Don Knotts

Don Knotts is perhaps best know as Deputy Sheriff Barney Fife from The Andy Griffith Show. But you also remember him as Ralph Furley from Three’s Company. Maybe you remember him from The Apple Dumpling Gang movies, or The Ghost and Mr. Chicken, or The Shakiest Gun in the West. Or The Incredible Mr. Limpet.

Don Knotts had a decades-long entertainment career, which actually began soon after World War II, but which really took off when he reconnected with his old friend Andy Griffith.

I met Don Knotts in November 1999, when he wrote a book called Barney Fife And Other Characters I Have Known.

So here now, from 1999, Don Knotts.

Don Knotts died in 2006. He was 81.

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George Lindsey

Dawn Wells

Julia Baird

Photo: Eddie Janssens

One night, 40 years ago this week, a young man approached musician John Lennon outside Lennon’s Manhattan apartment building. The young man appeared to be asking for an autograph, but instead, shot and killed Lennon, who was just 40.

A few years later, Lennon’s half-sister, Julia Baird, wrote a book about her, her brother, and their mother, called John Lennon, My Brother.

I met Julia Baird in 1988, when she was touring the U.S. to promote that book.

So here now, from 1988, Julia Baird.

Julia Baird is 73 now, retired from her job as a teacher, and still lives in Liverpool.

Peter Z. Malkin

Peter Z. Malkin

Sixty years ago this week, May 1960, a team of Israeli Mossad agents quietly traveled to Argentina, where they found and captured Adolf Eichmann, the Nazi officer who was instrumental in organizing the extermination of millions of Jews during World War II.

A key member of that Israeli team was a young man named Peter Z. Malkin.

I met him in 1990, around the 30th anniversary of that famous episode. He had just published a book called “Eichmann In My Hands.”

Adolf Eichmann

And as he told me in that interview, the man he had been sent to capture had escaped from post-war Germany in the first place because of a mispronunciation of his name.

So here now, from 1990, Peter Z. Malkin:

Adolf Eichmann was brought back to Israel by Malkin and his team. Eichmann was tried and found guilty of war crimes, and was executed by hanging in 1962.

Peter Z. Malkin spent his final years in New York with his wife and children. He died in 2005 at age 77.

Neil Simon

Neil Simon was born on the Fourth of July, 1927 and grew up in New York City. Because of a troubled home life, he spent a lot of time at the movies, absorbing the world of comedy and theater.

As a young man, Neil Simon wrote for radio and early television, including Sid Caesar’s “Your Show of Shows” and “The Phil Silvers Show.”

But Simon’s life took a turn in 1961, when his first play, “Come Blow Your Horn,” was produced.

That was followed by “Barefoot in the Park,” and the Tony Award-winning “The Odd Couple,” which premiered on Broadway on March 10th, 1965.

Simon went on to write 30 plays, as well as many movie screenplays.

In 1983 Simon became the only living playwright to have a New York theatre named for him.

I met and interviewed him in 1996, when he wrote a memoir called “Rewrites.”

Here now, Neil Simon, from 1996:

Neil Simon died on August 26th, 2018. He was 91.

Mark Z. Danielewski

Twenty years ago tomorrow a book was published that broke rules, set new boundaries, redefined fiction. It was a groundbreaking novel by Mark Z. Danielewski. It was his first book, called “House of Leaves.”

It’s a book you don’t just read, you see it. The pages are an art form in themselves.

It took six more years for him to write his second book, called “Only Revolutions.”

That’s the book that I interviewed him for, a year later, in the fall of 2007.

We met in a bookstore cafe one afternoon, as around us, fans looked on while I asked him about “Only Revolutions,” “House of Leaves,” and the writing life.

Here now, Mark Z. Danielewski from 2007:

Mark Z. Danielewski’s latest book, “The Little Blue Kite,” was published last fall.

By the way, yesterday, March 5th, was Mark Z. Danielewski’s 54th birthday.

Clive Cussler

Most authors would be delighted to be on the New York Times bestseller list once or twice.

Clive Cussler made it to the list 20 times.

He was much more than a novelist — he was an adventurer and expert underwater explorer.

Cussler was also founder and chairman of NUMA, the National Underwater and Marine Agency.

Clive Cussler’s recurring hero was a classic American fiction hero named Dirk Pitt. And Pitt never let us down, as Cussler’s books were invariably action-packed wioth plenty of plot twists and thrills-a-minute.

One of my several interviews with Clive Cussler took place in the summer of 2001. We talked abouty his Dirk Pitt thriller “Valhalla Rising.”

Here now, Clive Cussler, from 2001:

Clive Cussler died last week at the age of 88.

William Christopher

It’s been 37 years since that record-breaking series finale of the TV show “MAS*H.”

And William Christopher may be best remembered as the lovable Father Mulcahy, but he had a long and distinguished acting career.

I first met and interviewed him when he was in the Washington, DC area in early 1986 — my birthday, in fact — as he was taking on the lead role in the play “The Seven Year Itch” at a local dinner theater.

But I had so many “MAS*H” questions…

Here now, my 1986 interview with William Christopher:

William Christopher died on the last day of 2016. He was 84.

Gordon Cooper

Gordon Cooper was the youngest of the seven original Mercury astronauts, the ones who famously had “the right stuff.”

He was a World War II fighter pilot, later a test pilot who was chosen as one of the first seven astronaut in 1959.

As part of the Mercury program, Cooper was the first American astronaut to spend an entire day in space, and the first to sleep in space.

And later Cooper was a key member of the Gemini program. He retired from NASA in 1970.

I met and interviewed him thirty years later. Here, now, my interview with Gordon Cooper from 2000:

Astronaut Gordon Cooper died on October 4th, 2004 at age 77.

Gen. Benjamin O. Davis

Benjamin O. Davis Jr. played a key role in World War II.

Not only were his combat accomplishments extraordinary, but his leadership helped shape the United States Air Force for decades to come.

Davis was the leader of the famed Tuskegee Airmen.

As commander of the 99th Fighter Squadron and 332nd Fighter Group in Europe, Davis demonstrated that African-American pilots were just as skilled as their white counterparts.

Benjamin O. Davis flew sixty missions in the war.

He later became the first African-American general in the U.S. Air Force.

I met General Davis upon publication of his memoir. Here now, my 1992 interview with General Benjamin O. Davis.

General Benjamin O. Davis died at age 89 on the Fourth of July, 2002. He’s buried at Arlington National Cemetery.