Madeline Kahn Was an Alien Freak in “Slapstick of Another Kind,” With Jerry Lewis
She was a comedy film queen throughout the seventies, but in the eighties she misfired with this sci-fi adaptation.
This post is part of the So Bad It’s Good Blogathon, a blog event for bad movies with cult followings. At the end I’ll tell you where you can find more posts like this.
Madeline Kahn was a hilarious comic and a talented singer, who died too early, at age fifty-seven. Before that, though, she appeared in some of the funniest films of the seventies: Blazing Saddles, Young Frankenstein, High Anxiety and History of the World Part I by Mel Brooks, and Paper Moon and What’s Up Doc? by Peter Bogdanovich.
Unfortunately, she also made a few stinkers. One of them was a sci-fi movie with Jerry Lewis called Slapstick of Another Kind, based on a Kurt Vonnegut novel.
Madeline Kahn: from singing waitress to Oscar nominee
The Boston native started as a singing waitress in upstate New York, doing songs from musical comedies and even opera. After some minor stage roles, her big break came in 1968. As part of composer Leonard Bernstein’s fiftieth-birthday concert, she performed Candide.
This led to roles on Broadway, and ultimately, Hollywood. In 1972, she made Doc, her feature film debut, followed by Moon the next year.
In Moon, Kahn played the carnival dancer who accompanies Ryan O’Neal and Tatum O’Neal on their trek across the midwest, scamming people. Kahn earned her first Supporting Actress Oscar nomination. Her second came the next year, with her funniest and perhaps her best role, as the burlesque singer who seduces sheriff Cleavon Little in Saddles.
Kahn’s career escalated. Then in 1982 came the chance to work with a comedy superstar in a film based on a book by a popular author.
Kurt Vonnegut and Slapstick
Noted sci-fi scribe Kurt Vonnegut published Slapstick in 1976. An active television and prose writer since the early fifties, his biggest success was 1969’s Slaughterhouse-Five, a novel with a strong anti-war theme, inspired by Vonnegut’s own experiences in combat. It became a film in 1972.
Slapstick, despite the title, was, in Vonnegut’s words, “grotesque, situational poetry—like the slapstick film comedies, especially those of Laurel and Hardy, of long ago.”
It concerns a pair of freakish twins with great mental powers. They conspire to rewrite the rules of western society in an effort to combat human isolation, even as civilization falls to pieces—except for the Chinese.
Time, Newsweek, The New York Times and Rolling Stone all panned the book upon its release.
Yet it was made into a movie.
Slapstick the movie
Slapstick of Another Kind was producer-writer-actor Steven Paul’s second time in the director’s chair. He had made the Elliot Gould movie Falling in Love Again at the age of twenty-one. As an actor, Paul was in both the play and film of Vonnegut’s Happy Birthday, Wanda June.
Stars Kahn and Lewis both play the twins (conceived by aliens) and the parents of the twins. Marty Feldman, Kahn’s co-star from Young Frankenstein, plays their nanny.
Pat Morita, Jim Backus, John Abbott, Merv Griffin, and even director Samuel Fuller round out the cast. Orson Welles (!) co-narrates.
In this making-of documentary about the film, Paul expresses his great appreciation not only for Vonnegut, but for Lewis. Kahn states the double-role appealed to her.
Paul tried to play up the comedic aspects of Vonnegut’s book, but the film isn’t funny at all. The theme of the twins being intelligent in a society getting dumber reminded me of Idiocracy, but Slapstick has none of that great film’s satirical bite. Instead, it has Lewis and Kahn throwing food at each other wearing onesies. It also looks cheap, despite the star power of Lewis and Kahn.
Paul made it in 1982 (the same year as The King of Comedy for Lewis), but it wasn’t released until 1984. The later version had parts cut, including a song sung by Kahn. You can hear it in the making-of doc.
Siskel & Ebert gave Slapstick two thumbs down. The Onion AV Club, in a 2010 review, called it “a crass violation of everything Vonnegut stood for, and continues to stand for today.”
Paul went on to a long, if schlock-filled, career, producing films such as the Ghost Rider movies, the live-action Ghost in the Shell, and the Baby Geniuses franchise. He remains active.
Kahn in later work
Kahn recovered from Slapstick. Despite only lasting one season starring in a TV series, she came back with the films Clue in 1985 and the animated musical An American Tail in 1986.
She did comedies and dramas, TV and film—including an episode of a show based on Vonnegut short stories called Monkey House—until her death in 1999.
She’s remembered for much better movies.
@byrichwatson
PLUS: You totally need to hear her sing, so listen to her perform the Rodgers & Hart tune “Bewitched,” from a 1995 benefit for The Drama League, an organization which supports American theater.
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More entries in the So Bad It’s Good Blogathon can be found at Taking Up Room, from February 23-25.