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Theatre

Carl Reiner: The calm centre of a generation of geniuses

One of the comic greats, Carl Reiner, died this week. John Nathan pays tribute.

July 2, 2020 09:52
Carl Reiner

By

John Nathan,

John Nathan

2 min read

I have a reasonably clear idea of the places and periods I’d visit in my time machine. After checking out the dinosaurs and then fast forwarding to a Shakespeare first night — and I don’t mean a first night but the first night, as in the very first Hamlet, either of the Henry IVs or The Tempest — I would then crash through the centuries to Minton’s Playhouse in Harlem to watch Charlie Parker and Dizzie Gillespie duel with each other while simultaneously inventing bepop.

From here my machine would need only a tweak to move forward a few years to the 1950s and south a few miles, to the middle of Manhattan, landing in a sixth-floor room on West 56th Street. It was here that Neil Simon, his brother Danny, Mel Brooks, Woody Allen, M.A.S.H. creator Larry Gelbart and Carl Reiner, who died last Monday at 98, forged the funniest material known to man for Sid Caesar’s live TV series Your Show of Shows. (Allen and Gelbart turned up later, but I could toggle the machine back and forth as necessary. Says so in the instructions.)

In front of the camera, Reiner was often the deadpan straight-man to two of the funniest men alive, namely Caesar himself and later Brooks, opposite whom Reiner played the interviewer in the duo’s Two Thousand Year Old Man series of sketches.

But in that writers’ room, Reiner was the calm centre of comedy’s cauldron of talent that erupted in 
arguments over what line or inflection was funnier. The ceiling tiles were stabbed by pencils thrown around in anger or just cogitation.