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    Last Words

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      I wasn't there, but my eleven-year-old son, Nick—who as a kid always had an unusually deep voice—was. The conversation went as

      follows:

      NH: Hello.

      GC: Is Tony there?

      NH: No. Who's this?

      GC: This is George Carlin. Who's this?

      NH: This is his son, Nick.

      GC: Hey, Nick, how the fuck are ya?

      NH: Pretty fucking good. How the fuck are you?

      An hour later when we finally spoke, George—not as a rule exactly pro-kid—said he was impressed by Nick's lightning powers of

      repartee. I said it was hardly surprising: Nick had grown up roaming

      the same Upper West Side streets and basketball courts George had

      fifty years earlier.

      We discussed what was needed to bring the book up to date.

      George seemed to feel his work on it was largely done. He'd covered

      the first sixty years of his life in great detail and depth; he'd told

      me many things about himself and his life he'd never told anybody

      else and we'd uncovered a lot of other stuff in our conversations.

      Nothing that remarkable had happened in the last few years except

      Brenda's death. We could either deal with that or cut the book off

      before it. There was no rule you had to include everything in your

      life in a book like this. By that logic, anyone who wrote an autobiography couldn't finish it until they were dead.

      XVI

      INTRODUCTION

      We decided to see how Napalm C? Silly Putty did and regroup in

      the fall. On top of his book tour and normal concert load, George had

      an upcoming HBO special in November to plan. As things turned

      out, we never did regroup. 9/11 intervened, causing George major

      headaches for his HBO show (and adding a darkly comic episode to

      the sortabiography). Napalm became another huge best-seller, staying on the New York Times best-seller list for twenty straight weeks;

      the audiobook won George his fourth Grammy. Meanwhile I was

      on the best-seller list too, having become involved with a fast-track

      9/11 book, a photographic tribute to the FDNY and the 343 firefighters who died at the World Trade Center, called Brotherhood,

      which I edited and cowrote with Frank McCourt. (Rudy Giuliani

      and Thomas van Essen provided forewords. T he proceeds went to

      FDNY charities.)

      By the time I next saw George, at his HBO special in November, our literary landscape had changed. His publisher wanted another humor book like Napalm, and by now I was in the process of

      selling my own semiautobiographical book, the account of a lifelong friendship I'd had with a saintly and funny Benedictine monk

      named Father Joe. Not to worry, said George, our book was great

      and it wasn't going anywhere. It would get done.

      It was mid-'03 before I surfaced from writing Father joe and made

      contact with George again. In the meantime he'd experienced

      more heart problems—arrhythmia, requiring a procedure called an

      ablation. He was also doing a new humor book, When Will ]esus

      Bring the Pork Chops?, a title designed to be offensive to all three

      Abrahamic faiths. (When it came out in 2004, the only religious

      institution it offended was Walmart. Because the cover lampooned

      the Last Supper with George seated at the table, waiting for Jesus,

      they refused to rack the book.)

      George was always a long-term planner, and a new idea now entered the picture, involving an ambition of his we'd discussed occasionally, of capping his career with a Broadway show. The model

      for it would be Lily Tomlin's brilliant, virtuosic performance in Jane

      Wagners The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe,

      which she'd premiered in 1985 and had since performed all over

      X V I I

      INTRODUCTION

      the world. His new idea was to use childhood stuff from the book as

      a basis for the Broadway show; then when it opened, finally publish

      the sortabiography itself. The success of one would feed the success

      of the other. This seemed an excellent approach, especially since he

      wanted me to work on the Broadway end of it too.

      2004 came and went, and by the time we spoke again, George

      had been through rehab and was working again as hard as ever. But

      he had begun to talk more and more about slowing down, about

      someday soon getting off the road. Then he could devote the time

      he needed to the "Broadway thing." His health began to d e c l i n e after the 2005 HBO special he suffered heart failure—but whenever

      we spoke the plan for the next stage in his long and extraordinary

      career remained the same.

      George didn't live to fulfill his dream of homecoming, of taking

      his hometown by storm on Broadway, the magical place where he

      scampered as a boy from stage door to stage door, filling a fat autograph book. But at least the story of his life has made it to the light.

      In his own words.

      Words—the thing he loved most.

      XVIII

      1

      THE OLD MAN

      AND THE SUNBEAM

      Patrick Carlin Sr.

      (Courtesy of Kelly C a r l i n - M c C a l l )

      Sliding headfirst down a vagina with no clothes on and landing

      in the freshly shaven crotch of a screaming woman did not

      seem to be part of God's plan for me. At least not at first. I ' m

      not one of those people who can boast of having been a sparkle in

      his mother's eye. A cinder comes closer.

      I was conceived in a damp, sand-flecked room of Curley's Hotel

      in Rockaway Beach, New York. August 1936. A headline in that Saturday's New York Post said "Hot, sticky, rainy weekend begins. High

      humidity and temperatures in the 90s send millions to the beaches."

      At the Paramount Theater in Times Square, Bing Crosby and Frances Farmer starred in Rhythm on the Range. Meanwhile at Curley's

      Hotel on Beach 116th Street, Mary and Patrick Carlin starred in yet

      another doomed Catholic remake of Rhythm in the Sack.

      For several generations Rockaway Beach had been a favorite

      weekend retreat for New York's alcohol-crazed Irish youth in search

      of sex and sun. Popular ethnic slurs to the contrary, the Irish do enjoy sex—at least the last ten seconds or so. But we must admit that

      Irish foreplay consists of little more than "You awake?" Or the more

      caring, sensitive "Brace yourself, Agnes!"

      Not that my conception was the tale of two young lovers, carried away by passion and strong wine. By the time my father's eager,

      whiskey-fueled sperm forced its way into my mother's egg-of-themonth club, she was forty and he was forty-eight—certainly old

      enough to be carrying rubbers. The odds against my future existence were even longer: this particular weekend was a single isolated

      3

      LAST WORDS

      sex-fest during a marital separation that had lasted more than a year.

      In fact the preceding six years of my parents' marriage had consisted

      entirely of long separations, punctuated by sudden brief reconciliations and occasional sex-fests.

      The separations were long because my father had trouble metabolizing alcohol. He drank, he got drunk, he hit people.

      My mother told me that my father hit her only once. (My older

      brother, Patrick, can't say the same.) His first marriage ended disastrously when his first wife died of a heart attack not long after one

      of his beatings. My mother's theory was that while my father had


      been very free with his hands where his first family and Patrick were

      concerned, he didn't abuse her, because she had four brothers and

      her dad was a policeman.

      Their reconciliations were sudden because my father had a terrific line of bullshit. And because my mother really loved him. The

      two of them were crazy about one another. According to those who

      knew them they were one of the great pairings of all time. So while

      I sprang from something good and positive, by the time I showed up

      I was a distinct inconvenience. This marriage had gone south long

      before. As in Tierra del Fuego.

      Getting conceived had been hard enough. Staying conceived literally required a miracle. My next brush with nonexistence came

      two months after the sweaty sex-weekend in Rockaway Beach.

      During the five years between the birth of my brother and my

      tiny embryo glomming on to a few square millimeters of her uterine

      wall, my mother had made several visits to a certain Dr. Sunshine

      in Gramercy Square. Never for an abortion, mind you. Holy Mary

      Mother of God, no! The procedure in question was called a D&G:

      dilation and curettage—literally "open wide and scrape." A wonderfully delicate euphemism for quasi-Catholics with a little money.

      Really high-tone too. Gramercy Square was the place to get opened

      wide and scraped. No back-alley abortions on my father's salary.

      Legend has it that my mother was seated in Dr. Sunshine's waiting room with my father who, being a family man, was reading the

      sports pages, apparently just fine with my being less than a hundred

      feet from Storm Drain #3. The good doctor's instruments were ster4

      THE OLD MAN AND THE SUNBEAM

      ile and standing by. The old dilator-and-curettager had selected a

      nice new pair of rubber gloves and was whistling cheerfully as he

      pulled them on preparatory to my eviction.

      Then it happened. My mother had a vision. Sometimes when

      you're trying to be born, that religious shit can come in handy. Not

      a full-blown vision, like Jesus' face being formed by pubic hairs in

      the bottom of the shower. But real enough to save my embryonic

      ass. My mother claimed she saw the face of her dear, dead mother—

      who'd died six months earlier—in a painting on the waiting-room

      wall. She took this as a certain sign of maternal disapproval from beyond the grave. (Catholics go for that sort of thing.) She jumped up

      and left the abortionist's office, with me still safely in the oven. On

      the street below she delivered these momentous words to my father:

      "Pat—I'm going to have this baby."

      And so I was saved from an act frowned on by the Church through

      an experience smiled on by the Church. It's a wonder I'm not more

      devout. In fact you might be surprised that I support a woman's right

      to an abortion. But I do. Absolutely. So long as it's not my abortion.

      My father's response to this dramatic development is unrecorded.

      No doubt it included something about finding a place nearby that

      had qualified for a liquor license. After all, this was a man who, riding home from the hospital where my brother had just had a tonsillectomy, said: "Know how many beers I could've bought with what

      it cost to take your damn tonsils out?"

      In October 1936, shortly after my aborted abortion, Mary and

      Pat decided to try and make a go of marriage again. So here they

      were, this time at 155th and Riverside, with another nice home, a

      maid and of course the same old problems. And I have to say that

      while my father's drinking must have made a sizable contribution to

      the chaos, my mother was an extremely difficult person to live with.

      She was spoiled, self-centered, strong-willed and demanding; no

      matter who you were, she'd find out how to press your buttons, God

      bless her sainted memory.

      Somehow though, while I waxed and multiplied within her,

      things sailed along smoothly enough for them to stay together. One

      day in May 1937 she decided to take a recreational stroll on the then

      5

      LAST WORDS

      new George Washington Bridge. The exertion brought on labor

      pains sooner than expected and a couple days later I came barreling

      down the birth canal, a nine-pound behemoth, requiring the use of

      forceps. My mother insisted care was taken not to grip my temples

      lest in her delightful words, it caused "the creation of an idiot." This

      was almost as important to her as the fact that the obstetrician was

      Dr. James A. Harrar, the "Park Avenue doctor" who'd delivered the

      Lindbergh baby.

      The day I was born was auspicious. It was the day King George

      VI of England was crowned and a commemorative stamp was issued with the king's head on it—along with my birthdate, May 12th,

      1937. How about that? A New York Irish kid named George rates a

      fucking stamp for his birthday! No wonder I've always been a devout

      monarchist. I was also born about a week after the Hindenburg disaster. I've often wondered whether I'm the reincarnation of some

      charbroiled Nazi CEO.

      Lying there in New York Hospital, my first definitive act on this

      planet was to vomit. And vomit and vomit and vomit. For the first

      four weeks of my life I lived to projectile vomit. My mother later told

      me with great pride: "They would feed you and you would shoot formula clear across the room. You couldn't keep anything down." And

      I still can't. This remarkable inability to hold anything back and to

      spew it clear across a public space has served me well my whole life.

      At New York Hospital, I also survived circumcision, a barbaric practice designed to remind you as early as possible that your genitals are

      not your own.

      My first home—the Vauxhall, 780 Riverside Drive at 155th

      Street—was, according to my brother, "opulent." Expensive new furniture, a sunken living room, a dramatic view of the Hudson River

      and—Amanda, a very large, strong black woman who was actually

      capable of backing my father down. She became Patrick's and my

      protector when Dad got out of line—which was plenty. The bar at

      Maguire's Chop House on Upper Broadway got regular and strenuous workouts. Meanwhile my mother had settled into her Marie

      Antoinette period, sitting at the dinner table, tinkling her little bell

      to cue Amanda that the next course should be served. In fairness to

      6

      THE OLD MAN AND THE SUNBEAM

      my old man, that sort of behavior in a New York City cop's daughter

      would be enough to drive anyone out to the boozer for a few pops.

      One night Pat the Elder sailed in, ethanol-powered and very late,

      and Mary had a few choice things to say about "what good is it having all this nice stuff if we can't have meals together, blah blah blah."

      During the subsequent debate, to emphasize an abstruse point he

      was making, Pat carefully dropped a tray of silver-and-crystal tea

      service from their sixth-story window to the street below. He said

      something on the order of "This is what I think of your nice stuff"

      and headed Maguire-wards.

      Mary, who was capable of making life-changing decisions on a

      dime, made one now. She was leaving for good. Despite my father's

      promises, the pattern hadn't changed. There was a new baby on

      the scene. Who knew when I might be sched
    uled for a taste of the

      character-forming "discipline" my brother had endured since infancy? Three months? Six? As soon as I had hair I could be hauled

      around our living space just like him.

      That night, Mother Mary headed for the one place she knew

      we'd be welcome and safe—her father's house. Dennis Bearey, the

      gentle ex-policeman, lived not far away at the corner of 111th Street

      and Amsterdam. Two days after our arrival there, my father was

      spotted across the street watching the building, hoping to collar my

      mother on her way out and stage one of his specialties—getting back

      in her good graces with that terrific line of bullshit. But this time

      Mary was having none of it. Three days later she, Patrick and I went

      out Grandpa's fire escape, down four stories and through the backyards of 111th Street to Broadway, where my uncle Tom was waiting

      in his car. He drove us up to South Fallsburg in the Catskills and a

      farm owned by a couple of my mother's friends.

      There we stayed for two months. I was barely sixty days old but

      my life on the road had begun. And my first stop was the Catskills.

      A week later, my father forced his way into Grandpa's apartment

      by breaking down the door. The tough old cop, now seventy-four,

      was helpless to stop him. The next day he was dead of a stroke. Chalk

      up Number Two to my Dad. Technically he may not have been a

      killer but he sure was good at causing death.

      7

      LAST WORDS

      Dennis Bearey had come from Ireland to be a New York City

      policeman and, over the years, prided himself on the fact that he

      never used his gun. A strong man, he used to play with his four sons

      by extending his fist and telling them "Run up against that and kill

      yourself." After seventeen years on the force, he was retired on a disability from injuries he sustained struggling with a street criminal.

      A few weeks before, he'd passed the test for first lieutenant and was

      told by his immediate superior that a payoff of a thousand bucks was

      expected if he wanted the promotion. He refused to pay the bribe

     


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