Author Topic: ‘Seinfeld’ star Michael Richards is more than the worst thing that ever happened to him  (Read 195 times)

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Online jmyrlefuller

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https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/books/story/2024-05-26/michael-richards-racist-tirade-apology-book-seinfeld-kramer

 By Chris Vognar
Photography by Marcus Ubungen
May 26, 2024

Michael Richards entered the cultural consciousness, and the apartment next door, as a force of spontaneity named Cosmo Kramer. He was the rubber-limbed, unchained id of “Seinfeld,” the most popular sitcom of its era and a cultural phenomenon cultish in its fervor but too massive to really be considered a cult. Richards and Kramer worked without a net. The energy, the motion, the kavorka forever verged on chaos. But the chaos had a purpose, and it was tremendously popular. Richards won three Emmys for the role, and regularly earned the show’s biggest laughs.

Then, late one November night in 2006, the chaos tipped over into disaster. Performing a surprise set at the Laugh Factory, a venerable Los Angeles comedy club, Richards responded to some hecklers with a viciously ugly tirade. He hurled the N-word about, over and over, turning a night of uncomfortable comedy into the kind of incident that destroys careers. This was early in the era of ubiquitous cellphone cameras, when a horrible mistake could instantly be transmitted around the world. Richards quickly pivoted to damage control, making an appearance via satellite to apologize during his friend Jerry Seinfeld’s visit to “The Late Show With David Letterman.” But the damage was done. He was now widely labeled a racist, and worse.

Richards addresses his night of infamy in his new memoir, “Entrances and Exits,” and once again apologizes. The pop culture mulch machine will quickly reduce the book to soundbites: “Michael Richards says he’s not a racist!” But the Laugh Factory incident is but one tendril of Richards’ book, albeit an important one, tying into the dangerous high-wire act of performance in general and stand-up comedy in particular. It’s the story of a very lonely kid, raised by a working mother, a schizophrenic grandmother and the streets of Southern California; an army veteran who found his life’s purpose on the stage, poured everything into his craft, rose to the height of his profession, never learned to control his rage, flamed out in horrific fashion — and set about slowly rebuilding himself.

(excerpt)
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Offline berdie

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I admit I didn't read the article. What is he doing now? I don't watch regular tv so he might be on something.

A lot of people get typecast...maybe him?

Online jmyrlefuller

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I admit I didn't read the article. What is he doing now? I don't watch regular tv so he might be on something.

A lot of people get typecast...maybe him?
Well, he is a character actor. The wild, crazy act, that's what he did even before Seinfeld. But... he's basically retired now. (He's in his 70s and that kind of comedy is tougher to pull off at that age, just ask Lucille Ball.) Him going off the rails in '06 shook him and it took a long time to get over it. Now he's spending time with family and writing a book.
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He's surely not the only Hollywood actor/actress who believes a role type-cast them into oblivion.

Recently Alfonso Ribeiro (Carlton) of Fresh Prince of Bel Air said the same thing.

It's why I have a lot of artistic respect for those who can jump from one persona to another effectively.

Jeff Daniels...Dumb and Dumber to Godless...to A Man in Full

Ryan Gosling...The Barbie Movie to The Gray Man...to The Fall Guy

Tom Hardy...Peaky Blinders to The Drop...to The Bike Riders

James Duvall...The Godfather to Open Range...to The Judge.

just to name a few!
"It aint what you don't know that kills you.  It's what you know that aint so!" ...Theodore Sturgeon

"Journalism is about covering the news.  With a pillow.  Until it stops moving."    - David Burge (Iowahawk)

"It was only a sunny smile, and little it cost in the giving, but like morning light it scattered the night and made the day worth living" F. Scott Fitzgerald