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marble falls

(57,081 posts)
Thu Nov 14, 2013, 07:54 PM Nov 2013

Comedian Andy Kaufman 'faked his death', brother claims

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-24939133



Cult comedy star Andy Kaufman faked his own death in 1984 and is still alive, his brother has claimed.


Comedian Andy Kaufman 'faked his death', brother claims

Andy Kaufman Kaufman's eccentric comedy act often incorporated elaborate pranks



Cult comedy star Andy Kaufman faked his own death in 1984 and is still alive, his brother has claimed.

Kaufman, best known for playing the incompetent Latka Gravas on the 1970s sitcom Taxi, officially died from lung cancer in 1984.

But, appearing at an award show named in Andy's honour, Michael Kaufman said he received a letter from his brother, confirming he was alive, in 1999.

He then introduced a woman who claimed to be Andy's 24-year-old daughter.

Her age would mean she was born five years after his death.

"He just wanted to be a stay-at-home dad, that's why he wanted to leave the showbiz," she explained at the New York event.

"He's pretty much a great dad, and raised us. My mom has her own business... He helps her with that kind of thing, paperwork and stuff, so he can work from home and he doesn't have to be hiding out [or] concealing himself."

"He just makes us food and takes care of the house."

It has since been claimed, however, that the mystery woman is in fact a New York actress whose father is a doctor.

According to website The Smoking Gun, Alexandra Tatarsky was recruited by Michael Kaufman earlier this year to play his alleged niece.
Audience 'freaked out'

The woman's arrival on Monday night had been preceded by a long anecdote, in which Michael described how, many years ago, he discovered an essay in which Andy detailed plans to fake his death.

It was accompanied by a note, saying the comedian would reappear on Christmas Eve 1999, in a specific restaurant.

Although Andy failed to show up, Michael was handed a letter explaining that his brother had gone into hiding to live a normal life, and now had a wife and daughter.
Continue reading the main story
“Start Quote

It was chilling, upsetting and absolutely intriguing”

Killy Dwyer, audience member

In addition to his role on Taxi, Andy Kaufman was an eccentric performance artist who often staged elaborate pranks that entertained, confused and at times frustrated his fans.

He organised wrestling matches between himself and women, impersonated Elvis Presley and, most famously, created a hideous lounge singer alter-ego called Tony Clifton, who reeked of foul-smelling cheese and verbally abused virtually everyone in sight.

Famously, after he played Carnegie Hall, he hired 24 buses and took the 2,800 audience members out for milk and cookies.

A life-long health fanatic, he was diagnosed with cancer at the age of 33 and died in May 1984. A copy of his death certificate, which lists the cause of death as renal failure, can be seen online.

Nonetheless, a portion of his fan base has always maintained his death was a hoax.
Still from Man On The Moon Jim Carrey played Kaufman in the 1999 biopic Man On The Moon

Audience members at the Andy Kaufman Awards were uncertain how to take Michael's revelation, wondering if it, too, could be a stunt.

"The entire room was freaked out," wrote comedian Killy Dwyer on her Facebook page.

"I get that it is - could - might all be a hoax... [but] it was as real as anything I've ever seen. There is video. It was chilling, upsetting and absolutely intriguing."

Award show producer Al Parinello told the Hollywood Reporter: "I witnessed the entire thing and I can tell you without a doubt this was not a prank."

"You could see by the look on [Michael's] face that it had an emotional impact on him," said Ed Cavanagh, manager at the Gotham Comedy Club, where the award show took place.

But, he added: "I don't know whether somebody is perpetrating something on [Michael] or not. I'm truly 50-50 on this one."

Witnesses said the unnamed woman had explained the catalyst for her appearance was the death of her grandfather, Andy's father, in July.

In a video of the encounter, posted on gossip site TMZ, Michael is seen asking whether his brother is "getting close to revealing himself".

The woman covers her face and says, "I don't know what to say."

"I mean, he was really thinking about coming," she adds.

Michael then asks the audience not to follow the woman after she left the building.

"I won't give you her name. I don't even know [her] name," he says. "Let her have her privacy."

"Send him my love," he adds.
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Comedian Andy Kaufman 'faked his death', brother claims (Original Post) marble falls Nov 2013 OP
Maybe. Maybe this is the prank... TreasonousBastard Nov 2013 #1
He did that on Saturday Night live and it still is hysterically funny to me. This was before he was marble falls Nov 2013 #2
Absolutely a genius. Goblinmonger Nov 2013 #3

TreasonousBastard

(43,049 posts)
1. Maybe. Maybe this is the prank...
Thu Nov 14, 2013, 08:24 PM
Nov 2013

I saw Kaufman at a small comedy club called the Metro in Forest Hills, Queens long before he became famous. What he was was brilliant and had the most amazing act anyone had seen.

Not one "line" or joke, but he had us all rolling in the aisles and we couldn't explain what was so funny.

It sounds silly to describe it, and the phrase "you hadda be there" was made for this...

He started by playing the Mighty Mouse theme on a portable record player. Then he did some pantomime to the music as we were trying to figure out what he was up to. Eventually, he knew exactly when we were just ready to walk out or start grumbling and he went on into a long story about how he was quitting show biz since it wasn't working out. The more he talked, the more hysterical we got, and the more hysterical we got, the more morose and fatalistic he got. It went on until we were all out of breath.

It took true genius to pull that off.

And maybe it takes true genius to pull off a disappearance. Or maybe not.

marble falls

(57,081 posts)
2. He did that on Saturday Night live and it still is hysterically funny to me. This was before he was
Thu Nov 14, 2013, 08:48 PM
Nov 2013

famous, and I understood this was some sort of a "tryout". He wasn't back the next week.

Genius or not, he was well worth paying attention to.

My money is he's dead.

 

Goblinmonger

(22,340 posts)
3. Absolutely a genius.
Thu Nov 14, 2013, 10:10 PM
Nov 2013
Read this book. It's a biography by Bob Zmuda (Kaufman's best friend that played the ref during his wrestling bits). He recounts the genius that was Andy and what he was trying to do with his various acts.

Matter of fact, I think I'm going to reread that book again in honor of this latest round of "he's alive."
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