Some
people think he was the finest American
humorist since Mark Twain. Of course Jean Shepherd has some mighty stiff competition—Will Rogers, Damon Runyon, Dorothy Parker,
James Thurber, Kurt Vonnegut, Molly Ivins, and the man most directly
beholden to him, Garison Keillor—but
he is in the race with bookies taking short odds.
For
a man who mined his own life for the inspiration of some of his most famous
work, Shepard’s early life and later personal one are somewhat shrouded in
mystery. And he tried hard to keep it
that way. Likewise for a man who
celebrated a somewhat quirky family life, he was miserable in creating one for
himself.
Shepherd
was born on July 26, 1921, but his family soon moved to Hammond, Indiana, which would become the Hohman of his radio broadcasts, short stories and films. His father Jean Sr. was a cashier of
the local Borden Milk dairy, a low level
white collar job that elevated his status and income slightly above the mill
workers and factory hands of the steal
town. He also kept working through
the Depression assuring the family,
which included a younger brother, of a moderate middle class life.
As
a boy young Jean was mesmerized by the programs on the cathedral-style console radio that was the family’s prized possession
and the center of their lives as they sat around the front room every night
after dinner. Jean re-lived the stories
in his play and as he grew older even became interested in the technical side
of broadcasting. While still in Hammond High School young Gene studied for and
got his Amateur Radio Operators License at
age 15. He was a life-long Ham Radio operator and as an adult was
a leading promoter of the hobby.
Shepherd’s
passion for radio followed him into World
War II service in the Army Signal
Corps.
Either
during or shortly after the war Shepherd had a brief, disastrous marriage. No official records of the marriage have been
found and the woman’s name is unknown, but family members including his
estranged son Randall and third
wife, actress Lois Nettleton confirmed
that there was one.
Shepherd
began his radio career at WSAI in Cincinnati, Ohio in 1948. He began “spinning the dials” as an engineer but
soon found his way on the air, at first as an emergency fill-in. Honing his skills he worked his way into
regular time slots. From 1950-53 he had
a late night show on KYW in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He brought his show back to Cincinnati where
it was broadcast on WLW a leading
station which could be heard by broadcast executives in New York. They were intrigued
by his unique style—improvised stories of his childhood mixed with a touch of
political satire, zany gags which often involved his loyal listeners, and
reading poetry, especially Robert
Service Yukon ballads. The show as a huge local hit. While in Cincinnati he also hosted a local
Television show called Rear Bumper.
In
1950 Shepherd married for a second time to Joan
Laverne Warner. Son Randall was born
in ’51 and daughter Adrien shortly
after the couple was divorced in 1957.
For years he refused to acknowledge paternity of Adrien and was
estranged from his son.
In
1956 NBC TV executives lured
Shepherd to New York City where he
was led to believe that he was the leading candidate to replace Steve Allen on the Tonight Show. He made appearances
with Allen and during the interim period after his departure tried out on the
air with Ernie Kovacs as his
co-host. Let that sink in and imagine
the future of late night TV in their
hands.
As
Shepherd later told the story, he was virtually guaranteed the job, but because
of contractual obligations were obliged to offer it first to Jack Paar who surprised them by
accepting. This may or may not be entirely
accurate. The episode, however, soured
Shepherd on television, a medium which he would often savage in his satire from
then on.
But
Shepherd caught on with an overnight show on New York’s WOR when the TV gig fell through.
The show was an immediate audience favorite. In addition to his usual repertoire of
improvised stories—his engineers confirmed that he worked without a script or
with the barest of notes—there were those elaborate gags.
The
most famous came after he discovered that the prestigious New York Times Best Seller List was
based not just on actual sales, but also on requests for a book at select city
bookstores. Shepherd concocted an
entirely fictional novel, I, Libertine by a supposedly famous
18th century author Frederick R. Ewing. He had listeners flood the bookstores with
requests for a new edition of the supposed classic. He and fans salted the local literary press
with items about the book to make it look even more legitimate. And sure enough, it showed up on the
List. The stuffy Times was mightily embarrassed.
Paperback
publisher Betty Ballantine decided
to make the most out of it and commissioned Shepherd and science fiction heavyweight Theodore
Sturgeon to write the book. Frank Kelly Freas the leading American
sci-fi illustrator did the memorable cover.
Although the 35 cent paperback never mate the Times list on its own, it has become a cult classic in its own
right.
Shepherd
was increasingly in conflict with his bosses.
The very success of the show loaded it down with advertisers and the
frequent interruptions interfered with his rambling stories. He asked engineers to clump all of the ads
together at the end of the show, a major no-no, or worse just ran over the time
allotted for them so that they never made it on the air at all. Add sales naturally dwindled and WOR threatened
to cancel the show after less than a year on the air.
Before
he went off the air Shepherd improvised a comic, conversational ad for Sweetheart Soap, which was not a
sponsor. Irate listeners flooded the
station with protest on word of their favorite show’s eminent demise and
Sweetheart soap was so impressed by the fake ad, that they signed on as
principle sponsor. The result was that
instead of pre-recorded spots, or spots that had to be read slavishly from the
script, Shepherd was able to move them seamlessly into the program, which influenced generations of
broadcasters.
As
Shepherd’s popularity in New York grew, so did other opportunities. A huge jazz
buff, he frequently hosted concerts in the area and recorded spoken word
contributions to albums by Charles
Mingus and others. He began to take
his show on the road, broadcasting live on Saturday nights from the Limelight Cafe in Greenwich Village. He also
did live shows on college campuses, and eventually at such prestige venues as Carnegie Hall and Town Hall.
His
broadcasts also had memorable moments connected to history. In 1963 he broadcast an account of his
participation of Martin Luther King’s
March on Washington. A few months
later he did a legendary show the day after John F. Kennedy’s assassination.
Now in addition to then beloved nostalgia pieces, the show contained
more pointed satire, particularly at American materialism and corporate
exploitation.
In
the late ‘50’s Shepherd collaborated with close chums from the Greenwich Village
scene, Shel Silverstein, Herb Gardner,
and Nettleton on a popular cabaret review, Look,
Charlie. He wed Nettleton in 1960. The couple stayed together until their divorce
in 1967. When he moved out, she retained
a large archive of his work, including unpublished manuscripts and drawings.
The
demand for print versions of Shepherd’s stories became irresistible. When Hugh
Hefner offered him a regular forum in Playboy he began to re-craft his
radio tales into short stories. His
special talent, like Twain’s, was in keeping the conversational style of his
own voice. Reading them was like
listening to the best story teller you ever heard spinning yarns on the
barstool next to you.
The
stories were anthologized in hugely popular collections—In God We Trust, All Others Pay
Cash, Wanda Hickey’s Night of Golden Memories and Other Disasters, The
Ferrari in the Bedroom, and A Fistful of Fig Newtons.
By
the late 70’s he was growing bored with the nightly grind. He thought of himself now as mostly a
writer. He also had admissions to bring
his stories to the screen. To the
distress of his fans, Shepard’s last WOR broadcast was in 1977. He limited his radio appearances to brief
guest spots on other shows until he came to public radio station WBAI FM
in the ‘90’s for Shepherd’s Pie a weekly Sunday night
program where he could read his stories uninterrupted.
As
he was leaving WOR, he took with him his last producer, Leigh Brown who he married in 1977.
She became a frequent collaborator on his new ventures in television and
movies.
He
was the writer and narrator of the show Jean Shepherd’s America on Boston Public Television station WGBH and later took his Shepherd’s Pie to the New Jersey public radio network. Eventually he was writing and producing
Public TV dramatic programs based on his stories including The Phantom of the Open Hearth, The
Great American Fourth of July and Other Disasters, The Star-Crossed Romance of
Josephine Cosnowski, and The Great American Road-Racing Festival, Ollie
Hopnoodle's Haven of Bliss.
Of
course he is most famous for A Christmas Story, the little 1983
film, almost ignored when it first came out, that has become the most beloved
holiday movie of all time and an annual tradition in millions of American
films. Narrated by Shepherd, the film is
one of the rare ones that seem fresh and funny no matter how often it is seen.
Ten
years later Shepherd revisited the family for a second film, It
Runs in the Family released on DVD
as My Summer Story. The new film featured Charles Grodin as The Old
Man, Mary Steenbergen as the mother, and Kieran Culkin as Ralphie. Despite praise for Shepherd’s narration, the
film was a critical and box office failure.
It was a major disappointment to Shepherd who was never again able to
get a film project to the big screen.
By
the late ‘90’s Shepherd, beset with diabetes
and heart problems, had retired in seclusion to Sanibel Island, Florida. His
weight ballooned and his mobility was limited.
His loyal wife Leigh tenderly cared for him until her death in
1997. Shepherd followed on October 16,
1999. He was still un-reconciled with his
children.
Next
month a new collection of Shepherd’s stories, previously unseen tales of his
time in the Army, will be published for the first time. The manuscripts were retrieved from Nettleton’s
collection and edited by Shepherd’s biographer, Eugene B. Bergmann. I am
sure that many of his devoted fans are itching to get their hands on Shep’s
Army: Bummers, Blisters, and Boondoggles
It is extremely interesting. I can't imagine how you research these things.
ReplyDeleteTypos?
Nettelton and Nettleton
... he was still [un?] reconciled with his children.
As a young lad in NYC, I listened to Shepherd late at night. His rambling always came back to a point he was making, astounding when you consider that he would riff on his riffs, circling back, at times, only by the end of the show. I saw the cracking fire that warmed Sam McGee, and cringed when Nayland Smith encountered that evil incarnate - Fu ManChu.
ReplyDeleteHi, Eugene B. Bergmann here. Thank you for the mention of my new SHEP'S ARMY, transcriptions of nearly three dozen of Shepherd's army stories. Rather than taking them from manuscripts as you suggest, all were carefully transcribed by me from audios of Shepherd's radio broadcasts. I had to do some minor editorial work on them, and I wrote an extensive introduction, plus intros to each of the parts of the collection. The foreword is by Shep-enthusiast and political commentator Keith Olbermann. (I'm not aware of any Shepherd manuscripts from Lois Nettleton's collection of Shepherd material. If there were, naturally I'd be interested in them. --I am aware of a couple of partial short-story manuscripts for sale.) I and many others did buy various items from that collection when they were sold on www.ebay.com soon after her death.
ReplyDeleteThese days I'm involved in interviews about my SHEP'S ARMY. So far, there's been the WCBS TV Sunday Morning show, Bloomberg Radio with Joe Franklin, and the forthcoming WBAI live 2-hour broadcast 7-9 PM 8/11/2013, as well as NPR with Scott Simon, and others. I also post several times a week on my blog, http://www.shepquest.wordpress.com
For the record, I'm called Shepherd's biographer because of my illustrated and annotated 496-page description and appreciation of all his creative his work published in 2005, EXCELSIOR, YOU FATHEAD! THE ART AND ENIGMA OF JEAN SHEPHERD.
Excelsior!