What's new
Fantasy Football - Footballguys Forums

This is a sample guest message. Register a free account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!

I'm Chevy Chase, and you're not. (2 Viewers)

SuperJohn96

RPS World Champion
In the Jimmy Fallon thread, I posted a link to the very terrible Chevy Chase Show, but when I read a bit about Chevy himself, I found some of it pretty interesting.

Chevy Chase at IMDb.com

Date of Birth

8 October 1943, Woodstock, New York, USA

Birth Name

Cornelius Crane Chase

Height

6' 4" (1.93 m)

Mini Biography

Born Cornelius Crane Chase, he changed his name to Chevy Chase, joined the Saturday Night Live crew, and embarked on a highly successful movie career. Chase scored in the eighties with hits such as Caddyshack (1980), the National Lampoon movies and the Fletch movies. All his films show his talent for deadpan comedy. Sadly, his career has generally worsened throughout the nineties, starring in flops such as the wholly mediocre Memoirs of an Invisible Man (1992), and Cops and Robbersons (1994).

IMDb Mini Biography By: David Wilcock

Spouse

Jayni Chase (19 June 1982 - present) 3 children

Jacqueline Carlin (4 December 1976 - 14 November 1980) (divorced)

Suzanne Chase (23 February 1973 - 1 February 1976) (divorced)

Trade Mark

Pratfall during the opening skit of "Saturday Night Live" (1975).

"Saturday Night Live" (1975) Weekend Update newscast skit with the opening line, "I'm Chevy Chase, and you're not".

Deadpan delivery.

Trivia

Prefers to do family-oriented movies and has turned down roles in several films including the lead in American Beauty (1999).

His now-famous "Good evening, I'm Chevy Chase and you're not" opening line on the "Weekend Update" segments of "Saturday Night Live" (1975) was a takeoff of New York news anchor Roger Grimsby's "Here now the news" opening line.

Sat in as drummer with the college band The Leather Canary a couple of times. He refers to it as "a bad jazz band." The band also included Walter Becker and Donald Fagen, later of Steely Dan fame.

Winner of Harvard Lampoon Lifetime Achievement Award 1996.

He appeared in the music video and sang in the choir on the song "Voices That Care."

Convicted of drunk driving. [1995]

His short-lived TV talk show was billed as a Cornelius Production, Cornelius being Chevy's real first name.

Was nearly killed (electrocuted) during the filming of Modern Problems (1981) when, during the sequence in which he is wearing "landing lights" as he dreams that he is an airplane, the current in the lights short-circuited through his arm, back, and neck muscles. The near-death experience caused him to experience a period of deep depression.

Attended Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson, New York.

Was valedictorian of his high school class.

Has perfect pitch, a musical ability to remember the exact frequency of a note.

Parents divorced when he was four, and his father remarried into Folger coffee family. His mother's third marriage was to Juilliard School professor/ composer Lawrence Widdoes.

Daughters: Cydney Cathalene Chase (born 1982), Caley Leigh Chase (born 1984) and Emily Evelyn Chase (born 1988), with wife Jayni Chase.

Chevy was actually a childhood nickname -- possibly based on the Washington, DC suburb -- bestowed by his grandmother. The Chase family was affluent and distinguished, and Chevy was listed in Social Register at early age. His paternal grandfather was painter/teacher Frank Swift Chase; his father, Ned Chase, was a prominent Manhattan book editor and magazine writer. His mother was descended from the Crane plumbing-fixture family.

Paul Simon is one of his best friends. He appeared alongside Simon in the music video "You Can Call Me Al," in which he lip-syncs all of Simon's lines. Due to that video's remarkable success, Chase was asked to return when Simon released his follow-up album. In the music video for "Proof", Chase was accompanied by another of his best friends, Steve Martin.

Was a long-time class clown expelled from private schools like NYC's Dalton but did well at Stockbridge School in Massachusetts. Expelled from Haverford College after bringing a cow into the third floor of a campus building. Transferred to Bard College, where he dated actress Blythe Danner and graduated in 1967.

Used to spend his summer and other vacations at a castle on a beautiful beach in Ipswich, Massachusetts.

His middle name, Crane, is from his mother's family, He spent childhood vacations at Crane Castle, his mother's family' vacation home in Ipswich, Massachusetts.

Roasted into the New York Friar's Club on September 28, 2002.

Suffers from a fear of snakes.

Chevy Chase is the name of a 16th century ballad about the battle between Earl Douglas and Earl Percy, as well as the name of a city in Maryland.

He was the first member of the original "Saturday Night Live" (1975) cast to leave the show - after only one season, a decision he later said he regretted. He was replaced by Bill Murray.

Biography in: "Who's Who in Comedy" by Ronald L. Smith. Pg. 102-103. New York: Facts on File, 1992. ISBN 0816023387.

At the height of his career he earned around $7 million per film.

Is a huge jazz fan.

Runs five miles a day to stay fit and healthy.

Admitted in an interview that making ¡Three Amigos! (1986) was the most fun he has had on a film.

Helped campaign for John Kerry in the 2004 Presidential Election.

Attended Riverdale Country School in New York City.

His big break was performing on "Saturday Night Live" (1975). Ironically, he was never signed as a cast member. He signed a one year writer contract and became a cast member during rehearsals.

Has said that he regrets leaving "Saturday Night Live" (1975) after just one year.

Chase is a member of the exclusive Hollywood Gourmet Poker Club. Members included fellow card players Martin Short, Steve Martin, Carl Reiner, Barry Diller, Neil Simon and the late Johnny Carson.

In a 1975 New York magazine cover story, NBC executives referred to Chase as "The first real potential successor to Johnny Carson" and claimed he would begin guest-hosting "The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson" (1962) within 6 months of the article. It never happened.

At 6' 4", he was the tallest original "Saturday Night Live" (1975) cast member and was the first "tall guy" on the show. Cast members over 6 feet usually dwarfed the rest of the cast. Among the other tall guys to follow were Dan Aykroyd, Dean Edwards, Will Ferrell, Anthony Michael Hall, David Koechner, Norm MacDonald, Finesse Mitchell, Bill Murray, Kevin Nealon, Randy Quaid, Rob Riggle, Charles Rocket, Damon Wayans, and Fred Wolf. Only Nealon and Quaid equaled Chase in height.

The role of Eric 'Otter' Stratton in National Lampoon's Animal House (1978) was originally written with him in mind, but due to a scheduling conflict, he had to turn the role down. The role went to Tim Matheson instead.

His brother roomed across the hall from Ted Kaczynski "The Unabomber" at Harvard.

Has a street named after him in Cochranton PA (NWPA). - Chevy Chase Street

In 2003, he appeared in two television commercials for Cola Turka, a soft drink developed to be in direct competition with both Coca-Cola and Pepsi, while keeping the money in the Turkish economy. The commercials, which were both comic and nationalistic in theme, feature Chase playing a confused American who notices his friend and family using Turkish idioms and exhibiting Turkish customs after consuming the drink. The commercials, exclusively shown in Turkey, were filmed in New York in English, but have Turkish subtitles.

Wanted to be a doctor when he was younger.

Has a street named after him in New Orleans, Louisiana, possibly due to the Southern U.S. setting of Fletch Lives (1989); and another street named after him in Cochranton, Pennsylvania.

Fans often imitate his famous, straight-faced, "I like it!" (from Modern Problems (1981)).

After joking about Cary Grant being gay in a 1980 television interview, the Hollywood legend sued him for slander, but they later settled out of court.

Before his breakthrough as a comedian, he worked as a cab driver, truck driver, motorcycle messenger, waiter, busboy, construction worker, audio engineer, produce manager in a supermarket, salesman in a wine store and theater usher.

Graduated from Bard College with a bachelor of arts degree in English (1967).

Born to Edward Tinsley Chase, a Manhattan book editor and magazine writer, and his wife Cathalene Parker Browning, who both died in 2005.

Won an amateur orchestral conducting contest in Los Angeles, where he and other celebrities (such as Alan Rachins) competed to inspire appreciation for classical music.

Is portrayed by John Viener in Gilda Radner: It's Always Something (2002) (TV).

Was a favorite comedian of the students in "Head of the Class" (1986).

His mother Cathalene Parker Browning was the only daughter of Capt. Miles R. Browning, Admiral Halsey's Chief of Staff for much of WW2.

Brea, California (92621) also has a street named "Chevy Chase.".

Turned down the role of Buzz Lightyear in Toy Story (1995), he didn't want to as he was interested in the project, but his agent greatly advised him against doing the project.

Turned down the role of Peter Venkman in Ghostbusters (1984) which went to Bill Murray. According to Chase, the finished film is nothing like the script that he read, adding that the script was much scarier than the film.

Plays piano, drums and saxophone.

Had back surgery shortly after his time with "SNL" as a result of all the comedic falls he had taken on-stage.

Was the first person to say "Live from New York, it's Saturday Night!" on "Saturday Night Live" (1975).

Personal Quotes

On his reaction upon hearing of the death of "Saturday Night Live" (1975) co-star John Belushi): I was so angry I didn't cry for five years.

On the outcome of impersonating former U.S. President Gerald Ford on "Saturday Night Live" (1975): "I did hear ultimately from one of Ford's sons that some of the things had hurt his feelings, and that was a shocker to me. But I figured, 'Oh well, he's the President, he can take it. I mean, he has to, he's a public figure.' Of course, now my feelings have been hurt so much, I know exactly what he means."

Once I got married and had kids, I moved away from romantic roles, because it seemed wrong to have my three-year-old wondering why Daddy was kissing someone else.

I guess I look so straight and normal nobody expects me to pick my nose and fall.

Salary

Memoirs of an Invisible Man (1992) $6,000,000

Christmas Vacation (1989) $6,000,000

Where Are They Now

(2007) Release of the book, "I'm Chevy Chase - And You're Not" by Rena Fruchter.
 
The role of Eric 'Otter' Stratton in National Lampoon's Animal House (1978) was originally written with him in mind, but due to a scheduling conflict, he had to turn the role down. The role went to Tim Matheson instead.
And Dan Aykroyd was offered the role of D-Day, Bill Murray was supposed to play Boon, Brian Doyle-Murray was supposed to play Hoover, and Laraine Newman was supposed to play Katie.
 
Valedictorian is not surprising at all...guy is sharp.

He and Bill Murray are my two favorite comedians of all time...mostly because I love the classic sarcastic ####### role.

 
Last edited by a moderator:
Isn't he considered to be a doosh by a lot of people? Trying to remember if it was him or Billy Crystal.

 
Isn't he considered to be a doosh by a lot of people? Trying to remember if it was him or Billy Crystal.
Classic article....

He's Not Chevy, He's an #######: A History of Chevy Chase's Horrific Behavior"When you become famous, you've got like a year or two where you act like a real #######," Bill Murray told Tom Shales and James Miller when they interviewed him for Live from New York, their oral history of Saturday Night Live. "You can't help yourself. It happens to everybody. You've got like two years to pull it together — or it's permanent." He was talking, of course, about Chevy Chase, his opponent in a famous backstage fistfight. The two are friendly now, and it seems as though Murray wanted to imply that Chase had "pulled himself together" following his sudden rise to fame.

But by most accounts, Chevy Chase's #######dom was permanent.

The history of Chevy Chase being a jerk is long and varied, and from what I've heard Chevy is hard at work creating new legends of his own dickishness as the old stories become more widely known. I heard a recent story about Chevy unloading on a nervous intern who spilled a small amount of Coca-Cola in front of Chase and SNL creator Lorne Michaels. "Why don't you just piss in it?" he snarled.

But you don't even need to hunt down anecdotes of Chevy screaming at interns: between the hundreds of thousands of words that have been written about Saturday Night Live, his weirdly public ongoing spats with actors and writers on Community, and the unbelievably dickish and petty interviews he's given over the years, there's plenty of evidence that Chevy Chase is an #######. Here's a working timeline. If you've got any Chevy Chase stories, send them my way at max@gawker.com.

Saturday Night Live Season One Who He Pissed Off: John Belushi, Al Franken, Laraine Newman, Gilda Radner, and basically the whole cast and writing staff of Saturday Night Live

How: According to Jeff Weingrad and Doug Hill's Saturday Night: A Backstage History of Saturday Night Live, Chevy was known as "a viciously effective put-down artist, the sort who could find the one thing somebody was sensitive about — a pimple on the nose, perhaps — and then kid about it, mercilessly." In meetings, he'd smirk at writers' suggestions and say "gee, I don't think that's very good at all." As the show, and in particular Chevy, took off, his coworkers accused him of not giving them enough credit in interviews; he was also doing too much coke and spending much of his time bragging about his fame and ordering people around the set.

Who He Pissed Off: Johnny Carson

How: Carson once said Chevy "couldn't ad-lib a fart after a baked-bean dinner" after Chevy dismissed chatter that he could be the next Carson by telling New York, "I'd never be tied down for five years interviewing TV personalities." (In fairness, he never was.)

Who He Pissed Off: Lorne Michaels

How: Lorne and Chevy were close friends, until Chevy, without warning, decided to leave the show at the end of his contract and do a handful of primetime specials for NBC, severing his relationship with Bernie Brillstein, the manager he shared with Lorne, and signing with William Morris in the process. "Chevy was a scumbag the way he left," one of the writers told Weingrad and Hill. "Deceitful and dishonest about the whole thing." When staff writer Tom Davis asked why he was leaving, Chevy said "Money. Lots of money."

After SNL Who He Pissed Off: Jacqueline Carlin

How: Carlin, whom Chevy married right after he left the show, filed for divorce 17 months later, citing "threats of violence." He then cited his engagement and impending marriage to Carlin as a reason for leaving Saturday Night Live — a "blame the #####" strategy, according to one of the women on the show.

Who He Pissed Off: Jane Curtin

How: When Chevy returned to host the show for the first time after his departure, he insisted on doing the "Weekend Update" segment that had been his trademark. According to some accounts, including Chevy's, this pissed Jane off; in Live from New York, Jane insists that she didn't really care, and that "Chevy was expecting [a reaction] that he wasn't getting from me."

Who He Pissed Off: Bill Murray

How: According to Chevy, John Belushi had spent a lot of time poisoning the cast against him — in particular Bill Murray, who was more or less his replacement on the show. Bill apparently confronted Chevy about something (possibly the "Weekend Update" situation), the two traded barbs (Murray told Chase to go home and #### his wife; Chase told Murray his face looked like something Neil Armstrong had landed on), and the confrontation turned physical. Chase's account of the fight in Live from New York is hilarious, both for being so self-serving and for his insistence that he — an upper-middle- class fourteenth-generation New Yorker — had "grown up on the edge of East Harlem" and "been in a lot of fistfights." "It wasn't as if I was simply some guy who had never seen the other side of the tracks," Chase, who went to Dalton and the Stockbridge school, said. "I had."

Who He Pissed Off: Terry Sweeney, Robert Downey Jr., Jon Lovitz and the cast of the 1985-1986 season

How: Chase was back to host again in 1985 and seemed to piss off literally everyone. He made fun of Robert Downey Jr.'s father ("Didn't your father used to be a successful director? Whatever happened to him? Boy, he sure died, you know, he sure went to hell.") and was relentlessly hateful to Terry Sweeney, suggesting that SNL's first openly gay cast member star in a sketch where they weighed him every week to see if he had AIDS. "So then he ended up having to apologize and actually coming to my office," Sweeney says. "He was really furious that he had to apologize to me."

(As a coda to Chevy's SNL #######ry, we'll note that he ran into Live from New York author James Miller a few years after the book's publication. Angry with his status in the book as a recurring villain, Chevy proceeded to prove everyone right by immediately going off on Miller. And one of the authors received a sobbing phone call from his wife Jayni.)

The Chevy Chase Show Who He Pissed Off: The entire television-viewing public.

How: Chevy returned to television in 1993 with a high-profile attempt by Fox to fill the void left by a retiring Johnny Carson. In a New York cover profile from before the show's premiere(highly recommended, if only for the parenthetical where Chase tries to blame the huge flopNothing But Trouble on poor Dan Aykroyd) the show already feels doomed to fail — the only preview we get is a game Chevy wants to play with audience members involving putting rubber bands around their heads and "racing" by scrunching their faces — and within five weeks of its debut, it was canceled. He later told Time he wanted to do something "much darker and more improv," and blamed network constraints — and not his own clear nervousness and incompetence — for the show's failure

Who He Pissed Off: Howard Stern

How: In 1992, Chase was recorded talking #### about Stern in between commercial breaks on Larry King's show; Stern got hold of the tape and played it on-air before calling Chase, who told Stern never to call again. (A few years later, Stern and Richard Belzer called a furious Chase several times at 5 a.m.) The two apparently made up, and Chase was invited to Stern's wedding — but apparently gave a wildly inappropriate toast that only exacerbated Stern's dislike of him.

Who He Pissed Off: Will Ferrell and the cast of the 1996-1997 season

How: "When he was here," Tim Meadows says in Live from New York, "it was like just watching a car accident over and over again just watching him deal with people." According to Will Ferrell, Chase was "a little snobbish" and prone to screaming at people; at that show's first meeting he told a female writer "maybe you could give me a handjob later," reportedly mortifying Lorne. "I don't know if he was on something or what," Ferrell said. "If he took too many back pills that day or something."

Who He Pissed Off: Bill Maher and NYPD Blue creator Stephen Bochco

How: Chase appeared on Politically Incorrect in 1997, alongside television producer Stephen Bocho, and insistently hijacked the conversation to talk about how television, and Bochco's work in particular, is "useless and worthless." The Paley Center has a good summary: "Shortly thereafter, he admits that he is not terribly familiar with Bochco's work. When Maher attempts to get the conversation back on track, Chase declares that he disapproves even of Maher's show. Bochco suggests that Chase leave the show, and Chase almost makes it out the door before Maher stops him and asks him to stay."

Who He Pissed Off: Kevin Smith

How: That same year, Chevy met with Kevin Smith to talk about relaunching the Fletch series.According to Smith, the meeting was a disaster: "At the lunch, Chevy went on to claim he invented every funny thing that ever happened in the history of not just comedy, but also the known world... You ever sat down with somebody who claimed responsibility for stuff he did AND didn't do? It's really off-putting." Chase later accused Smith of "lying" to him.

Who He Pissed Off: Comedian Rob Huebel

How: Huebel, who describes himself as "the biggest Chevy Chase fan in the world," approached Chevy backstage at UCB Theater to introduce himself, only to have Chevy slap him across the face "offensively hard." It was done as a joke ("in good humor," Chase told New York magazine), and Huebel says he didn't take offense, but it clearly left an impression on him and an onlooking Jason Mantzoukas.

The Roast Who He Pissed Off: Actually, no one.

How: The 2002 Friars Club Roast of Chevy Chase, one of those interminable things broadcast on Comedy Central, may be the only thing Chevy's been involved with professionally where he didn't end up pissing anyone off. And yet we have to mention it here, if only because it's maybe the best, and saddest evidence of how few friends Chevy has left. Almost no one from the original Saturday Night Live showed up (Paul Shaffer, a member of the band, MCed), and the comedians who did show weren't exactly close friends of Chase, and were unbelievably cruel. (Not to mention unfunny.) I caught this on TV at the time without really having a sense of how widely-hated Chevy was; by the end, there was literally no question that nobody liked him.

Community Who He Pissed Off: Dan Harmon

How: Show creator Harmon, himself reputedly a sensitive and vindictive #####, has been embroiled in a weirdly public feud with Chase almost since the start of the show, and it's not hard to see the uncomfortable parallels between Chevy himself and his character Pierce Hawthorne — an old, out-of-touch, self-aggrandizing bigot who alienates all of the people he works with. Their sniping turned into a full-on confrontation over the last week when Harmon, smarting from an on-set spat over a late script, gave a very public "#### you" to Chase at a party in front of his wife and daughter and leaked a hilariously profane voicemail that Chevy had left for him. To be fair, Harmon's apologized, in a meandering Tumblr post: "I'm a selfish baby and a rude ####### and not a person to trust with your feelings." Meanwhile, a sort of poignant interview with the Huffington Post, Chase hints that he might leave the show soon, insisting that he wants a "much freer kind of performance thing" — which is more or less what he said about The Chevy Chase Show 20 years ago.


Chevy Chase Throws a Tantrum: Community Creator's 'Got Bad Writing, ####, Stinko' Looks like Chevy Chase and Community creator Dan Harmon are embroiled in a good ol' fashioned…

Read more

Who He Pissed Off: Dino Stamatopoulos and much of the Community cast.

How: Chevy "has a reputation for being a ####," Dino Stamatopoulos, who plays the character Star Burns, told Marc Maron on his podcast last year. "That reputation is earned." (Stamatopoulos nevertheless insists that he personally likes Chevy, and that all the actor needs "is a little respect," which he apparently doesn't get from the younger cast.) Update: Dino writes in:

Chevy mostly pissed me off when I was working on Conan back around '94. I had been working hard all week on a very complex desk piece. It played the segment right before Chevy came out and it did okay. After Chevy was introduced, he sat down, and the first thing he said was, "Wow, Conan, that bit [referring to the desk piece] sure was... stupid."
Also just to clarify, I get along with Chevy because I barely work with him and don't have him constantly ruining whole days when I'm there, like he does with the regular cast members. I view him now as a confused old man who can't really hurt me in any way. I understand why the regulars on Community and the full time writers hating him. If he wasted my time as much as much as he wasted their time, I'd hate him, too.
Who He Pissed Off: Yvette Brown, Alison Brie, Megan Ganz and probably most of the show's female staff

How: No one has come out and said specifically "I hate Chevy Chase," but there are hints. OnWatch What Happens Live, Yvette Brown didn't even have to think before naming Chevy Chase as the person she'd kick off Community if she had to choose one of them. asked by the Daily Beast's Jace Lacob about an uncomfortable rape joke Chevy made at a panel appearance by the cast, Brown and fellow cast member Alison Brie and writer Megan Ganz were diplomatic but not particularly warm. "His bits are from a different time," Ganz says. "A lot of crass comedy is accepted," Brie offers. "Some people don't know how to word it the right way." Brown agrees that some people don't "know their room... Maybe he was from a time when women weren't empowered enough to speak up. I'm glad that we're in a time now where if you are offended or upset by something someone says, you feel empowered to say, 'That's not right.'" (Chase doesn't seem to be helping things by telling the Huffington Post that the only two relatable characters are "the two white girls — the two pretty, young girls, Alison [brie] and Gillian [Jacobs]" who are "probably more like people that we can all understand.")
 
Al O'Pecia's post was an interesting read. I remember some loose political rants of his where he seemed like a complete #####. :thumbup:

 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top