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  1. Nov 2, 2021 · HBO tapped him to create another comedy series, The Larry Sanders Show, which landed his alter ego into a sitcom disguised as a fake late-night talk show, with brilliant backstage interpolations.

    • Garry Shandling Got The Idea For Larry Sanders from His Previous Show.
    • Jeffrey Tambor Made A Desperate Move to Get The Role of Hank Kingsley.
    • Albert Brooks's Defending Your Life Got Rip Torn The Role of Artie.
    • The "Hey Now" Episode Was Actually The First Episode Written and produced.
    • The Cinematographer Shot on Roller Skates.
    • The Actors Got Tired of Cleaning Up Their Language.
    • Jeremy Piven Left The Show to Star in P.C.U.
    • Janeane Garofalo Left Larry Sanders to Join SNL.
    • David Duchovny’s Attraction to Larry Was Duchovny’s idea.
    • Shandling Wrote The Jokes Making Fun of himself.

    Concurrently with his guest hosting of The Tonight Show, Shandling starred in Showtime’s It’s Garry Shandling’s Show from 1986 to 1990, where the comedian played himself, often addressing both the studio audience and the camera directly. In an episode where Garry was a guest on a morning talk show (“Take My Girlfriend, for Example”), he realized th...

    After having what he felt was a good audition, Jeffrey Tambor found himself uncharacteristically calling Shandling hours later, saying that he really wanted to play his sidekick. Shandling told him that calling after an audition is exactly somethingHank Kingsley would do.

    Executive producer Peter Tolan thought lawyer Bob Diamond, the character Torn played in Defending Your Life, was similar to what they were looking for with Larry Sanders’ producer character, Artie. When Torn and Shandling first met, Torn wouldn’t read the script until the two first had some idle chatter.

    When The Larry Sanders Show was on Netflix, “Hey Now” was correctly listed first. But when it originally aired on HBO, it was the last episode shown in thefirst season. Shandling credited Dennis Klein as the person who came up with Hank Kingsley’s classic Ed McMahon-ism.

    The talk show-within-the-show scenes were shot on four video cameras, and shown once a month to astudio audience. The scenes outside of the talk show were shot on film with three cameras in operation at once, with cinematographer Peter Smokler backpedalingon roller skates to shoot the walk-and-talks up and down the studio hallways.

    Up until the halfway point of season two, actors would record a second take of finished scenes without cursing, so someday it could be shown in non-cable syndication. But they eventually grew tiredof the extra work, leading to messier edits down the line when it was broadcast on IFC and Bravo.

    Jeremy Piven, who played Sanders' head writer Jerry, was written off the show in the early season two episode “Larry’s Birthday.” Piven received Shandling’s blessing to leave. When his movie career didn’t get off the ground, he co-starred on the sitcom Ellen.

    Mary Lou Collins (played by Mary Lynn Rajskub) was promoted to the role of booker when Janeane Garofalo's Paula character was written off the show. Garofalo lasted less than one season on SNL, and later admitted that she regretted leaving Larry Sanders.

    The X-Files star pitched the idea of his being sexually attracted to Sanders while the two wereplaying basketball.

    In the series finale, “Flip,” Sean Penn rips on Garry Shandling to Larry Sanders—which is the only time Shandling is ever referenced in the series. (Penn and Shandling had just worked together on the film version of Hurlyburly.) Shandlingtold The New York Timesthat he is the one who wrote the jokes about himself, as ''Nobody can write better jokes ...

  2. The Larry Sanders Show is a satire on show business that mixes fact with fiction. It featured real-life celebrity guests as they performed on the talk show and as they appeared behind the scenes.

    • Sitcom Satire
  3. Mar 24, 2016 · That was “The Larry Sanders Show.” A series that, though overlooked by audiences of its era, took root in the souls of Hollywood’s creatives and changed the very face of television as we ...

  4. May 30, 2023 · Seven years before the mobster’s first therapy session, Garry Shandling unveiled “The Larry Sanders Show,” a half-hour comedy that took viewers inside celebrity culture and changed the...

  5. Aug 30, 2012 · In order to get the show back (the network ratings saw a rise when it replaced his show with "Cheers" reruns), Artie and Larry create the fake story that Sanders had to enter rehab for a drug problem -- even though Larry thinks that excuse should be saved for when he really develops an addiction, something Artie unconsciously starts by the end ...

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  7. Sep 14, 2012 · When "The Larry Sanders Show" reached its end after six seasons and 89 episodes, the series' final moments naturally focused on them. True, Larry's most satisfying relationship was between himself and his talk show, but in the final analysis, the most important interpersonal dynamic on the series concerned Larry, Hank and Artie.

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