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THE COMEDY CAREER OF FOZZIE BEAR
Age
16: Encouraged by friends who repeatedly say, “You
know, you’re really funny” and “Few puppet bears
can quote Nichols & May routines verbatim,” Fozzie Bear
attends his first open mic night. His jokes about curfews and scatological
references to Lincoln Logs fail to engage the hard-drinking 3 A.M.
crowd but comedy club owners are quickly taken by his willingness
to Simonize their cars in exchange for stage time.
Age 18: Fozzie attends Fordham University to earn
a political science degree but soon starts spending more hours in
downtown comedy clubs than in class. He hones an extended riff about
the time he tried mushrooms and shaved off some his fur, only to
realize that fabric rarely, if ever, grows back.
Age 20: Fozzie drops out of college to focus solely
on his stand-up career. He begins dabbling in anti-comedy, singing
the fine copy of Maytag dryer warranties. What he gains in notoriety
he loses in laughs and bookings. Fozzie also starts to DJ at a Lower
East Side bar. It’s there that he meets future singer/songwriter
Paul Williams, then concertina player for a pre-thrash Husker Du.
Age 22: Fozzie reworks routine yet again, focusing on inability
to figure out women, impressions of famous people doing ordinary
tasks and the inanities of travel. He immediately lands a slot on
“The Tonight Show.” Emboldened by the fortuitous turn
in his career, Fozzie uses his five minutes of airtime to muse on
what the mythology of Count Chocula would be like if written by
Anne Rice. Carson does not invite him to sit by his side at routine’s
end.
Age 24: Destitute and desperate, Fozzie is about
to take a real estate agent license test when he receives a callback
for a commercial spokesperson gig. His resulting tagline, “I
don’t go in the woods, I go in an American Standard toilet”
gets him the attention of then-NBC President Fred Silverman, who
signs him to a sitcom deal.
Age 25: NBC announces the fall premiere of “Fozzie,”
about a leather-jacketed cool guy who always gets the women, tools
around on a motorcycle and turns on appliances by hitting them.
Gary Marshall sues for intellectual theft before a single scene
is shot.
Age 27: CBS picks up the sitcom “Grin &
Bear It,” starring Fozzie as a happy-go-lucky social worker
tending to two children—Rodney Allen Rippy and Mason Reese,
playing themselves if only to negate the need to write character
backstories. Audience reaction to the test pilot is violent at best.
The series is reworked and reconceived several times before eventually
airing as “Barnaby Jones,” starring Buddy Ebsen. Fozzie
fires his agent, manager and spiritual advisor.
Age 29: Fearing he has blown any and all opportunities
to achieve a career in comedy, Fozzie tries his hand at dramatic
acting. His one-person reimagining of Ibsen’s “A Doll
House” not only proves spectacularly ill-conceived but also
heavily cribbed from the movie “The Deep,” down to his
repeated mention of actress Jacqueline Bisset.
Age 30: While toiling as a janitor at a Burger
Chef, Fozzie is introduced by Paul Williams to Kermit the Frog,
a fast-rising comedy star who just landed a deal with a British
production company for “The Muppet Show” (initially
pitched as “‘Laugh-In’ meets ‘Animal Farm,’
minus the political screed”) Fozzie auditions for the role
of crotchety audience member Statler but instead lands the much
larger role of Fozzie Bear, in part thanks to his “almost
preternatural understanding” of the character.
Age 31: “The Muppet Show” airs and
immediately becomes a worldwide sensation. While less than thrilled
with the vaudevillian-style jokes he is required to cite, Fozzie
is ecstatic to finally be able to afford his own car, home and mescaline.
Age 32: Worried that the show’s family-friendly
content could have a negative impact on his grittier stand-up career,
Fozzie pushes for more experimental humor. He and Kermit eventually
come to blows over a proposed skit about ursine gynecologists. Fozzie
is dropped from two episodes. The skit is retooled as “Veterinarian’s
Hospital.”
Age 34: Fozzie starts bad-mouthing Kermit in the
press, calling him a “sell out” and “slave to
mass market needs.” The acrimony spills over to the filming
of “The Muppet Movie,” during which Fozzie takes a nasty
swipe at Kermit only to inadvertently maul Paul Williams, resulting
in six less songs on the soundtrack.
Age 36: “The Great Muppet Caper” goes
way over budget when Fozzie demands and gets an extended musical
number featuring then-girlfriend Pia Zadora and a song by Meatloaf
lyricist Joe Steinman. The 23-minute tune, “I Want to Give
You My Heart but That Would Take Away My Life” is eventually
cut and the footage burned.
Age 39: Strung out on mescaline and bitterness,
Fozzie requires multiple takes during the shooting of “The
Muppets Take Manhattan.” His startling lack of professionalism
raises the ire of first-time director/screenwriter David Mamet who,
unhappy with the final product, opts for credit under an assumed
name.
Age 42: Fozzie checks himself into rehab, mostly
for the industry contacts. The Muppets momentarily break up while
Kermit and first wife Miss Piggy try to start a family much to the
horror of animal geneticists.
Age 43: Fozzie stars in “Mannequin 4”
with then-girlfriend Judy Tenuta. The movie is never run, broadcast
or mentioned by film historians.
Age 44: Fozzie returns to his stand-up roots, longing
to try out material deemed far too risqué under Jim Henson’s
management. The years, however, have been unkind to Fozzie’s
comedic stylings as he finds his once-taboo material is now best
suited for children’s parties.
Age 45: In dire need for cash but unable to work
with Kermit, Fozzie sells all rights to his name to Walt Disney
Company. Another puppet bear assumes the role of “Fozzie”
in “The Muppet Christmas Carol,” “Muppet Treasure
Island,” “The Muppets’ Wizard of Oz” and
“Muppet Medea.”
Age 46—51: Whereabouts unknown. Rumors swirl
of death by drug overdose, autoerotic asphyxiation or hunter.
Age 52: Reappears with one-man show about missing
years and critical backlash titled, “Lost and Frowned.”
Show garners huge audiences, great acclaim and top honors at Edinburgh
Fringe Festival.
Age 53: Fozzie signs a $50 million deal with Comedy
Central.
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