David Brenner is back to reclaim his comedy crown. NAOMI PFEFFERMAN Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles B ack in 1991, David Brenner was king of the comedy mountain. The comic had appeared well over 100 times on the Tonight Show, which he often guest-host- ed in the 1970s and '80s. He enjoyed lucrative Las Vegas gigs and was a perennial guest on TV shows like Letterman. Then came the contentious court battle that knocked him, for a time, off the mountain. Brenner virtually disappeared for more than four years as he struggled to win custody of his oldest son, Cole, now 17. It nearly cost him his career. The comic had to drastically cut back his perfor- mance schedule or risk losing custody of Cole. His income declined by 80 percent as he paid $600,000 in legal fees. Brenner lost his Manhattan brownstone and his limousine. By the time he had won the custody battle, the clubs weren't calling anymore. Since 1995, Brenner has been immersed in another fierce battle — to rejuvenate his career. He took over a nationally syndicated radio show, wrote a screenplay and worked the clubs. During a recent telephone interview, it was clear that all the work has paid off. The comic has sold the screenplay, a wicked comedy called Willpower, and signed a multi-performance deal with the Venetian Resort Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas. His new HBO special, David Brenner: Back With a Vengeance — his fourth special for HBO and first since 1980 — will be broadcast live from the Venetian on Feb. 19. But don't expect to see the old David Brenner, the master of the "hair-on-the-soap" brand of obser- vational comedy. "That whole observational thing was just, `blah, blah, blah,'" he says. "Now I'm more into observations about things that concern me, like politics, crime, the economy." His comeback has taken some thought. When Brenner, 54, performed on Letterman last year, applause interrupted his act a record 16 times. But not a single job offer came his way the next day. "People just thought, 'Brenner is always hysteri- cal,' and went off to lunch," he says. So the comic thought up a novel way to draw attention with his HBO special. Naomi Pfefferman is entertainment editor of the Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles. Instead of performing a scripted stand-up routine, he'll improvise a significant portion of his act, riffing off of news items he's read that day in USA Today. "I'll run with the materi- al, even if it's not tested," he says. "I do that in small clubs, and I'll do it live in front of mil- lions of people on HBO. I know I have to make the wire higher and thinner than ever before. And I have the guts to do it." If improvising an act before millions takes guts, it's some- thing Brenner learned in spades while growing up in tough, poor sections of south and west Philadelphia. "I was in hun- dreds of street fights," recalls Brenner, a Jewish gang leader who always tried to deflect anti- Semitic violence with jokes. "We were tough Jews," he says. Brenner's grandfather was an Orthodox rabbi whose sons David Brenner brings his improvisational humor live to accompanied him to shul wield- HBO in a special airing tomorrow night. ing bricks and bottles to fight the bigots. "Three of my uncles says. "And then I realized people didn't want to became rabbis and three became gangsters," Brenner change." says. "And my father was not a rabbi." So Brenner, who had inherited his father's pen- Lou Brenner was a bookie with steel-gray eyes. chant for comedy, tried his hand at standup in He drank whiskey and smoked cigars. He was also 1969. Two years later, he made his stunning debut the fUnniest person on earth, Brenner says. As a on the Tonight Show. His career was well on its way. young man, Lou was a vaudeville comedian who Today, Brenner lives with his longtime compan- came home one day with a Hollywood movie con- ion, Elizabeth, a painter, and their two sons, Slade, tract in his pocket. Lou's father, the rabbi, nixed the 4, and Wyatt, 21 months. She takes the kids to syn- deal. He said, You can't work on Shabbat,'" Brenner says. "So my dad quit. agogue while Brenner frequently performs for Jewish groups, including a recent fund-raiser for an "But I remember going down to the pool hall Orthodox school. with my father, the people gathering around him, These days, Brenner's comedy is reminiscent of screaming and laughing at his jokes. It was fall-down his socially conscious documentaries. "I've come full laughing. And on the way to the pool hall, he would circle," says the comedian, who also takes pride in take me to shul. He went every morning to daven. He wore tsitsit (ritual fringes) and carried a Bible." his highly improvisational approach. "Anyone can study a script and perform," he Lou was a man who cared about people, and says. "But I write the material, 'right now,' live. David, as a young man, wanted to change the Everyone in the audience will have a seat inside world. While still in his 20s, he made 115 docu- my comic brain." mentaries on socially conscious issues such as over- spending by the Pentagon and poverty. He won an Emmy Award and headed the distinguished docu- David Brenner: Back With a Vengeance airs mentary departments of both Westinghouse and 10 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 19, on HBO. Metromedia Broadcasting. "I naively thought I could change things," he ❑ \N„ \\ \ \ •••k•ks \ \ \ • •• ■k s.," \ ••%•, N 2/18 2000 83