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    ListenRodney Dangerfield
    Life
    LIFE

    “He Was Quite
    Simply the
    greatest stand
    up comedian
    there ever was”

    — Jay Leno

    Anyone can repeat a Rodney Dangerfield joke, but no one can tell one quite like the man himself. In his autobiography, It’s Not Easy Bein’ Me, we get a rare glimpse into the events that shaped Rodney’s perspective and propelled his career. If it’s history you want, that’s a good place to start.

    Rodney.com continues on as a tribute to the living philosophy of perhaps the ultimate comedic genius. We had an artistic mastermind, a comedy God, walking among us. The following pages offer a journey into his virtuous mind.

    People remember Rodney as a regular on variety programs like The Tonight Show and from a host of sidesplitting movies that incited cult followings. But if you never witnessed Rodney perform his opus, his Las Vegas act, then you missed the definitive comedic event—a contemplative glimpse into the otherwise billowing eyes of this soulful philosopher.

    The following reviews of his live shows were those Rodney cherished. He could immediately see the writers understood he what he was trying to do on stage, making their accounts essential to the true Rodney fan.

    Later, Tom Shales of The Washington Post wrote in Rodney’s obituary that “If Steinbeck’s Tom Joad or Kafka’s Joseph K had been stand-up comics, they might have been something like Rodney Dangerfield.” He then recanted, “No, wait—not at all. There was only one Rodney.”

    — Joan Dangerfield

    Rodney Running Scared—
    How a comic
    made a comeback
    from nowhere


    By Jay Cocks, Time Magazine, July 1980

    When he was a child and lost his parents at the beach, he asked a policeman, “Do you think we’ll ever find them?” “I don’t know,” came the reply. “There’s so many places they could hide.”

    No breaks, no how, no way. His father worked in a bank and got caught stealing pens. Research reveals that Rodney Dangerfield is the sap in his own family tree. The line has never been broken. Elevator operators eye him and always say the same thing: “Basement?” On a night out in a Chinese restaurant, he opens his fortune cookie and gets the check from the next table. The trauma reaches into the intimate parts of his life. He has become such a maladroit lover that he caught a peeping Tom booing him. His wife “cut me down to once a month. I’m lucky. Two guys I know she cut out completely.”

    The weeks of his life are run-on reminders of his inferiority. No luck. No chance. And of course—as a connoisseur of the hairsbreadth art of stand-up comedy will tell you—no respect. These components of Rodney Dangerfield’s fractured comic mask form one of the unlikeliest success stories around. Dangerfield was a has-been even before he was anyone at all.

    “I dropped out of show business once,” he often confesses in his act. “But nobody noticed.”

    He went into business selling paint, and scribbled jokes between appointments. By the time most businessmen are playing chicken with their first heart attack, Rodney was planning his comeback from nowhere. At 45, he made his first appearance on the Ed Sullivan Show. He was 47 when he went on Carson for the first of 63 appearances. Now, at 58, Dangerfield has a rambunctious new comedy album out and his first starring role in a Hollywood movie.

    In Caddyshack, Rodney shows up as a real estate developer who dresses in color combinations out of a Sherwin-Williams sample book and outrages the gentry at the local country club with such reflections as, “You look at that kid, you know why tigers eat their young.” Rodney must compete for attention in the film with alumni of Saturday Night Live and one mechanical gopher. He draws more laughs than the TV kids and chews up at least as much of the screen as the rodent.

    Dangerfield, who keeps his traveling to a minimum and works as much as possible out of his own club on Manhattan’s East Side, has put together one of the best comedy acts in the trade by dealing shamelessly in things other comics struggle to hide—like fear, anger and humiliation. In performance, Dangerfield is the enemy of poise.

    A minute after he hits the lights, his brow throws off sweat like a lawn sprinkler. His eyes bulge. His hands claw at his throat. He may be trying to loosen his tie, but it looks as if he is trying to strangle himself.

    The whole performance is a screwball incarnation of the comedian’s deepest nightmare: flop sweat, the purgatorial feeling of bombing out, when every joke falls like a barbell and the only laughs come when you introduce the band. Other guys fight their way past flop sweat, or cool it out. For Rodney Dangerfield, cool is a dial on a Fedders. He sets fear on parade, and all its consequences are his best punch lines.

    Jack Benny once told Dangerfield that his signature line—”I don’t get no respect”—cuts right to everyone’s soul. Indeed, Dangerfield’s best comedy is based on a futile lashing out against misery, often sexual and always social.

    “Comedy is essentially mood, not a series of one-liners,” Dangerfield says. “Every joke is a complete story.”

    The way he tells one, the audience can often see a whole life in a setup, and a fate in a punch line. “During sex my wife wants to talk to me,” he confesses, then adds: “The other night she called me from a hotel.”

    Even Dangerfield’s silliest gags have the sting of truth. How accurate they may be about his own life is another matter. He talks about “comedic license,” but whether he is doing a shotgun discourse on marriage or about growing up Jewish and poor in a subsection of New York City that is well-off and Waspy, he seems to be drawing from deep roots. Rodney was Jacob Cohen when the neighborhood kids had names “like Marianne and Biff.” When they were on the tennis courts, he was delivering groceries. He started writing gags when he was 15. At 19 he was playing the Catskills for $12 a week.

    Jobs outside the Catskills were even harder to come by. He got a spot as a singing waiter at a Brooklyn joint called the Polish Falcon, where the emcee was a woman named Sally Marr. Rodney hung around with her I son, who was in the Navy then. He called himself Lenny Bruce.

    If the Catskills were the training ground for that time, a Broadway drugstore called Hanson’s was the laboratory. Rodney, Lenny and a lot of other young guys hung out in the back booths, nursing coffee, nailing each other with wild ideas, gags, nutty notions for routines. A few made it out of the drugstore. Some, like Joe Ancis, were brilliant in the booth and on the street; Bruce once admitted that he owed maybe a third of his act to Joe. But Ancis trembled before the prospect of flop sweat. He never went onstage. Others, like Rodney, fought the flops, but never got out quite far enough. When he married Singer Joyce Indig, he was close to 30 and still far from the big time. He worried that long weeks working joints on the road would hurt the marriage. So he packed it in and started selling paint.

    During that period, he watched Lenny become a storm center, a genius and a martyr. He saw Joe Ancis go into the construction business. Rodney had two children, Brian and Melanie, but his marriage was rocky and finally fell apart. Rodney raised the kids. He also put together a new act and got a taste for a new life. Says Dangerfield:

    “I asked the club owner not to put my name in the paper, to make up another name. When he came up with Rodney Dangerfield I thought he was crazy, but I was depressed enough to go along with it. I figured, if you’re gonna change your name you might as well change it.”

    By 1967, he crashed the Sullivan Show, and by 1969 he had enough mileage behind him to settle down and open a club, from which he has been sallying forth ever since, pretty much at his own pleasure.

    Rodney says a lot of offers come in now: movies, “dozens” of TV pilots. His attitude toward them is “I don’t want to spend my time poring over scripts and memorizing. When you do standup, you are the guy on. Live entertainment is the only real medium.” It is a medium filled with ghosts. You can hear Lenny Bruce beneath the skin of some of Rodney’s cracks, though Dangerfield disclaims any specific influence. Both of them share the same manic irreverence, the same compulsive wise-mouthing and fearless telling of truth.

    They also shared the same pal, Joe Ancis, who has been boarding with Rodney and his children ever since Joe separated from his wife a couple of years back. Although Rodney occasionally pays $50 for a gag, he cooks up most of his own material, saying what he feels, working the jokes out in front of small audiences until they flow just right. “I play with a joke a long time,” Dangerfield admits. “I came up with this one sitting in the sauna at the health club yesterday: ‘When I got married all the property was put in two names. And her mother’s.’ ”

    The hands reach for his throat. The eyes bulb out of his face like two Christmas ornaments dropped into a holiday pudding. “Do you think that’s funny?” he asks.

    Stage:
    At the Hellinger,
    Rodney
    Dangerfield


    By Stephen Holden, New York Times, February 1988

    At age 66, Rodney Dangerfield is the youngest older comedian - or might he be the oldest younger comedian? - on the block. Whichever, Mr. Dangerfield, who opened a two-week engagement at the Mark Hellinger Theater on Tuesday, is the rare comic whose popularity transcends generations.

    In contrast to the mature crowds that flocked to Jackie Mason’s ‘’World According to Me!,’’ Mr. Dangerfield’s raucous opening-night audience seemed less than half his age.

    Having discovered the feisty saucer-eyed complainer with his hang-dog expression and pugnacious jaw in such movies as ‘’Caddyshack’’ and ‘’Back to School,’’ this audience greeted him with the sort of enthusiasm normally reserved for respected aging rock stars.

    The phenomenon of this veteran comic’s popularity among the young brings up an interesting paradox. To his own generation, his savage, bellowing self-deprecation and wife-bashing have made him something like the male equivalent of Phyllis Diller or a Jackie Gleason stripped of innocence and faith. But to those half his age, Mr. Dangerfield’s resentful roars mark him as the godfather of the cutting edge of comedy. To them, he is the prototype for hostile rock-influenced ‘’screamers’’ like Sam Kinison, to whose career Mr. Dangerfield has given crucial support.

    Onstage, Mr. Dangerfield is a verbal boxer who dances lightly around a theme, then closes in for the kill, delivering a barrage of one- and two-line punches in an accelerated rapid-fire delivery that becomes a orgiastic flurry of jabs.

    The pleasure in watching Mr. Dangerfield perform comes more from his delivery than from his material. He never loses his timing as he lands his often smutty punches in a virile drill-instructor’s growl that deepens and expands as the action speeds up.

    Mr. Dangerfield’s endless jokes about his failing sexual powers, his putdowns of marriage, his reflections on ugliness, obesity and stupidity, may be only slightly more sophisticated than the ‘’take my wife, please’’ school of stand-up humor out of which he emerged. By injecting it with freewheeling obscenity, he has modernized this school and given the jokes a contemporary immediacy.

    Mr. Dangerfield’s present pinnacle of popularity makes his patented ‘’no respect’’ shtick, which is no longer the center of his act, ring with a certain irony. If in leaner times he represented a working-class everyman railing against his own ordinariness, today he can’t help but look like a winner who commands loads of respect and whose style of combativeness is offered as successful strategy for survival.

    In his Broadway engagement, Mr. Dangerfield is sticking to his customarily narrow range of subjects: sex, physical ugliness, more sex, old age, still more sex, drugs and alcohol and yet again more sex.

    Mr. Dangerfield’s sexual humor can be funny, though it does begin to wear thin after the umpteenth joke about impotence and meager anatomical endowment. It must be said, however, that in the age of the sex therapist, these jokes tap into primal anxieties that are only fed by today’s sexualized climate. There is finally something liberating about the free-floating hostility in which Mr. Dangerfield invites his audiences to wallow. In one pithy bit, Mr. Dangerfield pretends to be flicking a television remote control switch. As an imaginary parade of talking heads rolls by, he lambasts it with contemptuous profanity. “That’s how I get my hate out,’’ he says. Who among us hasn’t felt the same disgust while wandering through the video wasteland?”

    RODNEY DANGERFIELD,
    BEATING
    TROUBLES TO THE
    PUNCH LINE


    By Tom Shales, Washington Post, October 2004

    Many labels were hung on Rodney Dangerfield during his long, frenetic heyday as the funniest joke teller in America. His was “the comedy of angst,” or “the comedy of anxiety,” or “the comedy of the loser.” What it really was was the comedy of funny. It was the comedy of laughter. His act wasn’t conceptual or observational or stream-of-consciousness; it was a bunch of jokes.

    The jokes tended to be self-deprecating and selfpitying and what they said at heart was “We’re all in this together.” But we’re not all in it together anymore. Rodney Dangerfield died at 82 Tuesday in New York after a long series of illnesses and operations.

    “I don’t get no respect” was, of course, his signature line, but to the end he had the respect, and the gratitude, of everybody who ever laughed so hard they cried.

    In the ‘70s and ‘80s, Dangerfield’s appearances on “The Tonight Show With Johnny Carson” were major television events, whether in college dorms or, who knows, retirement villages. Carson loved comedians and found Rodney so relentless in his pursuit of the ever-elusive next laugh that just the idea of Dangerfield amused him.

    Dangerfield would come out from behind the curtain and do five or six minutes of prepared material, then sit on the couch and do several more minutes of jokes thinly disguised as conversation, Carson barely getting a word in except to set up more jokes. He’d ask Dangerfield, “How’s your health?” and Dangerfield would do a few minutes of health jokes, always involving his physician, the mythical “Dr. Vinnie Boom Botz,” being referred to of late by David Letterman on his own show.

    He didn’t like it when he visited his doctor one time and was told he was crazy, Dangerfield recalled. “I said, ‘Oh yeah? Well I want another opinion.’ The doctor says, ‘Okay — you’re ugly, too.’ ”

    Even at the dentist’s he was plagued. “I told my dentist, what can I do about having such yellow teeth? He said, ‘Wear a brown tie.’ ”

    One night Dangerfield tore through his sit-down routine so fast that he ended early and so, mopping his brow with a handkerchief, no more jokes available, he turned to Carson and simply asked, “So what’s new with you?” Carson laughed so hard at this that he literally fell off his chair. They were gorgeous together.

    Though he had two careers as a comedian — the first, as Jack Roy, began at the age of 15 — it was the second one, started late in life, that made Dangerfield a star and, in his rumpled black suit, solid red tie and unmade bed of a face, an American icon.

    The success in other people’s clubs and on TV enabled him to open Dangerfield’s, a homey comedy club on Manhattan’s East Side. Dangerfield would roam through the crowd in his trademark silk bathrobe, greeting guests and watching the new comics. He was infallibly generous about giving young talent exposure at his club, and on his memorable HBO specials, where Roseanne Barr made her first big splash. He supported one of the most audacious and irreverent comics ever, the great Sam Kinison.

    Dangerfield was thoroughly hip; he “got” all the jokes, including the ones he didn’t tell. He got all the jokes, he was all the jokes. Never did he break up at his own material, though. He was too worried about it. He slaved over it — sometimes with co-writers — into the wee hours, scribbling jokes on the lined pages of big notebooks.

    His huge popularity may have been a reaction to all the pseudo-intellectual comics who stood before brick walls and talked about their neuroses. Dangerfield didn’t talk about his neuroses; he talked about how little success he was having in bed. “I asked one girl if she was going to hate herself in the morning. She said, ‘I hate myself now.’ ”

    Or: “I remember one date I had, we ran into some guy she knew and she introduced us. She said, ‘Steve, this is Rodney. Rodney, this is goodbye.’ ”

    Eventually he was able to star in such movies as “Easy Money” and “Back to School,” respectably funny if not artful comedies, and in “Caddyshack,” now a cult hit so beloved that some of its fans know the whole script by heart. Dangerfield plays a boor, a vulgarian, the ugly American. It was a stretch, but he brought it off.

    Even in his movie roles, the jokes were on him — ridiculing the way he looked or talked or barged through life. He was a study in manic misery, hilarious homeliness, Emmett Kelly with a voice.

    Perhaps if Steinbeck’s Tom Joad or Kafka’s Joseph K had been stand-up comics, they might have been something like Rodney Dangerfield.

    No, wait — not at all. Forget that stuff. There was only one Rodney — one put-upon, perpetually pained, always discouraged Rodney. If he looked for that famous silver living, it would fall out of a cloud and hit him on the head. His was a humor that, like so many of the great comics of his generation (though his popularity spanned several generations), grew out of pain. Born Jacob Cohen, he remembered all his life how teachers — not just students, but teachers — made anti-Semitic remarks about him in front of classmates at New York’s P.S. 99.

    And so he told jokes about being a miserable kid. But not about that aspect of being a miserable kid. The anger never came out in the comedy — not directly. He was a professional joke teller, not a guy looking for psychoanalysis from an audience in a nightclub, so you got jokes and gags, not anecdotes about the way it really was.

    “My mother had morning sickness after I was born,” he’d say of his earliest days.

    “My old man didn’t help, either. One time I was kidnapped. They sent back a piece of my finger. He said he wanted more proof!”

    “I was lost at the beach once and a cop helped me look for my parents. I said to him, ‘You think we’ll find them?’ He said, ‘I don’t know, kid. There’s so many places they could hide.’ ”

    Thus, according to his act — the way Chaplin’s or Keaton’s or Harold Lloyd’s characters were established — the patterns of this Rodney’s ramshackle life were immutably established.

    “The other day they asked me to leave a bar I was drinking in. They said they wanted to start the happy hour.”

    “Once the cops arrested me for jaywalking. The crowd shouted, ‘Don’t take him alive!’ ”

    The litany of abuse would be punctuated with the occasional “I tell ya, I don’t get no respect. No respect at all.” The crowd would cheer.

    And then back to the jokes.

    The no-respect theme was encouraged by one of the most artful and adored of all stand-ups, Jack Benny. “He was an ace. He was a doll,” Dangerfield recalled in a 1979 interview. “And he says to me, ‘Rodney, I’m cheap and I’m 39, that’s my image, but your ‘no respect’ thing, that’s into the soul of everybody. Everybody can identify with that. Everyone gets cut off in traffic, everyone gets stood up by a girl, kids are rude to them, whatever.’ He says to me, ‘Every day something happens where people feel they didn’t get respect.’ ”

    No matter how Dangerfield complained onstage about how life treated him, the comic never exploited it for pathos or poignancy. Still, there was just a trace of it in a soliloquy in which he talked about the fact that nobody ever gave him “one of these,” and made the “okay” sign, the little circle, with his thumb and finger. So if you saw him in the street after the show or in a club later or anywhere, he would tell an audience, it would be doing him a great service just to flash him “one of these.”

    He figured it wasn’t much to ask. “You know what the trouble with me is? I appeal to everyone who can do me absolutely no good,” he’d mockingly lament. “At my age, if I don’t drink, don’t smoke, and eat only certain foods, what can I look forward to? From this point on, if I take excellent care of myself — I’ll get very sick and die.”

    And so he did.

    But he left behind infinite echoes of laughter, laughter that survives somehow even if it appears to have evaporated. And who knows but that right now, at this very moment, someone, somewhere is giving Rodney “one of these.”

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    The facts on rodney

    Birth Day

    Nov 22, 1921

    Career Peak

    1980s

    Movie Roles

    22

    Birth Name

    Jacob Cohen

    Favorite City

    Vegas

    Lite Beer Commercials

    20

    Favorite Film Role

    Al Czervik

    Johnny Carson Appearances

    70

    First Stand-Up

    1942

    First Stage Name

    Jack Roy

    Number of Children

    2

    Favorite Activity

    Smoking Weed

    Skits on the Dean Martin Show

    28

    Autobiography

    It's Not Easy Bein’ Me

    Favorite Food

    Chinese

    Merv Griffin Show Appearances

    45

    Catchprase

    I don’t get no respect

    Successful Nightclubs

    1

    (Dangerfield’s)

    Ed Sullivan Show Appearances

    16

    Deceased

    Oct 5, 2004
    Age 82

    10 Things to Know

    1. 01

      Born Jacob Cohen on November 22, 1921 in Babylon, Long Island to Hungarian Jewish immigrant parents.

    2. 02

      Offstage, Rodney was nothing like his hapless comedic persona. He was a loving husband, father and mentor.

    3. 03

      His first distinctive joke set-up was “nothing goes right.”

    4. 04

      Some chatty mob guys were the unintended inspiration for his signature catchphrase, “I don’t get no respect.” Rodney overheard them talking about respect—during one of his shows—and it was a Eureka moment for him.

    5. 05

      Rodney gave many comedians early breaks, including Jim Carrey, Tim Allen, Roseanne Barr, Jerry Seinfeld, and Sam Kinison.

    6. 06

      A black suit with a red tie was Rodney’s signature getup. One of his outfits is part of the permanent collection at the Smithsonian Museum in Washington, D.C.

    7. 07

      He was nicknamed Rodney Dangerfield by a club owner who, on Rodney’s request, introduced him as someone other than Jack Roy.

    8. 08

      In 1995, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences denied Rodney entry. After an exceptionally loud outcry by fans, the Academy reversed their decision and offered membership to him, which he then declined.

    9. 09

      His first Las Vegas appearance was at the Sands Hotel, opening for Dionne Warwick.

    10. 10

      Rodney held many odd jobs as a teenager, including selling ice cream on the beach, delivering groceries, taking care of a newsstand, working at a soda fountain, barking for the theater, and driving a fish truck.

    More ▼
    ListenRodney Dangerfield
    Jokes
    JOKES

    Jokes

    Listen01
    I tell ya, when I was a kid I had it rough. Once on my birthday, my old man gave me a bat. The first day I played with it, it flew away.
    Listen02
    I tell ya with girls, I never have any luck. A belly-dancer told me I turned her stomach.
    Listen03
    I tell ya, nothing works out. I bought a book, ‘100 Ways To Make Love’. I ended up in traction—it was a misprint.
    Listen04
    I tell ya with my old man, I never got respect. He told me, “Never take candy from strangers, unless he offered me a ride.”
    Listen05
    Last week I told my wife, “If you would learn to cook, I could fire the chef.” She said, “If you could learn to make love, I could fire the chauffeur.”
    Listen06
    What a childhood I had. My parents sent me to a child psychiatrist. The kid didn’t help me at all.
    Listen07
    Well I don’t get respect from anyone. I met the surgeon general. He offered me a cigarette.
    Listen08
    From my wife, I don’t get no respect. I fell asleep with a cigarette in my hand. My wife lit it.
    Listen09
    I tell ya with girls, I don’t get no respect. I had a date with a girl, I waited two hours at the corner. A girl showed up. I said “Are you Louise?” She said, “Are you Rodney?” I said, “Yeah.” She said, “I’m not Louise.”
    Listen10
    I tell ya, when I was a kid I got no respect. My parents got divorced. They had a custody fight over me. No one showed up.
    Listen11
    What a doctor I got. I saw him, I told him, “Doc, I broke my arm in two places.” He told me to keep out of those places.
    Listen12
    When I was born, I got no respect. The doctor told my mother, “I did all I could, but he pulled through anyway.”
    Listen13
    I tell ya with my dog, I don’t get no respect. He keeps barking at the front door. He don’t want to go out, he wants me to leave.
    Listen14
    I know I’m ugly. My dog found out we look alike. He killed himself.
    Listen15
    I tell ya my old man was strict. He said, “No drinking in the house.” I had two brothers who died of thirst.
    Listen16
    Oh when I say I’m lonely, I’m very lonely. Well the other day in traffic, this guy gave me the finger, and I enjoyed it.
    Listen17
    I tell ya with with my dog, I don’t get no respect. His favorite bone is in my finger.
    Listen18
    I tell ya when I was a kid, I got no respect. My old man took me to a freak show. They said, “Get the kid out, he’s distracting from the show.”
    Listen19
    Oh she was a wild girl. But her idea of safe sex is making sure the car doors are all locked.
    Listen20
    I tell ya with girls, I don’t get no respect. I was making love to one girl and she started to cry. I said, “What’s the matter, you going to hate yourself in the morning?” She said, “No I hate myself right now.”
    Listen21
    I tell ya last Christmas I got no respect. I gave my kid a BB gun. He gave me a sweatshirt with a bulls eye in the back.
    Listen22
    Oh when I was a kid, I got no respect. I played hide and seek. They wouldn’t even look for me.
    Listen23
    I tell ya, my old man, he was never nice. I asked him if I can go ice skating on the lake. He told me to wait until it gets warmer.
    Listen24
    Oh I’m a bad drinker. I got loaded one night, the next day I ended up in front of a judge. He told me, “You’re here for drinking.” I said, “Ok your honor, let’s get started.”
    Listen25
    My kid he drives me nuts. For three years now he goes to a private school. He won’t tell me where it is.
    Listen26
    I tell ya when I was a kid, I got no respect. Well the time I was kidnapped. They sent my old man a note. They said, “We owe $5,000, or you’ll see your kid again.”
    Listen27
    Oh with my old man, when I was a kid I got no respect. I told him, “How can I get my kite in the air?” He told me to run off a cliff.
    Listen28
    I tell ya, I come from a tough neighborhood. Well the other night, a guy pulled a knife on me. I could see it wasn’t a real professional job, there was butter on it.
    Listen29
    You know, the doctors say when you have sex, you lose 150 calories. I had sex once. I lost 150 calories, my watch and my wallet.
    Listen30
    I tell ya, when I was a kid I got no respect. I told my mother I’m going to run away from home. She said, “On your mark…”
    Listen31
    In high school, I got no respect. I shared a locker with a mop.
    Listen32
    Oh I tell ya, she was old. Well when she was born, the Dead Sea wasn’t even sick.
    Listen33
    I tell ya, with my doctor, I don’t get no respect. I swallowed a bottle of sleeping pills. He told me to go home, and have a few drinks and get some rest.
    Listen34
    I tell ya, when I was a kid I got no respect. When I went on a roller coaster, my old man, he told me to stand up straight.
    Listen35
    When I was a kid, I had no friends. I remember the sea-saw. I had to keep running from one end to the other.
    Listen36
    I tell ya, my old man, he never liked me. He told me to start at the bottom. He was teaching me how to swim.
    Listen37
    Oh I tell ya, with sex, my wife thinks twice before she turns me down. Once in the morning and once at night.
    Listen38
    I know I’m ugly. I tell my doctor I want to get a vasectomy. He said with a face like mine, I don’t need one.
    Listen39
    I tell ya, when I was a kid I got no respect. My uncle’s dying wish, he wanted me on his lap. He was in the electric chair.
    Listen40
    Oh I tell ya, with my wife, I don’t get no respect. I made a toast on her birthday to ’the best woman a man ever had.’ The waiter joined me.
    Listen41
    I tell ya, I’m in bad shape. I joined a weight lifting class. They started me with balloons. Very bad shape. I hurt myself playing Simon Says.
    Listen42
    I tell ya, with my wife, I got no sex life. Just when I get going, she wakes up.
    Listen43
    I tell ya, my wife, she likes to talk during sex. Last night she called me from a motel.
    Listen44
    Every time my wife takes the car, there’s trouble. The other day, she came home, there were 100 dents in the car. She told me she took a short-cut through a golfing range.
    Listen45
    The other night I came home, I figured I’d play it cool, you know. Let my wife make the first move. She went to Florida.
    Listen46
    I tell ya, with me, nothing works out. My psychiatrist told me my wife and me should have sex every night. Now we’ll never see eachother.
    Listen47
    Oh with my wife, I don’t get no respect. She kisses the dog on the lips and she won’t drink from my glass.
    Listen48
    Oh with my wife, I don’t get no respect. Last night some guy knocked on the front door. She told me to hide in the closet.
    Listen49
    I tell ya, when I was a kid, all I knew was rejection. My yo-yo, it never came back.
    Listen50
    I tell ya, when I was a kid, my old man never liked me. He took me to the zoo. He told me to go over to the leopard and play connect the dots.
    Listen51
    I tell ya, when I was a kid, I got no respect. Every week my old man took me to the zoo. I found out he was trying to make a trade.
    52
    I told my wife she was lousy in bed. She went out to get a second opinion.
    53
    My wife told me she wants plastic surgery. She got plastic surgery. I cut up her credit cards.
    54
    The other night my wife met me at the front door. She was wearing a sexy negligee. The only trouble is she was coming home.
    55
    Nothing works out. I bought an Apple computer. There was a worm in it!
    56
    I like Southern girls; they talk so slow. By the time they say no, I made it already.
    57
    Just remember, it’s lonely at the top, when there’s no one on the bottom.
    58
    One thing about football that don’t make sense, the two-minute warning. Everyone knows you got two minutes to play, what’s the big deal? To me, a two-minute warning is like you’re in bed with a chick; the phone rings. It’s her husband on his car phone. He says, “Honey, I’ll be home in two minutes”. That’s a two-minute warning.
    59
    Today they got girls telling you from the sidelines, telling you all about football; right, wrong, mistakes. I don’t like a girl reporting to me about football. I don’t like a girl telling me I’m two inches short.
    60
    I tell ya, my wife and I, we have our own arrangement. Once a week, I go out with the boys and once a week she goes out with the boys.
    61
    I told my doctor, I broke my arm in two places. He told me to keep outta those places.
    62
    Well I’m getting old. I’ve got no sex life. If I squeeze into a parking space, I’m sexually satisfied.
    63
    Oh, my wife signed me up for a bridge club. Haha, yeah, I jump off next Tuesday.
    64
    When I have sex with my wife, I always have a mirror in the room. Yeah, I put it under her nose to see if she’s breathing.
    65
    I can’t lose any weight. I tried jogging; I keep running into restaurants.
    66
    Well I have no sex life. A dog can watch me in the bedroom to learn how to beg. He taught my wife to roll over and play dead.
    67
    My trouble is my sex life is on hold and I got no one to hold it!
    68
    I got no sex life. At my age, I need a designated lover.
    69
    I made love to an inflatable girl. Now I got an inflatable guy looking for me.
    70
    When I was a kid, we were poor. We were so poor the rainbow was in black and white.
    71
    Kids are wild today. They get pregnant from eating chicken. Yeah, it’s finger licking good but one thing leads to another...
    72
    I was crossing the street; I was hit by the Bookmobile. I was lying there in pain, moaning, and the guy went, “Shhhhh”.
    73
    I live in a tough neighborhood. In my neighborhood they got a children’s zoo. Last week four kids escaped.
    74
    Oh I told a guy, kids today, the way they dress you can’t tell boys from girls. I was looking at one kid, I said, what is that a boy or a girl? He said, that’s a boy. I said, sure you knew, you’re his father. He said, I’m not his father, I’m his mother.
    75
    When I was a kid, my whole neighborhood made fun of my brother. They called him four eyes. Later on he got glasses. Now they call him eight eyes.
    76
    I know I’m getting old. My insurance company, they sent me half a calendar.
    77
    I got no respect. When I was kidnapped, they sent back a piece of my finger. My old man said he wanted more proof.
    78
    What a childhood I had. When I was 10 years old, I found out Alpo was dog food.
    79
    When I was a kid, I was ugly. When I was born, the doctor smacked my mother.
    80
    I tell ya, yesterday, that was a beauty. I found a guy’s wallet. Inside was a picture of my two kids.
    81
    I live in a bad neighborhood. I saw two guys share a taxi. One guy took the radio and the other guy took the tires.
    82
    When I was a kid, we were poor. My teeth were all yellow and I mean yellow. When I smiled, I would stop traffic.
    83
    When I was a kid, we were poor. We used to sleep six in one bed. I didn’t know what it was like to sleep alone until I got married.
    84
    I found out how the limbo got started. A midget sneaked into the pay toilet.
    85
    I think a hooker is more important than a doctor. I mean, 4 o’clock in the morning drunk, I’d never walk up five flights of stairs to see a doctor.
    86
    My doctor told me not to make any quick moves and my wife told me not to make any moves.
    87
    I remember I told my wife, will you marry me? She said, if you really loved me, you wouldn’t ask me to do this.
    88
    When we got married, the first thing my wife did was put everything under both names. Yeah, her and her mother’s.
    89
    I loaned a guy $10,000 to have plastic surgery. Now I can’t find the guy. I don’t know what he looks like!
    90
    Oh, I’m getting old. A girl asked me if I wanted to have some super sex. I took the soup.
    91
    I did a show. The whole audience was gay. I did great. I mean, after the show.
    92
    My wife told me, she was going to run away from home. Luckily, I live on a cliff.
    93
    When my wife was pregnant, I told her, I said honey, if it looks like you it’ll be beautiful. She said, if it looks like you, it’ll be a miracle.
    94
    My wife, how could I trust her? My kid was born; 4 guys gave me cigars.
    95
    The first time I hitchhiked, I got beat up. Yeah, I used the wrong finger.
    96
    I was an ugly kid. Every time my old man wanted sex, he’d just show them my picture.
    97
    When I was a kid, I was ugly. My mother breastfed me through a straw.
    98
    I had an uncle who was really a big drinker. He saw a sign “Drink heaven dry”. He went up there. When he died, they had his body cremated. The fire burned for four days.
    99
    I saw my psychiatrist. I told him Doc, I keep thinking I’m a dog. He said, how long has this been going on? I told him, since I was a puppy. Then he told me to lay on the couch, facedown.
    100
    My psychiatrist, he’s a beauty. He told me I’ve got a split personality and from now on, I have to pay him twice.
    101
    My wife is never nice. She won a trip for two to Las Vegas. She went twice.
    102
    My wife, she’s happy I’ve got a split personality. She likes two guys at once.
    103
    I tell you, sex with my wife is ridiculous. Her favorite position is facing Bloomingdale’s.
    104
    I tell ya, my wife and I, we got problems. I want to see a marriage counselor and she wants to go on the Jerry Springer show.
    105
    By the way, I tried to get on the Jerry Springer show. Yeah, they turned me down; I got all my teeth.
    106
    I tell ya, I never had any luck with girls. I took out a Mexican girl. It took me 2 years; I taught her how to speak English. Her first words were, “I’m leaving you”.
    107
    I told my landlord I wanted to live in a more expensive apartment. He raised my rent.
    108
    I tell ya, my family. Most of them are drunks. When I was a kid, I got lost. They put my picture on a bottle of Scotch.
    109
    I took a survey: “Why men get up in the middle of the night”. 10% get up to go to the bathroom. And 90% get up to go home.
    110
    They took a survey. They had 1,000 prisoners. They all said to them, “For your last meal, what would you like to have?” 25% said steak. 24% said lobster. And 50% said Jennifer Lopez.
    111
    I worked a nightclub. The boss told me he’d pay me under the table. I waited there for 2 hours; he never showed up.
    112
    People have too much hate in them. I hear these guys talk, they hate their mother-in-law; they hate their mother-in-law. Me, I love my mother-in-law. It’s her daughter I can’t stand.
    113
    The other night, I told my wife, I hurt my little pinky. She said that’s all right, we’re not gonna have sex anyway.
    114
    Last night my wife told me people are looking in our bathroom; I gotta buy shades. I said, look, let’s let them keep looking all right; they’ll buy the shades.
    115
    My wife has a temper. The other night she was yelling, “you’re an animal, you’re an animal”. So I took a leak in the living room and I told her, from now on, that’s my territory.
    116
    My doctor told me he’ll have me on my feet in two weeks. He was right. I got his bill; I had to sell my car.
    117
    I saw one place that had a sign “pop was bottomless”. I went inside, there was no one there.
    118
    I told my wife, how come when we kiss, your eyes are always open? She told me she was on the lookout for her boyfriend.
    119
    I bought a waterbed. I went to grab my wife; she had drifted away.
    120
    I asked my wife last night, “Were you faking it?” She said, “No, I was really sleeping.”
    121
    I’m not a sexy guy. My wedding night, my wife said, “this is it!” I told her, “Honey, that was it.”
    122
    My wife can’t cook at all. I got the only dog who begs for Alka-Seltzer.
    123
    Last night I had a dream. I took a walk down memory lane. And my wife was working it.
    124
    My wife and I, are you kidding? Our relationship is on and off. Every time I get on, she tells me to get off.
    125
    I went back to my hometown, to visit all my ex-schoolteachers. All I had to make was one stop – the cemetery.
    126
    When I go to a nude beach, I always take a ruler with me. In case I have to prove something.
    127
    I never had any luck with a nude beach. I went to a nude beach; they kicked me out. They said it’s impolite to point.
    128
    Well that was a wild beach. The day I was there they had a wedding. A wedding on a nude beach; everyone knew who the best man was, you know?
    129
    I said to a girl, come on honey, I’ll show you where it’s at. She said, you better. Last one couldn’t find it.
    130
    I was making love to a girl. I told her, you’re so flat chested. She said, get off my back.
    131
    When I was a kid, everyone thought I got plenty of girls. I’d go to a drive in movie and do push-ups in the backseat of my car.
    132
    My wife told me to go to hell. I told her, you’re too late, I’m there already.
    133
    My wife and I, we don’t think alike. I mean, she donates money to the homeless and I donate money to the topless.
    134
    My wife, she keeps me in line. No matter how many guys are ahead of me.
    135
    When I was a kid, my parents went shopping. They always took me with them, ya know. That way they could park in the handicap section.
    136
    What a childhood I had. When I took my first step, my old man tripped me.
    137
    One time my whole family played hide and seek. Yeah, they found my mother in Pittsburg.
    138
    My doctor told me to watch my drinking. Now I drink in front of a mirror.
    139
    I drink too much, way too much. My doctor drew blood. He started to run a tab.
    140
    I’m getting old. I’ve got no sex life. I get tired just holding up the magazine.
    141
    At my age, I want to get sex over quickly. Then I can take my nap.
    142
    I tell you, I’m not a sexy guy. I was a centerfold for Playboy magazine; the staples covered everything.
    143
    A lot of girls turn me down, you know? One girl turned me down. She told me she had to go to work in the morning. I told her I’d be finished by then.
    144
    I tell you, this girl was fat. When she walks backward, she starts beeping. I mean fat; I hit her with my car. She told me why don’t you go around me. I told her I didn’t have enough gas.
    145
    I know the best way to get girls. I hang out at women’s’ prisons and wait for the parolees.
    146
    Last week I noticed my gums were shrinking. I was brushing my teeth with Preparation H.
    147
    My wife, she loves vacations. Last night she told me, “I wanna go someplace I’ve never been before.” I took her to a men’s room.
    148
    I know how to satisfy my wife in bed; I leave.
    149
    When we got married, my wife told me I was one in a million. I found out she was right.
    150
    Last night I came home, I picked up the extension. My wife was talking to some guy on the phone. I told the guy, “Don’t let her fool you. She’ll fake it!”
    151
    When I was a kid, we were poor. We were so poor when my father died, they asked my mother, “Plastic or paper?”
    152
    I was poor. I used to go to orgies to eat the grapes.
    153
    People say fish is good for a diet. But fish should never be cooked in water. Fish should be cooked in its natural oils: Texaco, Mobil...
    154
    Hey, I’m trying a new diet. The diet is Viagra and prune juice. Now I don’t know if I’m coming or going.
    155
    Girls, they don’t think right. I had a date with a girl; she had mirrors all over her bedroom. She told me to come over and bring a bottle; I got Windex.
    156
    My wife was never nice. On our first date, I asked her if I could give her a goodnight kiss on her cheek. She bent over.
    157
    Hey, you wanna have laughs? Do what I do. When I go through a tollbooth, I tell the guy, the car behind me’s paying for two.
    158
    I had a good time last week. The end of the show, the whole audience was midgets. I tell ya, I got a standing ovation and I didn’t even know it.
    159
    Just remember, a crowded elevator smells different to a midget.
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    Comedy Albums

    I Don't Get No Respect!

    I Don’t Get No Respect

    1980

    1. I Don’t Get No Respect Set 1
    2. I Don’t Get No Respect Set 2
    No Respect

    No Respect

    1981

    1. No Respect
    2. Son of No Respect
    Rappin' Rodney

    Rappin’ Rodney

    1983

    1. Rodney Rappin’
    2. Rappin’ Rodney
    3. Rodney Continues Rappin’

    View Video »
    What's In A Name

    What’s In A Name

    1995

    1. What’s in a Name
    2. Someone’s Gonna Get Hurt
    3. Get a Horse
    4. Lost
    5. Flying Southern Comfort
    6. The Gourmet
    7. Home Sweet Home
    1. My Neighborhood
    2. The Hold Up
    3. Unhandy Husbands
    4. That’s Show Biz
    La Contessa

    La Contessa

    1995

    1. La Contessa
    2. It’s Lonely At The Top
      (When There’s No One On The Bottom)
    Romeo Rodney

    Romeo Rodney

    2005

    1. They Say You’re Laughin’ at Me
    2. I Believe
    3. Strangers in the Night
    4. She’s Funny That Way
    5. Fools Rush In
    6. He
    7. Somewhere There’ a Party
    1. I Understand
    2. My Foolish Heart
    3. I Spent My Birthday in Las Vegas
    4. Strangers in the Night
    5. Rappin’ Rodney
    The Best of Rodney Dangerfield

    20th Century Masters - The Millenium Collection: The Best of Rodney Dangerfield

    2005

    1. No Respect
    2. What’s in a Name
    3. Get a Horse
    4. Flying Southern Comfort
    5. My Neighborhood
    6. The Hold Up
    1. Unhandy Husbands
    2. That’s Showbiz
    Greatest Bits

    Greatest Bits

    2008

    1. What’s in a Name
    2. Am I Too Fast for This Table?
    3. I Tell You with Bars I Am Never Lucky
    4. No Respect at All
    5. Finiculi Finicula
    6. Rappin’ Rodney
    More ▼
    ListenRodney Dangerfield
    Films
    Films

    Films Starring Rodney

    Film Poster

    The Projectionist

    1971

    “Renaldi, The Bad”

    A projectionist bored with his everyday life begins fantasizing about his being one of the superheroes he sees in the movies he shows.

    Film Poster

    Caddyshack

    1980

    “Al Czervik”

    An exclusive golf course has to deal with a brash new member and a destructive dancing gopher.

    Film Poster

    Easy Money

    1983

    “Monty Capuletti”

    To inherit his mother-in-law’s colossal fortune, a hard living, gambling addict must change his unhealthy ways before it gets the best of him.

    Film Poster

    Back to School

    1986

    “Thornton Melon”

    To help his discouraged son get through college, a fun-loving and obnoxious rich businessman decides to enter the school as a student himself.

    Film Poster

    Rover Dangerfield

    1991

    “Rover Dangerfield”

    A Vegas show dog gets ditched in the sticks and ends up working on a farm.

    Film Poster

    Ladybugs

    1992

    “Chester Lee”

    To climb the corporate ladder to success, a guy agrees to coach the company’s all girl soccer team with the help of his secret weapon: his fiancee’s son.

    Film Poster

    Natural Born Killers

    1994

    “Ed Wilson”

    Two victims of traumatized childhoods become lovers and psychopathic serial murderers irresponsibly glorified by the mass media.

    Film Poster

    Meet Wally Sparks

    1997

    “Wally Sparks”

    Wally Sparks is a tabloid TV show reporter who’s trying to boost ratings on his show. He goes to the governor’s mansion to uncover a sex scandal.

    Film Poster

    The Godson

    1998

    “The Rodfather”

    Surrounded by danger, double-crossing and pasta, The Godson proves that some wise guys just aren’t so smart.

    Film Poster

    Little Nicky

    2000

    “Lucifer”

    A movie about the independent minded son of Beelzebub and the mischief he creates.

    Film Poster

    My 5 Wives

    2000

    “Monte Peterson”

    A three times divorced real estate tycoon, who thought he was through with love, gets more then he bargained for.

    Film Poster

    Back By Midnight

    2002

    “Jake Puloski”

    The warden of a small, rundown, minimum-security prison plots revenge against the the prison’s dishonest owner.

    Film Poster

    The 4th Tenor

    2002

    “Lupo”

    A restaurant owner falls in love with an opera singer and, desperate to impress her, travels to Italy to learn how to sing.

    Film Poster

    Angels with Angles

    2005

    “God”

    In order to be reunited with his long lost love, an angel is sent on a mission by God to save a big time loser.

    More ▼

    Film Clips

    • Caddyshack

      Caddyshack

      (9 Clips)
      Expand
    • Natural Born Killers

      Natural Born Killers

      (9 Clips)
      Expand
    • Meet Wally Sparks

      Meet Wally Sparks

      (9 Clips)
      Expand
    • My 5 Wives

      My 5 Wives

      (18 Clips)
      Expand
    • Back By Midnight

      Back By Midnight

      (10 Clips)
      Expand
    • The 4th Tenor

      The 4th Tenor

      (2 Clips)
      Expand
    ListenRodney Dangerfield
    TV
    TV

    Commercials

    Video Clip
    Play Clip

    Miller Lite

    1987 / 1:09

    Video Clip
    Play Clip

    Miller Lite

    1986 / 1:01

    Video Clip
    Play Clip

    Miller Lite

    1986 / 1:01

    Video Clip
    Play Clip

    Miller Lite

    1984 / 0:32

    Video Clip
    Play Clip

    Miller Lite

    1982 / 1:01

    Video Clip
    Play Clip

    Lo-Sal

    1983 / 0:30

    Video Clip
    Play Clip

    Pepsi Superbowl

    1993 / 0:46

    Video Clip
    Play Clip

    Twister

    1985 / 0:31

    Video Clip
    Play Clip

    Best Western

    0:32

    Video Clip
    Play Clip

    Bonanza

    1980 / 0:30

    Video Clip
    Play Clip

    Lo-Sal

    0:31

    Video Clip
    Play Clip

    Arby’s

    1998 / 0:37

    Video Clip
    Play Clip

    NBA (I Love This Game)

    1993 / 0:30

    Video Clip
    Play Clip

    Tour Edge Golf

    1999 / 0:32

    Video Clip
    Play Clip

    Starter Hat

    1993 / 0:30

    Video Clip
    Play Clip

    WLS Musicradio

    1981 / 0:32

    Video Clip
    Play Clip

    Opens Only

    1993 / 1:01

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    TV Appearances / Stand-Up

    Video Clip
    Play Clip

    Late Night with Conan O'Brien

    1997 / 8:45

    Video Clip
    Play Clip

    Jim Ferguson - "Easy Money"

    1983 / 7:13

    Video Clip
    Play Clip

    Stand-up Comedy

    1973 / 5:02

    Video Clip
    Play Clip

    Tonight Show with Johnny Carson

    1982 / 7:33

    Video Clip
    Play Clip

    The Ed Sullivan Show

    1970 / 0:57

    Video Clip
    Play Clip

    I Can't Take It No More (DVD Special)

    1983 / 3:25

    Video Clip
    Play Clip

    Exposed (TV Special)

    1984 / 7:09

    Video Clip
    Play Clip

    Tonight Show with Jay Leno

    2001 / 7:20

    Video Clip
    Play Clip

    Dick Clark's Live Wednesday

    1978 / 5:04

    Video Clip
    Play Clip

    Dangerfield's Stand-Up

    1986 / 2:40

    Video Clip
    Play Clip

    It's Not Easy Being Me (TV Special)

    1981 / 3:06

    Video Clip
    Play Clip

    Stand-Up

    1978 / 5:17

    Video Clip
    Play Clip

    Stand-Up (2)

    1978 / 3:41

    Video Clip
    Play Clip

    Creative Achievement Award

    1995 / 4:32

    More ▼
    ListenRodney Dangerfield
    Impact
    IMPACT

    quotes from those influenced

    Celebrity Photo

    Adam Sandler

    The affection felt for Dangerfield when you saw him on TV or in the movies was doubled when you had the pleasure to meet him. He was a hero who lived up to the hype.”

    Associated Press

    Celebrity Photo

    Bill Murray

    There are not many people alive who could party with Rodney. He would have left you all for dead. He really went hard, he was fun. He was funny. In my free time on the movie [Caddyshack], I spent it with him. That’s who I wanted to talk to, that’s who had an irony and experience beyond us. He was super cool.”

    Herald Recorder

    Celebrity Photo

    Bob Saget

    Rodney Dangerfield made the world laugh, and laugh deeply because he was just so funny. Funny as a writer, funny as an actor, funny as a comedian, and funny as a man.”

    Rodney’s Memorial

    Celebrity Photo

    Brad Garrett

    He would find a place for you if he enjoyed what you did and believed in you. And that was rare. It just shows how generous he was. Most comics are threatened by other funny people.”

    A&E Biography

    Celebrity Photo

    Chris Rock

    He cared about stand-up more than anyone in the history of stand-up.”

    USA Today

    Celebrity Photo

    Dom Irrera

    He was our Godfather. I never saw a guy who was so non-threatened that he would just help people.”

    Rodney’s Memorial

    Celebrity Photo

    George Lopez

    For a guy who got no respect, I will miss him and he always had my respect. I love him. Nobody has a catch phrase like that.”

    A&E Biography

    Celebrity Photo

    Harold Ramis

    Rodney Dangerfield–the king of the one liners. His jokes are easy to remember and often quoted.”

    AFI—Quotability of Caddyshack

    Celebrity Photo

    Louie Anderson

    There was nobody who worked harder on a joke that I ever met. Like I used to say, ‘Wow, I am really lazy. Rodney Dangerfield is working on a joke that is great, and he wants to make it greater.’”

    A&E Biography

    Celebrity Photo

    Harry Basil

    He really cared about how your day was going, how your kids were. He really loved to recommend doctors to you. He had a joke in his act that he had more numbers for doctors than for girls.”

    Rodney’s Memorial

    Celebrity Photo

    Howard Stern

    Rodney was incredible. Hard to describe my admiration for this legend. His standup was spectacular and innovative. His command of the stage was unequaled and the movies he made were game changers.”

    Celebrity Photo

    Jack Benny

    Rodney, I’m cheap and I’m 39, that’s my image, but your ‘no respect’ thing, that’s into the soul of everybody. Everybody can identify with that....Every day something happens where people feel they didn’t get respect.”

    Washington Post, 1979 Interview

    Celebrity Photo

    Jay Leno

    He was just simply the greatest stand-up comedian there ever was.”

    Rodney’s Memorial

    Celebrity Photo

    Jeff Foxworthy

    There are legends, and then there are the rest of us.”

    USA Today

    Celebrity Photo

    Jerry Seinfeld

    Comedy audiences are like dogs always ready for their comedic ‘biscuits,’ and [Rodney] Dangerfield was the best at handing out those biscuits at a constant pace.”

    Comedy Central

    Celebrity Photo

    Jerry Stiller

    He turned Dangerfield’s into a University. He was the professor, the headmaster who would nurture, mentor, and encourage any brave soul willing to risk his ass in the uncertain world of stand-up comedy.”

    Rodney’s Memorial

    Celebrity Photo

    Jim Carrey

    He gave so much to people, he gave people so much joy & so much laughter & so much relief....One of the great experiences in my life is knowing Rodney Dangerfield. I’m so thankful, I’m so thankful.”

    Rodney’s Memorial

    Celebrity Photo

    Johnny Carson

    Quite simply, no one was ever funnier doing stand up comedy than Rodney Dangerfield.”

    Celebrity Photo

    Craig Kilborn

    His magic went beyond the jokes. It was the body movement, the facial expressions. Rodney could get a laugh by just moving his eyes.”

    Celebrity Photo

    Michael Bolton

    Here on Earth, the rest of us mortals will keep you in our hearts and our minds, and we’ll respect you ‘til the end of time. Because it ain’t easy bein’ us without you. Thank you Rodney.”

    Rodney’s Memorial

    Celebrity Photo

    Oliver Stone

    Rodney had the face. His face told 1,000 stories. He had the huge eyes!”

    A&E Biography

    Celebrity Photo

    Paul Rodriguez

    Rodney gave you access and made you feel like you were as important. Whenever he came to the club, it made you want to be better.”

    Rodney’s Memorial

    Celebrity Photo

    Rita Rudner

    Rodney had a lot of empathy for other comedians because he knew how difficult it was. He felt the need to nurture.”

    A&E Biography

    Celebrity Photo

    Robert Klein

    Rodney Dangerfield was my mentor and he was my Yale drama school for comedy.”

    The Amorous Busboy of Decatur Avenue

    Celebrity Photo

    Rob Schneider

    It’s the greatest name in the history of comedy....I don’t think Johnny Carson has ever laughed as longâ��or as loud as when Rodney was next to him....Just having Rodney know you and think you’re funny was like a badge of honor.”

    A&E Biography

    Celebrity Photo

    Roseanne Barr

    He’s one of the greatest that ever was. He totally brought stand-up comedy to a new level, because he created a character. And so everybody coming up did too, including me. We all created characters because we loved Rodney.”

    Comedy Central

    Celebrity Photo

    Sandra Bernhard

    I think Rodney enjoyed people who are unique and had their own voice. He always championed people who were off-beat.”

    A&E Biography

    Celebrity Photo

    Susie Essman

    He was so into material, that if you had a bit, he remembered that bit.”

    Comedy Central

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    Teller

    He was so confident....He was Rodney and he could do anything.”

    A&E Biography

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    Tim Allen

    One of the prime guys in my life....What a tremendous man this man was....For a man who said all his life he got no respect, it is amazing the impression he’s made on everybody.”

    Rodney’s Memorial

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    Tom Smothers

    He appreciated talent. And I liked that about Rodney Dangerfield. He admired other comics because he loved the art of comedy.”

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    Rodney's Collected Papers

    The comedic genius that transpired onstage was due in no small part to careful planning behind the scenes.

    Before nearly every appearance, Rodney would sit down with pen and paper to outline the material he planned to cover. Sometimes he took days to organize his thoughts, creating pages and pages of jokes, much of which is seen here.

    Rodney saved all of his notes, opening a rare window into the workings of his mind. His creative process is on display here for the first time and is shown with other notable ephemera from Rodney’s collection. Please enjoy and come back again as we'll unveil new material from time to time.


    Jack Roy #1
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    Jack Roy, Page 1 of 3 Perhaps rarest of all are the typed pages of Rodney’s first attempt at his act as Jack Roy. The evolution of not just Rodney’s performance style but his approach to preparation is evident here.

    Jack Roy #3
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    Jack Roy, Page 3 of 3

    Sullivan Try
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    Sullivan Try Rodney tested his jokes at local clubs before including them in his stand up show. Check marks indicate jokes he tried that were working, while asterisks indicated the new ones. He would record the jokes to judge the laughter, deciding later which to keep, which to retry, and which to toss out.

    The Joey Bishop Show, August 1968
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    The Joey Bishop Show, August 1968 Rodney was such a beloved guest on The Joey Bishop Show, that they booked him every night for a week in August of 1968. This is the first of his prep notes for a week’s worth of material.

    The Merv Griffin Show, June 1968 #2
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    The Merv Griffin Show, June 1968, Page 2 of 3

    The Dick Cavett Show, October 1968
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    The Dick Cavett Show, October 1968 Rodney made multiple appearances on The Dick Cavett Show during its run from 1968-74. The notes seen here are from an October episode thought to have aired early in his career. He begins with the opening question, “How do you do?” Later, he would change his opener to, “What a crowd, what a crowd. I’m all right now but last week I was in rough shape,” a line his loyal fans adored.

    The David Frost Show, October 29 1969 #2
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    The David Frost Show, October 29 1969, Page 2 of 4

    The David Frost Show, October 29 1969 #4
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    The David Frost Show, October 29 1969, Page 4 of 4

    The Mike Douglas Show, June 30, 1972, #2
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    The Mike Douglas Show, June 30, 1972, Page 2 of 3

    Blue Note
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    Blue Note You could often tell when Rodney was in a big hurry to get his ideas on paper. His handwriting appeared near illegible to anyone but him and he strayed from the usual template when planning a televised show.

    The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, August 30, 1997
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    The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, August 30, 1997 Rodney’s career spanned multiple hosts of The Tonight Show. His final appearances on the late-night staple were with Jay Leno, whom he remained friends with until his death. In 2009, Jay credited Rodney as the inspiration for the style of jokes he frequently told on his show.

    The Tonight Show, November 21, 2000 #2
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    The Tonight Show, November 21, 2000, Page 2 of 2

    Hotels
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    Hotels Being in the “business,” Rodney spent a fair amount of time in hotel rooms and casinos. In this particular note he laments, “I can always tell how well I’m doing by the hotel I’m staying at.” Though he wrote numerous rough lines about his travels, his act never strayed too far from what worked—his wife, his dog, and his lack of respect.

    Doctor's Note
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    Rodney Knows Best In 2002, Rodney received this letter regarding the use of medical marijuana. And though it needs no explanation, it’s worth noting that it came shortly after he was lectured for smoking pot while in an L.A. hospital. It would seem that after all the fuss, Rodney finally got the respect he deserved—at least from his doctor.

    Jack Roy #2
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    Jack Roy, Page 2 of 3

    The Catskills
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    The Catskills Before Rodney was Rodney, he was Jack Roy, a struggling comedian trying to make it in the business. He put in long hours preparing and even longer hours traveling to any club that would have him on stage. This bit of material was for a gig he was trying in the Catskills, before he had developed his “act.”

    The Steve Allen Show, March 7, 1968
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    The Steve Allen Show, March 7, 1968 When it came to planning his shows, Rodney wasn’t all jokes. He sometimes wrote himself fashion advice (“wear long dark socks”) or directional cues (“walk to your mark”). These types of comments are frequent in his earlier years and less so later on, perhaps owing to experience and familiarity with his routine.

    The Merv Griffin Show, June 1968 #1
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    The Merv Griffin Show, June 1968, Page 1 of 3 Rodney graced the stage of The Merv Griffin show more than 40 times in his career. On this evening, his 28th appearance on the show, he performed a stand-up routine and spent some time conversing with Merv from the couch—a segment Rodney referred to as “The Panel.”

    The Merv Griffin Show, June 1968 #3
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    The Merv Griffin Show, June 1968, Page 3 of 3

    The David Frost Show, October 29 1969 #1
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    The David Frost Show, October 29 1969, Page 1 of 4 For his third appearance on The David Frost Show, Rodney penned three pages of notes. In 1969, he was still using the “How do you do?” opener. He used the same format at the microphone as he did on the couch, often cracking up his hosts when they were supposed to be asking him questions.

    The David Frost Show, October 29 1969 #3
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    The David Frost Show, October 29 1969, Page 3 of 4

    The Mike Douglas Show, June 30, 1972, #1
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    The Mike Douglas Show, June 30, 1972, Page 1 of 3 For The Mike Douglas Show, Rodney performed stand up and chatted from the couch, just as on Merv’s show. By the 1970s, he was getting quite comfortable with the variety show format, yet never complacent with his material and planning.

    The Mike Douglas Show, June 30, 1972, #3
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    The Mike Douglas Show, June 30, 1972, Page 3 of 3

    The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, March 24, 1995
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    The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, March 24, 1995 Rodney used the same note-taking system for more than 40 years. He would switch pens and use a heavier mark for the punch lines and key words, to stay focused.

    The Tonight Show, November 21, 2000 #1
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    The Tonight Show, November 21, 2000, Page 1 of 2 This note, marked “Panel Nov 21 40th spot” is from one of his later appearances on The Tonight Show. Even as new forms of comedy were gaining popularity among youthful viewers, Rodney still amused as a one-liner comic of the old school, doing his best work in front of live audiences.

    Stains on a Note
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    Stains on a Note Comedy is an art form without a weekend. And as such, Rodney was always “on.” On any given day, you might find handwritten notes strewn about his home with raw material for his next act. Here, he noted he liked the expression “the cool side of the pillow,” and thought he might use it in a joke. He never did.

    Unknown Internet Magazine
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    Unknown Internet Magazine Rodney gave many interviews over his lifetime. Some in person, and others via the question-and-answer method seen in this interview for an online magazine. Though undated is likely from the early 1990s. Clearly, his signature irreverent style still shone brightly in his later years.

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    In celebration of Rodney’s 100th birthday, we’re giving away a one of a kind prize... the shirt off Rodney’s back! Custom made in 1991 by Zohrab of Paris with Rodney’s initials and the date sewn into the collar. Solve a custom crossword puzzle for your chance to win.

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