View Full Version : Gerald Ford Didn't Make His Career, Actor Chevy Chase Says


Brian Damage
12-31-2006, 01:18 PM
SAN FRANCISCO - U.S. comic actor Chevy Chase, who portrayed Gerald Ford as a klutz on the 1975-76 Saturday Night Live television shows, says he does not enjoy the renewed attention the ex-president's death brought him.
"I'm just a guy who made some fun of Gerald Ford in 1976 and I prefer to be left alone, really," the 63-year-old comedian told Reuters this week from a Colorado ski resort where he had been skiing with his daughter.

Chase, who has starred in many Hollywood film comedies and written for television shows, said he gets upset when people say that Ford "made" his career.

"The man who 'made my career' did not do Fletch, did not do Caddyshack, did not write for the Smothers Brothers before he wrote for Saturday Night Live, did not write for 12 years before that and win Writers Guild awards.

"It's that kind of thing that comes out in the press that perpetuates myths about me that are disgusting, that hurt my feelings, that hurt my family's feelings."

Chase and other original cast member of Saturday Night Live once relished the national publicity that the show's irreverent comedy generated.

But since Ford's death at age 93 on Tuesday, Chase has declined interview requests from the nation's top newspapers and television news programs, which have repeatedly played excerpts of his old skits. Pundits and Internet blogs also have been debating Chase's impact on the Ford presidency.

"He did not make my career," said Chase, who spoke to Reuters twice this week by telephone. "If anything, I took his career and put it in the dumper because I did not want him to be president of this country, that's the way it really should be written."

Chase said he later became friendly with Ford and called the Republican "a very, very sweet man."

"He took my wife and I on a whole lovely trip through Grand Rapids to show us where he had been as a child and what not. We kept in touch and he was just a terrific guy," he said.

Mr. Cranky
01-01-2007, 12:01 PM
Ain't about you Chase.

pscisme
01-01-2007, 12:09 PM
Thanks for the Chevy Chase piece, which says a lot.

Of course, his portrayal of Ford didn't "make his career," and I'd like to know who the idiots are who'd say otherwise.

I think it's probably more true than not that Chase's send up of the President did influence the country's idea of Gerald Ford (it sure did for me, though I wasn't old enough to vote for another 4 years) and I appreciate that Chase explained why he lampooned him at the time and how he came to see another side of the man years later.

On the other hand, Chevy Chase has made it plain that he is a bitter man and anyone who interviews him seems only to rile him up-there's really nothing funny coming out of these latter day interviews.

It's a shame that the man who brought so much laughter to so many seems so angry and humorless, but whatcha gonna do?

Bobby F.
01-01-2007, 12:25 PM
"If anything, I took his career and put it in the dumper because I did not want him to be president of this country, that's the way it really should be written."


:rolleyes: His party sure put a great man in the White House after Ford. Idiot. How hard would it have been for Chase just to say that the 2 of them help each other out in the way people looked at them. I always like Chevy. Didn't know he was such an ass though. Sucks to be bitter over something that happened over 20 years ago.