
One of the things I love about my job is that I have gotten to meet â and interview â a little more than my fair share of famous people â from sports celebrities like Pete Sampras, Wade Boggs and the late, great Lee Roy Selmon to entertainers like Tom Petty and actress Kathy Bates to public figures like former Vice-President Mike Pence, General Norman Schwartzkopf and yes, Saddebrook Resort founder Tom Dempsey.
But, I was surprised â and a little starstruck â to receive a phone call a few months ago from Marc Price, the actor, writer and stand-up comic who played Irwin âSkippyâ Handelman on the hit NBC-TV show âFamily Tiesâ from 1982-89. And, while Marc may not be the most famous person Iâve interviewed, his character â the best friend of star Michael J. Foxâs Alex P. Keaton â is someone with whom I felt a kindred spirit. I also was a little nerdy in high school, wore glasses until I finally got contact lenses at age 14 and my closest friends were always smarter and more adept at âgetting the girlâ than I was.
Our first conversation was very brief, but Marc told me then that he was coming to perform at Sidesplitters at The Grove in Wesley Chapel and would call me again to try to help promote his one-night-only show â which is scheduled for Friday, September 27, at 7 p.m.
And, he was true to his word. Marc called me a few days before we went to press with this issue and we had a great conversation, which was a stroll down memory lane for both of us â as I realized that, when compared with him, Iâve really hardly met anyone.
âMy father and mother were both in show business,â Marc told me. âMy dad was a âBorscht Beltâ comedian in the resorts of the Catskill Mountains in upstate New York from the 1930s through the early â80s. He performed under the name âAl Bernieâ and he did his stand-up routines frequently on âThe Ed Sullivan Show.â âThe Mike Douglas Showâ and âMerv Griffin.â My mom was a night club singer and recording artist who went by the stage name âJoy Mann.ââ
He adds, âMy dad loved show business. My mom hated show business…and she hated my dad.â

His parents split up when Marc was going through his formative years in the late 1970s and early 1980s, and he says he had to make a choice: either stay in New York and live with his mom, âwho wanted me to go to Cornell, have a family and follow in the footsteps of my doctor stepfather, that sort of thing. Or, I could move to Hollywood with my dad, hang out at The Comedy Store and try to be in showbiz. So really…my momâs plan never stood a chance.â
When they moved to California, Marc says, âMy dadâs goal was to make it on a sitcom â and that wouldnât have been absurd ten years before that because they were using people his age in the â60s and â70s. One of my dadâs best friends was Phil Foster, who played Laverneâs grumpy dad (Frank DeFazio) on âLaverne & Shirley.â So, it wasnât a crazy idea that my dad could get a part on a sitcom.â
But, he adds, âBy the time I moved out there with him, there was a shift on TV sitcoms to only young people who would become big stars. âFamily Tiesâ was a great example of that â it was about a family but it was really focused on the kids. And, it was very clear early in the show that he (Fox) was the breakout superstar of the show. And I think we all appreciated it.âÂ
Marc credits Foster for helping him land the part of Skippy.
âUncle Phil brought me to Paramount Studios one day and asked me, âDo you want to watch how we make âLaverne & Shirleyâ and âHappy Days?â And I was watching them figuring out how to make that physical comedy work and it just blew my mind.â
He says he, âalways knew I wanted to be a stand-up comedian, but here was this whole new world â acting â and he could see it in my eyes and said, âHey, you wanna come back and watch this all week?â If any of the security people gives you a hard time, you just tell them that youâre Phil Fosterâs nephew.ââ
But then, Marc says, âI started wandering around the studio and was on the set of âBosom Buddiesâ and Tom Hanks came over to juggle and do his shtick for me. And, it was only a few years later when he was on âFamily Tiesâ (as âUncle Nedâ) on the same set as me. Same thing with âMork & Mindyâ and âTaxi.â I got to watch them all getting made, watched the process.â
Because of that experience, he says, âIâd like to think that a couple of years later, when I was auditioning for âFamily Ties,â I was a lot more comfortable on set than the average 13- or 14-year-old. Sure, I was nervous, but it wasnât like a complete freak-out. It kind of felt like home.â
Marc says that one of the best things about being on the show was watching Fox just explode as a mega-star. âMichael was always super-cool to me and to this day, he remains an inspiration,â he says. âSo, we raise money for the Michael J. Fox Foundation at every stop on our tour because I believe that I might not even be on tour if it wasnât for him. People can go to TeamFox.org if they want to make a donation for a really great cause â Parkinsonâs disease research.âÂ
About His Stand-Up Show
Marc says his comedy âfollows in the footsteps of my dad. I would hang out backstage at his shows when we lived in New York and I met so many famous comics and actors â including George Burns, Joey Bishop, you know, the old-school greats, I even pitched Milton Berle a joke before I was 12 that he used in his stand-up act.âÂ
But then, when he and his dad moved to L.A., âThere was a Comedy Store near where we lived. This wasnât the famous Comedy Store on Sunset Blvd., because it was hard for a kid under age 14 to get into, but the one in Westwood, near UCLA, which was for those college kids, so they didnât serve hard alcohol, just wine, beer and food, and you could get in at any age, like a restaurant.â
He also remembered that when âFamily Tiesâ was on the air, ânone of the stand-up guys who went on to become the biggest sitcom and TV stars in history even had a TV show yet â Jerry Seinfeld, Drew Carey, Jay Leno, Paul Reiser and the list goes on. Yes, Seinfeld and Leno were the best-known stand-up comics in the country. And yes, they were famous, but Jay didnât host âThe Tonight Showâ yet and Jerry didnât have a sitcom. And I was working doing stand-up with these guys and they wanted to know about sitcoms, about my (other) world. They gravitated towards me.â
He adds, âAnd I got to meet and hang out with all of the comics on the circuit at that time â Andrew Dice Clay, Sam Kinison, Tim Allen, Jim Carrey. Jim was a few years older than me but he was the youngest guy working regularly at the Comedy Store. The host the first night I met Jim, my friend Freddy Asparagus, introduced us and said, âMarc, I want you to meet Jim. Heâs young, too, but we expect big things from him. So, I guess he was right.â
He says that because his influences in comedy were so varied â from Milton Berle to Sam Kinison â âI donât think you can say Iâm âlikeâ any other stand-up, maybe to my own detriment. Iâm not a very specific comedian, Iâm kind of all over the place. There are parts of my show that I like to think are smart and parts that I think are silly. And there are parts that are crazy, wacky, jokey, and there are parts where I deal with my true life and things that are very real to me. Itâs like what some people say about the weather â if you donât like something, wait a few minutes and itâll change.â
Marc did just a little of his act for me. âI love Florida because I live in L.A., where when youâre in your 50s, youâre a dinosaur. But then, I go to Florida and I hear, âOh…spring chicken.ââ
He admits he also enjoys a lot of todayâs young comics, âEven though none of them know who I am.â When I mentioned that I just saw Taylor Tomlinson in Vegas, he said, âIâve been trying to get on that show she does â âAfter Midnightâ â because they mix it up. They actually have folks from my world on it, too.â
In fact, he says, âI was actually on CBS in that exact time slot â 12:30 weeknights â but for only one week. It was when Pat Sajak was an epic failure as the big competition for Johnny Carson. So then, they tried something different called âThe Midnight Hour,â where they had a different host each week for eleven weeks as a summer replacement. One of those hosts was Bill Maher, and CBS should have picked him up, but they missed on him. And then, I got the eleventh â and final â week, at about age 19. When those shows aired, we were up against David Letterman. At the end of my week, the network executives asked me, âWhat do you think of this David Letterman?â And I said, âAre you kidding? Heâs amazing!â So, I like to think that I got him that job.â
For tickets to see Marc Price at Sidesplitters at The Grove (6333 Wesley Grove Blvd., in the B&B Theaters, Theater #7), visit SideSplittersComedy.com or call (813) 723-2170. For more info about Marc Price, visit IJoke.com.Â