I've been out on the book tour going through Pittsburgh, St Louis and Cleveland, Dayton and Orlando, Raleigh-Durham. I sign many books for people.
If you want good sketches, go pick up Sid Caesar. The best of Your Show of Shows. That's the greatest sketch comedy you'll ever see on television.
I certainly don't have any airs about myself.
When the show is over we still have to pay our rent, we have to buy food. We have to do all the same things that you do.
I don't think anybody is wanting to put me back on the air. But I'm certainly out there trying.
I do Broadway because I refuse to succumb to the stereotypical things that Hollywood does to a performer.
Canadians send us great hockey players. You also send us wonderful performers, from the beginning, with Mary Pickford.
I did sketch comedy for years. Ive always enjoyed it.
Children and even adults, when they like certain athletes, they can tell you about their batting average, about where they came from.
Even in the days when they did Othello, you didn't necessarily have to be black to play Othello. You wore the makeup.
I got tired of reading that everybody was either coming out of the closet or they were abused or had some kind of substance problem.
I have a good time watching Nick At Night with the old shows on there. I love to see I Love Lucy, although I've seen them many, many times. I think it's a security factor, it's like your blanket.
I never got any kind of mail regarding whatever I did on the show.
I never met the second happiest man, or the first happiest man, so I can't judge where I fall into that category.
I tried to make it a simple as possible for people so they could pronounce my name.
I was born in 1934 and I didn't make my first movie until 1954.
I'd like to create a role on Broadway. That would really heighten my senses.
They sometimes beat things into the ground. They don't know when to get out of a situation. They think it's going to be funny....the more you pound the nail into the ground the funnier it gets and that's not necessarily true.