LARRY HANKIN PODCAST - Discussing his career: being that actor everyone knows but doesn't know! Also, the 'clown' characters of film and his short film The Outlaw Emmett Deemus
Writer, performer, director, producer and Oscar-nominee, Larry Hankin, is one of Hollywood’s most recognizable faces in the world of character actors. Through the years he has made us laugh with his memorable portrayals of zany characters, in stand-up comic clubs, on the legit stage, in A-list features, and on some of televisions’ top rated situation comedies.
Upon graduating from Syracuse University, with a degree in Industrial Design, he made a beeline for New York City with designs on the entertainment industry and started plying his unique brand of humorous storytelling in coffee houses in Greenwich Village. These stints led him to open for acts that included Woody Allen, jazz legend Miles Davis and pop icons The Lovin’ Spoonful.
However, still looking for a steady paycheck, he decided to check out Chicago, where he soon landed a steady paying gig with The Second City comedy troupe. But, when a splinter group of malcontents decided to head west, Larry was invited to join ‘The Committee’ and soon found himself in middle of San Francisco’s Haight-Ashbury district doing political-satirical-improvisational theatre. Destined to be famous, two years later, they returned to New York City, headlining the Great White Way at Broadway’s St. James Theatre, for a limited three-month run. Upon hearing the news, his showbiz hating father simply replied, “And then what?”
And, so began his odyssey to Hollywood where his long, lean, lanky, buffoonish frame began getting him plum roles in film and television; parts in soon-to-be-classic television shows such as “Laverne & Shirley,” “Eight Is Enough,” “Family Ties,” and “Alf,” with early film appearances in “American Hot Wax” with Jay Leno and “Yours, Mine and Ours” with Lucille Ball and Henry Fonda, leading to his featured role as Charlie Butz, the man in the cell next to Clint Eastwood in “Escape from Alcatraz.”
But comedic storytelling still called to him, so with his Alcatraz paycheck, his biggest to date, he decided to write, direct and star in “Solly’s Diner,” debuting his wry comedic alter-ego, Sometime Jones, on film. The production was a huge success leading to an Oscar nomination in the ‘Live Action Short’ category, by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. The film was also picked up for television and video distribution, in addition to being screened at national and international festivals, that included Chicago and Los Angeles, as well as Goteborg, Sweden and Venice, Italy.
On a roll, he went on to appear in John Huston’s “Annie,” “Running Scared” with Billy Crystal, three John Hughes’ pictures “She’s Having My Baby” with Kevin Bacon, “Planes, Trains and Automobiles” with Steve Martin and John Candy, and “Home Alone” with Mcaulay Culkin, as well as “Billy Madison” and “Pretty Woman.”
Television guest shots led to his recurring role of Mr. Heckles, the downstairs neighbor on “Friends” and to his impersonation as ‘the Other Kramer,’ who stole the raisins, on “Seinfeld,” in the ‘TV Show within The Show,’ episode.
But story writing, story telling and film production still called to him. He was haunted his by his gaunt counterpart Sometimes Jones, and after his real hair turned white, Jones’ alter-ego, a delusional aging biker named Emmett ‘Sagittarius’ Deemus emerged.
These vagabond satirical stories became the basis for Hankin’s book Fables of Sometimes Jones, as well as a CD “Larry Hankin:Pomes & Stories” released on New Alliance Records.
So, next up for Larry Hankin and his cast of alter-egos, Sometimes Jones and Uncle Emmett, (among other luminaries, such as Osama bin Laden, magic frogs and serial killers), is the Larry Hankin Funny Short Film Festival, a compilation of shorts that explores the relationships between Jones, Emmett and Hankin, reeled into delightful spoofs that are sure to delight audiences around the globe.