Larry Gelbart died today of cancer at age 81. Among his achievements was writing for the television version of M*A*S*H:
Set in the 4077th Mobile Army Surgical Hospital during the Korean War, TV’s “MASH” grew out of director Robert Altman’s hit 1970 movie written by Ring Lardner Jr., which was based on the 1968 novel by Richard Hooker (the pen name of Dr. Richard Hornberger, who had been a military surgeon in Korea).
Gelbart and his family were living in London, and he was producing the British TV show “The Marty Feldman Comedy Machine” in 1971 when producer-director Gene Reynolds called him about writing a pilot script for a TV series based on “MASH.”
In writing the pilot, Gelbart recalled in his 1998 memoir “Laughing Matters,” he knew that it “was going to have to be a whole lot more than funny. Funny was easy. How not to trivialize human suffering by trying to be comic about it, that was the challenge.”
“MASH” debuted on CBS in 1972, with Gelbart serving as executive script consultant. He and Reynolds were both executive producers of the show — and shared Emmys — when it won the award for outstanding comedy series in 1974.
Gelbart’s influence on “MASH,” Reynolds told the New York Times in 1989, was “seminal, basic and enormous.”
“Larry not only had the wit and the jokes,” Reynolds said, “he had a point of view. He not only had the ribald spirit, he had the sensibility to the premise — the wastefulness of war.”
As for the regulation-breaking surgeon Hawkeye Pierce — the lead character played by Alan Alda — Gelbart told the New York Times, “I didn’t have to think of why he was saying what he said. He was saying what I felt. I mean, he is an idealized me.”
Hawkeye, he said, “is capable — that is, at work, at what he does. He’s an idealist. He’s a romantic. Somebody who cares about himself and other people. He’s often frustrated by whatever particular system he finds himself fighting against.”
“MASH” ran for 11 years. But Gelbart’s involvement ended in 1976 after four years and 97 episodes. As he later told The Times, “After four years, I had given it my best, my worst and everything in between.”
In a statement Friday, Alda said: “Larry’s genius for writing changed my life because I got to speak his lines — lines that were so good they’ll be with us for a long, long time; but his other genius — his immense talent for being good company — is a light that’s gone out and we’re all sitting here in the dark.”
M*A*S*H was one of the greatest anti-war shows ever (as well as one of the greatest television shows of any type to ever air). If George Bush had spent more time when younger watching M*A*S*H instead of drinking, perhaps he would have thought twice about going into Iraq.
M*A*S*H was a nightly part of my family’s routine. For years, they ran the show in sydincted reruns on Los Angeles’s Channel 11 at 7:00 and 11:30 every night (right after the network news broadcasts on competing stations, in both cases) and watching them after dinner and the news was part of what my family did. Though my parents were Republicans, they were varying degrees of liberal Republicans (my father was a Romney/Scranton/Anderson fiscal conservative and my mom was a Rockefeller liberal) and, furthermore, the Mennonite Church to which they belonged was and remains committed to pacifism. On top of that, the serious episodes were profound and the funny episodes were profoundly funny.
It’s also worth noting (though he deserves immense credit for his work on M*A*S*H, from which I am not trying to detract) that Larry Gelbart was also a Hollywood script-writer. He wrote several screenplays, most notably Oh God! and Tootsie.
“M*A*S*H.” The show went on for another 11 years, although Gelbart only wrote and produced “M*A*S*H” for the first four seasons. “M*A*S*H” won 50 awards, including eight Golden Globes.
“M*A*S*H” was so popular it lasted much longer than the Korean War itself, and was seen as a commentary on American involvement in the Vietnam War. Gelbart also was involved in the short-lived sequel, “After MASH.”
For Gelbart, “M*A*S*H” mixed a bit of comedy with drama, allowing viewers to connect more with the story.
“I said once that the only way before ‘M*A*S*H’ you would get any feeling out of your television set is if you touched it while you were wet,”