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ENTERTAINMENT Comedian George Carlin Dies in Los Angeles at 71
George Carlin, 71, the much-honored American stand-up
comedian whose long career was distinguished by pointed
social commentary that placed him on the cultural cutting
edge, died two Sundays ago in Santa Monica, Calif.
He had long struggled with health problems and a heart
condition dating to the 1970s, and, according to Associated
Press and other reports, he had checked into the hospital
after experiencing chest pain.
Carlin's comedy career spanned a half-century, starting
with years as a disc jockey in the 1950s and culminating
with his selection last week by the John F. Kennedy Center
for the Performing Arts to receive this year's Mark Twain
Prize for American Humor, a lifetime achievement award.
Over that time, he evolved from the more straight-laced
member of a comedy duo formed with Jack Burns into a social
satirist whose routines deliberately tweaked the social and
cultural edge -- mocking religion, sexual prudery and
American society.
In an interview last year with The Washington Post,
Carlin said that as his career evolved, "I found myself in a
divorce from my species and culture" and changed his focus
from mainstream nightclub stand-up to the biting,
observational humor that made him famous. He teased the
shallowness of radio programming in skits about the
fictional station WINO, and the shallowness of television
personalities with his "Hippy Dippy Weatherman."
Those lighthearted parodies gave way, however, to a more
serious exploration of language, social mores and
particularly "religious superstition."
It was a career that both tracked the changes underway in
the 1960s and 1970s, and helped mold them. His 1972 album
"Class Clown" included the signature "Seven Words You Can
Never Say on Television" -- an expletive-filled bit that led
the Supreme Court to clarify rules for what could be said on
radio and television and when.
In the spirit of 1950s comic Lenny Bruce, whose
monologues wore down the significance of offensive language
through repetition, Carlin's routine took a list of words
which, ostensibly, could not be said on television, and
worked them into contexts that ranged from the Bible to a
housewife in the kitchen.
Carlin was arrested for performing the monologue live in
Wisconsin, though the charges were dropped by a judge who
found the material indecent but protected under the First
Amendment.
However when a New York radio station aired a similar bit
by the comic, a complaint to the Federal Communications
Commission ended with a Supreme Court ruling which, in fact,
upheld restrictions on language that was "patently
offensive," not just obviously obscene.
While the media landscape has changed markedly since that
1978 ruling -- the content available on cable television and
the Internet makes Carlin's monologue seem almost quaint --
the controversy secured his reputation as a social critic.
"In his lengthy career as a comedian, writer and actor,
George Carlin has not only made us laugh, but he makes us
think," Kennedy Center chairman Stephen A. Schwarzman said
in announcing Carlin as this year's Twain Prize recipient.
Though an iconoclast, Carlin was embraced by the culture
he mined for his material. He made dozens of appearances on
the popular television shows hosted by Johnny Carson and Ed
Sullivan. Mainstream outlets curbed their interest in him,
however, as his material grew racier and his pony-tailed
appearance more offbeat.
The popularity of his albums earned him four Grammy
Awards -- including his first, for "FM & AM," recorded in
1971 at Washington's old Cellar Door club. He hosted the
debut episode of Saturday Night Live in 1975, an appearance
for which, he notes on his Web site, he was "loaded on
cocaine all week long" -- a reference to substance abuse
problems that dogged him throughout his life. Carlin also
appeared in numerous movies and television shows, voiced
animated characters in children's shows, and enjoyed a
steady stream of appearances on cable television, where he
was free to say what he wished.
Born in Manhattan in 1937, Carlin grew up in Morningside
Heights, and in a Washington Post interview last year traced
his interest in comedy to an imitation of sultry film star
Mae West that he would perform as a child for his mother's
friends.
"I got the attention of the adults and I got their
approval," Carlin said.
He dropped out of high school and joined the Air Force in
1954. He began his radio career at age 18 working at station
in Louisiana near where he was stationed, then moved to
Boston after his discharge from the service to begin his
career in earnest.
He once summed up his approach: "I think it is the duty
of the comedian to find out where the line is drawn and
cross it deliberately."
His first wife, Brenda, died in 1997. They had a
daughter, Kelly. A second wife, Sally Wade, survives him.
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