Tinseltown Talks
Known for his gentle satire, basset hound eyes, and witty routines, former Chicago accountant-turned-comedian Bob Newhart turns 90 this month (Sept. 5). This year is also the 60th anniversary of Newhart's show business career – he signed with Warner Bros. Records in 1959.
In 2008, I interviewed Newhart along with fellow entertainers willing to share some thoughts on the beloved comedian's career.
Newhart said he suspected that he lacked the temperament to remain in the accounting profession back in the mid-1950s when his attitude towards taxation arithmetic could be summed up in three words: "That's close enough!" So he and a friend began writing humorous routines based on telephone conversations which they sold to radio stations.
"I eventually dropped the partner, but kept the telephone in the act," he said.
Those one-sided phone conversations have remained throughout his radio, recording, television, and stand-up career. They are as much his trademark as the straight-faced delivery and slightly forced stammer. Why keep the stammer all through his career?
"I got my home in Beverly Hills because of that stammer, so I'm not about to drop it now," he explained.
Newhart stormed onto the comedy scene in the 1960s when "The Button-Down Mind of Bob Newhart" became the first comedy record to win a Grammy for Album of the Year with its now classic routines such as "Abe Lincoln vs. Madison Avenue."
He wrote the routine in Chicago when Bill Daily (1927-2018) asked the unknown local comedian to come up with a piece about press agents. Remembered for his sidekick role in the 60s sitcom "I Dream of Jeannie," Daily went on to co-star with Newhart and actress Suzanne Pleshette a decade later for five seasons of "The Bob Newhart Show" making famous his trademark greeting, "Hi Bob!"
"I couldn't believe it when I got to work with Bob and Suzanne," Daily told me from his home in Albuquerque in 2008. "Bob is one of the nicest men who ever lived and he's beyond talented – a comic genius. And what's amazing is that Bob wasn't acting on the show – that really was Bob."
Comedian Elayne Boosler came away with the same impression when she first met Newhart after a show in Las Vegas in the late 90s. And at a time when in-your-face, crude comedy is now everywhere, it's tempting to suggest Newhart's gentler style of humor is obsolete. But Boosler doesn't think so.
"That would be like saying Mozart is outdated," she said. "Classics survive. When something has a solid foundation and is so unique and perfect, I don't think it can ever be outdated. And when you're the best at something, it just doesn't go out of style."
Bob Newhart makes no apologies for his clean humor, although he said he can still appreciate more bawdy comedians such as the late Richard Pryor.
"I even know most of the words he used!" he said. "It's just my choice to work the way I do."
The list of professional comedians who count themselves as Newhart fans is a long one and includes Carol Burnett, Don Rickles (1926-2017), and Dom DeLuise (1933-2009).
"He's as nice as he is funny," Burnett wrote in an email message.
Don Rickles was a longtime friend and Newhart delighted in recounting his first encounter with Rickles in the late 1960s in Las Vegas. The two comedians and their wives met in a cafeteria and Rickles, the perfect gentleman, invited Bob and wife Ginnie to his show.
"Don steps out on stage and the first thing out of his mouth is 'the stammering idiot from Chicago is in the audience today, along with his hooker wife from New Jersey,'" Newhart told me.
But the two families became fast friends and would eventually travel the world together on vacations.
"People would ask me how I could go on vacation with Rickles," Newhart said. "Well, it's like elevator music in the background, you just don't hear it. But we always had fun together – everyone should have a friend like that."
"Bob and I are like apples and oranges in terms of our comedy," Rickles told me in an interview I did for the Malibu Times in 2008. "But we share the same family values, make each other laugh, and enjoy each other tremendously – he's brilliant at what he does."
Dom DeLuise recalled working with Newhart in 1964 on the long-forgotten CBS variety show, "The Entertainers."
"It was my first show," DeLuise told me in 2008. "Bob would do his telephone sketches and create magical little stories that were hysterical and he'd hit a bulls-eye every time."
DeLuise was one of the millions of viewers who watched the final 1990 episode of "Newhart," Bob's second TV series set in a Vermont inn.
"Bob woke up from a dream on the set of the original 'Bob Newhart Show' with his wife Suzanne Pleshette in bed next to him," recalled DeLuise. "The entire second series had been a dream! That was just brilliant."
"The whole idea for the ending was Ginnie's," noted Newhart, who passed it on to the writers to create the show's finale. The episode remains a moment cherished in television history – the type of comic twist that the button-down mind of Bob Newhart has always relished.
When trying to sum up the comedy genius of Newhart, the words of the late comedian Ed Wynn come to mind: "A comic says funny things; a comedian says things funny."
Clearly, Bob Newhart is a master of both. Happy birthday Bob!
Nick Thomas teaches at Auburn University at Montgomery, Ala., and has written features, columns, and interviews for over 750 magazines and newspapers.