Rise of the great comedian: Jonathan Winters

By cchapman on August 26th, 2008 Blog Homepage

Posted in Rise of Great Comedians

Without Jonathan Winters, there’d be no Robin Williams. Williams himself said so. The two comedians’ style is often described as “madcap”, but a more accurate diagnosis would be “bipolar”. In Winters’ case, it was literally true as he once spent 8 months in a mental hospital.

Winters got his start when the Ohio TV station where he worked refused to give him a $5 raise. He quit and, with $56.36 in his pocket, moved to New York, promising his wife he’d return if he didn’t make it in a year. He started doing stand-up and got his break in 1957 when he landed a spot on “Omnibus”, a Sunday morning TV show hosted by Alastair Cooke. Sunday morning TV with Jonathan Winters and Mr. Masterpiece Theatre—who says the fifties were boring?

Breaking the mold of the wise-cracking but sane comedian personified by Bob Hope, Winters shtick was the one-man sketch, for which he provided sound effects and voices of the characters that poured forth from his imagination. In this clip, Winters is handed a pen-and-pencil set and asked to improvise. In less than three minutes, he creates twelve characters, including a water skier and a wood nymph—live, on network television.

Just as Winters gave birth to Williams, Williams cast Winters as his son on Mork & Mindy. Ever wondered where Mork’s “Na-Nu Na-Nu” came from? In one of his acts, Winters was impersonating a baby named Elizabeth. Baby Elizabeth’s mom tells her: “Take that groundhog out of your mouth—you don’t know where it’s been!” Baby Elizabeth’s answer?

“Ne-Nu-Na-Na-Nu-Nu.”

What? Exactly.

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