of our times.  He was labeled by Time Magazine as a “sick comic.” A misnomer if there ever was one. Yet it tarnished him forever.

Lenny was unique. He pushed against the limits of free speech. Brandeis University is a great place to continue the fight.  Colleges today are under such an onslaught of political correctness, “trigger” words which might offend, Halloween costume warnings; he probably couldn’t have gotten booked on campuses now. He loved to mix Yiddish and obscenities. He hated hypocrites, as he called out Bishop Sheen. In fact his religious attacks are what got him arrested. It was easier to prosecute blasphemy than obscenity. And then the nightmare began every appearance, cops and prosecutors.  Persecutors.

His reach was endless and his purpose so different than comedians working today who just try to shock and use four letter words or bodily functions and like to think they are his descendants. To me they are not. I won’t names, but I will point out Louis C K as a real disciple, Sasha Baron Cohen and Amy Schumer deserve the mantle in my opinion. Jon Stewart rates and led to John Oliver, whose profanity somehow is cute…probably the “English accent.”

But there was only one Lenny Bruce. And there will never be another. He was quoted as saying poignantly, “I’m not a comedian. I’m Lenny Bruce.” Comics often describe their work in life and death terms like I killed,” “I died up there.”  It was the first time anyone did what he did and he did die for it. Literally. He was brilliant, observant, and even in our brief time together, he pegged me correctly. As a child, I’d loved the book “The Secret Garden”, but was afraid to enter that night.  Other times I did.  Well, you’ll have to wait for the memoir.

At the end of the conference, I bought a T Shirt they had on sale, the money going to the Lenny Bruce Memorial Foundation that Kitty Bruce had established to help addicts after their rehabilitation.  I got the Extra Large so I could “wear it as a nightshirt,” as the salesperson suggested. It has an iconic full length shot of Lenny on the front, familiar slouch, hands in pockets. cigarette dangling, soulful eyes fixing you in his gaze. Sensual. Beckoning.  So now, I do sleep with Lenny…in a way.

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By Susan Silver

Lenny Bruce and Me

Because of my career, I have had the extraordinary luck to have, sometimes briefly, sometimes meaningfully, like Woody Allen’s Zelig, engaged with many of the icons of my generation. But it started even before that!

In college, I was an “extra” in the movies and caught the eye of Elvis, yeah that one, in Viva Las Vegas, but was too chicken to go out with him when he sent one of his minions to ask. (If you look really fast, I am the “unnamed Showgirl” passing by, balancing a huge gold headdress, while he woos Ann Margret by a pool table.)  I was also friends with a shy, sensitive guy at UCLA named Jim Morrison, but before the Doors, when he reinvented himself into a leather wearing sometimes scary sex symbol.

I did casting on Rowan & Martin’s Laugh-In, thereby encountering major movie stars (Sean Connery, Steve McQueen, Jim Garner), singers (Tom Jones), and strange characters (Tiny Tim) of the era. My first encounter with a politician was then also, when Richard Nixon guested, asking “Sock it to me?” Later, a political junkie, I’ve met several Presidents and visited President Bill Clinton in the Oval Office.

I worked for Mort Sahl, but I did go out with Lenny Bruce!  His mother, Sally Mar (later played on Broadway by another pal of mine, Joan Rivers) fixed me up with him when I was in college.   She was a burlesque manager and we “bonded” at a New Year’s Eve Party when she asked if I was single and would like to ‘‘meet her son.”  She called him and he actually showed up.

Recently, Brandeis University was holding a two-day seminar on: Comedy and the Constitution: The Legacy of Lenny Bruce.  They had previously acquired his papers from his daughter, Kitty, who was to attend.

As I was writing my memoir, I thought, this would be a great way to commemorate the public and refresh my private reminiscences.  I called to see if I could attend, and when they heard that I’d known him, they asked me to speak at the conference! I didn’t know what that would be like, never having been a part of an academic forum, where papers were “presented.” It turned out to be a memorable few days.

 

PART TWO TO COME NEXT FRIDAY

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By Susan Silver

The Writer Wore Hotpants, An interview with Susan Silver, TV Guide

I should be mortified that I actually wore Hot Pants to meetings. Gloria Steinem, forgive me!  But hey, it was a different time and I did get in TV Guide.

The gist of the article was about being one of the few women, in this man’s world and the very fact that TV Guide covered it was the lucky break for me that inspired a lot of other publicity and led to work.
And now, inspired the title of my memoir!

The Writer Wore Hotpants, An interview with Susan Silver, TV Guide

Cover of the issue of TV Guide with this article.

Featuring David Cassidy.

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By Susan Silver

Mary Richards and I Made it After All!

Originally published on Huffington Post, 05/13/2013

Mary_Tyler_Moore_cast_1970_1977

I was one of the original writers of “The Mary Tyler Moore Show.” It was like starting on top and as I often say, downhill after that for the next twenty years of a career. Actually, the career was good all the way through, but the experience on “Mary” was the best! The most responsive writer/producers, the most welcoming “family” of the cast, and certainly, an iconic show which can still be seen today, thanks to reruns (and I wish I got residuals, but that’s another post).

Recently, a new book, Mary and Lou and Rhoda and Ted, by Jennifer Armstrong, came out and I was again amazed and thrilled to see what the reaction was, lo these many years and a new century since we first asked “if we could make it on our own.” (Sing theme song to yourselves here.)

I was interviewed by Jen and provided some pictures and unbelievably, they all made it into the book. It’s embarrassing, for me and my ex! His haircut will haunt him forever… and since one of my outfits that I actually wore to the Emmy’s looked like something I stole from Ginger on Gilligan’s Island (don’t ask), I should be hiding in shame. But it turned out be the most gratifying and wonderful experience a girl (sorry, woman) could get.

You live on old credits just so long, but to see the response to this, particularly at a panel we just did at the 92nd St Y — ok, Tribeca branch, but still — it was amazing. Fans of the show who knew much more than I did and whose lives were impacted by the show were in attendance — guys as well as girls. Hmmm… The overall impression was that this show touched people personally in a way that most TV sitcoms today do not.

I’m not one of those people who say there is nothing great on now. I love “Modern Family,” “The Middle” and can appreciate “30 Rock, but the connection the MTM characters had, their reality, their humanity, seems to have jumped into the living rooms of the viewers and stayed until now!
OK, today there were a few potential stalkers… but no problem. (A long time ago, I did a panel in which one guy wanted to know about Pumpkin… my dog! No freakouts this time, just nice, nice
folks.)

I joked that I should be wearing hotpants as yes, I actually did in those days and it was
profiled and indelibly lives in a TV Guide article, but they don’t make them with Depends.

Remember this reference.

Anyway, I think back to those days and how Mary Richards and I were just living our lives and
not “making a statement.” The results of those lives paved the way for women who
needed a role model in media, among them Oprah and Katie Couric. At the time, the producers wanted women’s stories which were inherently different than men’s; the references, the fact that women dont “go get cleaned up,” as one of the guys said, before I corrected him: We take a bath or a shower. These little nuances that put women’s lives up on TV and gave birth to the women of today, be they Tina Fey or any other woman who created a sitcom and can trace their ambition to Mary.

But in all honesty, I never expected to get such nachas (that’s gratification in French) from something I was just doing… a long time ago.

I was feeling really good about myself and the fact that I was still well-preserved; someone in the audience said, “I must have started writing when I was 4.” I then got home and had a bit of
a reality check. The phone rang and a guy on the other end said,”Hello, Susan ?” Warily, I said yes… who is this? And he said “It’s Jim and I’m calling for a company that makes life alerts for the elderly!”

I hung up. Depends must be coming soon. Now, if someone would just do a show for Baby Boomers which was relevant to our lives as much as Mary was to Feminism. Call your networks and ask! I’m available.

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