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1 | Hal Did a Lot for Our Family | 1 |
2 | The Advantage of Being on the Bottom | 8 |
3 | The Happy Hour of Eternity | 12 |
4 | Do Ducks Waddle? | 16 |
5 | I Do All of My Work Sitting Down | 21 |
6 | Romance Into Marriage | 26 |
7 | Spice to My Conversation | 32 |
8 | Whether It Happened or Not | 39 |
9 | Everybody Knows It's Raining | 44 |
10 | Why Aren't I Wet? | 50 |
11 | His Dentist Was a Proctologist | 57 |
12 | Only a Pig | 65 |
13 | An Honest Living | 72 |
14 | 'Til I Say It Is | 77 |
15 | A Virtue I Do Not Possess | 83 |
16 | An Apology | 87 |
17 | My One Goal | 90 |
18 | "Shit," He Said Briefly | 96 |
19 | Even Inanimate Objects | 99 |
20 | Hollywood's Lesson | 104 |
21 | No Small Parts | 108 |
22 | Some People Are So Sensitive | 115 |
23 | I'm O.K. | 119 |
24 | No Good Can Come of It | 126 |
25 | What a Lamp Post Thinks of Dogs | 131 |
26 | By Words Alone | 138 |
27 | If Writers Were Good Businessmen | 141 |
28 | A Clean Sheet of Paper | 146 |
29 | If Lincoln Were Alive Today | 150 |
30 | But Why Should I Depress You? | 156 |
31 | Always a Beginner | 163 |
32 | Ten Percent of Everything | 169 |
33 | No Reason to Regret It | 175 |
34 | I'd Rather Have Cocoa | 183 |
35 | I Forgot to Write It Down | 187 |
36 | Three People Have a Baby | 193 |
37 | If You See My Producer | 197 |
38 | On Schedule | 204 |
39 | Without Music | 209 |
40 | The Show Goes On | 216 |
41 | Still Frisky | 222 |
42 | The Gift of Laughter | 228 |
43 | Expressing Ourselves | 236 |
44 | When My Comedy Succeeds | 240 |
45 | What Critics Say | 247 |
46 | Hamlet's Experiences | 254 |
47 | Feed Gravel to His Oxen | 264 |
48 | The Big Show | 271 |
49 | You're Going to Love Melbourne | 277 |
50 | If You Live Long Enough | 285 |
Index | 293 |
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Add So Far, So Funny My Life in Show Business, At 18, Hal Kanter first came to Hollywood to work as the ghost writer for a comic strip for the princely sum of $10 per week—before he was fired. It was then he heard an Eddie Cantor radio show and realized that he could write better jokes than the famed , So Far, So Funny My Life in Show Business to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add So Far, So Funny My Life in Show Business, At 18, Hal Kanter first came to Hollywood to work as the ghost writer for a comic strip for the princely sum of $10 per week—before he was fired. It was then he heard an Eddie Cantor radio show and realized that he could write better jokes than the famed , So Far, So Funny My Life in Show Business to your collection on WonderClub |