believe, Andy made his sister a mem- ber of the audience. Before Kaufman began on his path to professional success, he took a walk on the wild side. It was the turbulent '60s and Andy was constantly party- ing; he took LSD, drank and did drugs," says Zmuda. "But then he began practicing Transcendental Meditation (TM), and that commit- ment taught him to clean up his life. He never smoked or did drugs after that. "It's ironic that he died of lung can- cer, because as long as I knew him, he wouldn't even be in a room with someone who smoked." Although Kaufman embraced Transcendental Meditation, he still considered himself an observant Jew. "Andy grew up in a. Jewish home, had a bar mitzvah and was a nice Jewish boy," says Zmuda. "Every year when the most important Jewish holidays rolled around, he would participate, no matter how busy he was. For the High Holidays and Passover, he would make sure to be on the East Coast so he could celebrate with his folks." When Kaufman got off drugs, he enrolled at a community college in Boston to study film and television. According to Zmuda, one day a stu- dent approached Kaufman about entering the campus talent show. With the serenity and confidence that TM had brought him, he accepted, and wound up performing some of his childhood routines. "The crowd's extraordinary reac- tion, coupled with his new mind-set from TM, proved to Andy that his fears were no longer part of his lug- gage," Zmuda writes in his book. "So he set them down and never looked back." Around that time, Kaufman's girl- friend Gloria became pregnant with his child. Not ready for parenthood, they put the baby girl up for adop- tion. When the daughter, Maria, came of age, she decided to seek out her biological parents. Although Andy had passed away, Maria developed a rela- tionship with the Kaufman family. In Man on the Moon, Maria's daughter (Andy's granddaughter) plays Andy's sister as a young girl. U pon finishing college, Andy Kaufman headed for New York City to try out his routines. Creating his own bizarre brand of humor, he began as an improvisational stand-up comedian at New York clubs like The Improv and Catch a Rising Star. With a fascination for Elvis, he did an uncanny impersonation of the King of Rock 'n' Roll. And, as a mas- ter of foreign accents, Kaufman often- times cast himself as an oddball, refus- ing to break out of character. "The first time I met Andy he was performing on stage, speaking with a thick foreign accent," recalls Zmuda. "Later that evening, while I was trying to figure out what country he was from, I saw him loading props into his car. "When he spotted me, he asked in a thick Russian-like accent if I would help him. He said he had hurt his back. I agreed and wound up carrying all of his very heavy equipment. 'Dank you veddy much,' he said when I was through. I said, 'You're welcome.' Then Andy yelled, 'Sucker!' with an American accent and jumped in his car and drove away. I actually thought it was hysterical and was anxious to get to know him. Before long, we ), became close friends. In 1975, Kaufman's offbeat humor brought him into the national spot- light after his television debut on the first-ever episode of Saturday Night Live, where he sang the "Mighty Mouse" theme. A hit with the audi- ence, he wound up with more than a dozen appearances on SNL. The instant fame allowed him to move to Los Angeles, where his career continued to flourish. He appeared on television with Red Foxx, Dick Van Dyke, David Letterman and Johnny Carson. He also hosted Andy's Funhouse TV Special and sold out at Carnegie Hall. Perhaps his most memorable role was that of Latka Gravas, on the sit- - com Taxi, where he portrayed the weird immigrant mechanic whose bro- ken English had audiences asking for more. Despite his fame and fortune, Kaufman continued to push audiences to the limit, leaving them squirming in their seats. According to a 1998 Esquire magazine article, Kaufman was once quoted as saying, "I want people to laugh from the gut, be sad from the gut or get angry from the gut." He had them doing all three. During one concert he read aloud with a British accent from The Great Gatsby; after an appearance at Carnegie Hall, Kaufman hired 20 buses and took a large portion of the audience out for milk and cookies; during an L.A. performance, he did his laundry on stage using a portable r*: Convincee4 as the saying goes, that there really aren't more than six degrees of separation in this world, a writer reports on he r personal connection to "Man on the Moon." n the film Man on the Moon, Courtney Love plays the lead role of Lynn Margulies, Andy ICaufman's girlfriend. But had it not been for the film My Breakfist With 131assie, produced by my sister, Linda Burdick Margulies (profes- sionally known as Linda Lautrec), Lynn Margulies probably never would have met Andy Kaufman. It was back in 1982, when Linda, advantages of filing your teeth and Blassie's affinity for shopping at hardware stores. Keeping the skeleton cast within the family, Linda, along with her hus- band, Martin Margulies (whose showbiz name is Johnny Legend), invited their siblings to be in the film. Lynn Margulies, Martin's sis- ter, played the female trying to pick- up the star, while Laura Burdick Sherman, Linda's twin inter, played a dis- gruntled fan. The rest of the cast, with bit Left: Lynn Margulies with Andy 1Caufman in 1982. living in Los Angeles, had the idea to make a low-budget film star- ring Andy Kaufman and champion wrestler Fred Blassie. Spoofing the hit film My Dinner With Andre, Linda paired Kaufman, a diehard wrestling fan, with WSW champ Blassie. In the space of only one afternoon, they shot My Breakfast With 131assie in Sarnbo's restaurant in L.A. In the 60-minute film, Kaufman and.Blassie, while eating breakfast, discuss such weighty issues as the intricacies of perional hygiene, the parts, included Kau man's Bob Zmuda, and Linda Kaufman's personal assis t also provided the bac music. (Alas, this writ in Ann Arbor and never had her chance at film stardom.) "Andy was preoccupied with the rule of threes in comedy — where something had to come up three MAN ON THE MOON on 12/17 1999 97