Author Topic: ford gets the last laugh. chevy chase.  (Read 749 times)

Offline JB88

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ford gets the last laugh. chevy chase.
« on: January 06, 2007, 05:57:33 AM »
January 6, 2007
Op-Ed Contributor
new york times
Mr. Ford Gets the Last Laugh
By CHEVY CHASE

IN recent days, I’ve been bombarded by requests to comment on my relationship with President Gerald Ford. Until now, I’ve tried to say nothing — any remarks from me during the Ford family’s private time of grief would have been inappropriate.

The requests were understandable, I guess. You see, I made a reputation for myself 30 years ago on “Saturday Night Live” in part because of a number of sketches and “Weekend Updates” that I wrote or appeared in ridiculing Mr. Ford for his apparent “stumble-bumbling” (though he was perhaps the best athlete to have been president) and making fun of his presidency.

Luckily for me, Mr. Ford had a sense of humor.

I’ve often thought how odd it was that we became linked together. It’s not like we had a lot in common. After all, Mr. Ford had never been helped for any problems with “self-medication” in a facility that has helped so many throughout these past decades. And he had never been castigated by the press for such atrocities as “Oh! Heavenly Dog” or “Cops and Robbersons,” among other slightly awful films I had made in Hollywood.

But linked together we were. And not just in the obvious ways. If it hadn’t been for the courage of Mr. Ford’s wife, Betty, for admitting to an alcohol problem, I would never have received the help I needed in the early 1980s at the Betty Ford clinic, located not far from the Ford residence near Palm Springs. During my short stay there, I often saw Mrs. Ford personally surveying the clinic and generously offering a helping hand to those who were lucky enough to face their problems and, with the learned help of the clinic staff, appraise their behavior and their lifestyles.

One day when my wife, Jayni, came to visit me at the clinic, the Fords invited us to lunch. As it happened, Mrs. Ford had become so beloved and respected by many for her earlier openness about breast cancer and her alcoholism that a television network was in preproduction on a special bio-pic about her. Mr. Ford suggested that while we ate lunch, the four of us could view the videotape of various performances by actors being considered to play the part of the president.

Seated at a small table set for four in a simple dining room also containing a somewhat complicated videotape recorder and TV set were the former commander in chief and I making friendly small talk before lunch was brought in. And on all fours, literally on their hands and knees in front of the bulky and confusing tape machine, were Mrs. Ford and Jayni trying their best to figure out the wiring of the playback machine and the way the whole system worked, so we could watch the screen tests. Noting the effort the ladies were putting into getting the VCR to work, I suggested to Mr. Ford that perhaps we might help them out.

As I began to stand up from my chair, he took gentle hold of my arm, sat me back down and said: “No, no, Chevy. Don’t even think about it. I’ll probably get electrocuted, and you’ll be picked up and arrested for murder.”

We both laughed.

I’ll never forget that moment. My laughter was hearty and genuine.


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i always liked ford.  thought this was a nice tribute from a man who made a career out of his foibles.
this thread is doomed.
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Offline rpm

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ford gets the last laugh. chevy chase.
« Reply #1 on: January 06, 2007, 11:43:34 AM »
Wow, I'm surprised Chevy could write something so genuine and sincere. He just rose a few notches in my book.
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storch

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ford gets the last laugh. chevy chase.
« Reply #2 on: January 06, 2007, 03:26:44 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by rpm
Wow, I'm surprised Chevy could write something so genuine and sincere. He just rose a few notches in my book.
indeed

Offline Debonair

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ford gets the last laugh. chevy chase.
« Reply #3 on: January 06, 2007, 11:14:31 PM »
its some damage controls by his PR guy i think

Quote
Originally posted by Adam Tanner
Reuters
Friday, December 29, 2006; 7:49 PM


Ford didn't make his career, actor Chase says


SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - U.S. comic actor Chevy Chase, who portrayed Gerald Ford as a klutz on the 1975-76 "Saturday Night Live" television shows, says he does not enjoy the renewed attention the ex-president's death brought him.

"I'm just a guy who made some fun of Gerald Ford in 1976 and I prefer to be left alone, really," the 63-year-old comedian told Reuters this week from a Colorado ski resort where he had been skiing with his daughter.

Chase, who has starred in many Hollywood film comedies and written for television shows, said he gets upset when people say that Ford "made" his career.

"The man who 'made my career' did not do 'Fletch,' did not do 'Caddyshack,' did not write for the 'Smothers Brothers' before he wrote for 'Saturday Night Live,' did not write for 12 years before that and win Writers Guild awards.

"It's that kind of thing that comes out in the press that perpetuates myths about me that are disgusting, that hurt my feelings, that hurt my family's feelings."

Chase and other original cast member of "Saturday Night Live" once relished the national publicity that the show's irreverent comedy generated.

But since Ford's death at age 93 on Tuesday, Chase has declined interview requests from the nation's top newspapers and television news programs, which have repeatedly played excerpts of his old skits. Pundits and Internet blogs also have been debating Chase's impact on the Ford presidency.

"He did not make my career," said Chase, who spoke to Reuters twice this week by telephone. "If anything, I took his career and put it in the dumper because I did not want him to be president of this country, that's the way it really should be written."

Chase said he later became friendly with Ford and called the Republican "a very, very sweet man."

"He took my wife and I on a whole lovely trip through Grand Rapids to show us where he had been as a child and what not. We kept in touch and he was just a terrific guy," he said.


dude doesnt know his career ended 15 years ago, lol.
good thing for him he is heir to teh big urinal fortune
urinals pwn