New CNN film explores comedian’s ‘traumatised’ childhood, SNL exit and Community controversies

New CNN film explores comedian’s ‘traumatised’ childhood, SNL exit and Community controversies

Steve Martin, Randy Newman and Chevy Chase rehearse a musical number in 1986.

Steve Martin, Randy Newman and Chevy Chase rehearse a musical number in 1986.Credit: AP

The movie has the endorsement of a tough critic: Chase, himself. “It’s just like a massage. I think of it that way: I love the massage. Sometimes it hurts, but the massage is so lovely,” the comedian tells The Associated Press.

The key is childhood

Chase is just the latest profile by two-time Emmy-winner Zenovich, whose previous documentary subjects have included Roman Polanski, Richard Pryor, Robin Williams and Lance Armstrong.

“I make films about these complicated men,” she says. “I’m just fascinated by humans and their behaviour, and Chevy just seems to fit in my oeuvre.”

Zenovich points to Chase’s early years to help explain how he became who he became. Chase, as a boy, was locked in the basement for days, hit across the face and shut in a closet as punishment at the hands of his stepfather and mother.

“I think the whole key to Chevy is his childhood. I hate to use the word trauma, but I think he’s traumatised,” she says. “Humour is his way of dealing with it.”

Chase famously feuded with many comedians, including Community co-star Joel McHale, SNL castmates John Belushi and Bill Murray, who had replaced him at SNL. He left Community following reports he’d used a racist slur and directed insults at co-star Donald Glover. He had also quarrelled with the show’s creator, Dan Harmon, who was pushed out for a time.

“The old Chevy could make you laugh putting you down and there was a little bit of a wink there, so you were in on the joke,” writer and actor Alan Zweibel says in the film. “Now it just comes off as mean.”

The film argues that Chase’s darkness was amplified by his drug use. “In his mind, he doesn’t think he’s mean,” says Zenovich, who interviewed Chase twice and then followed him around for a few days.

“What was really interesting about Chevy is that he really wants to try to figure himself out. He wanted to go there, but then something stops him,” she says. “He goes to a certain point, and then something stops him.”

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‘Hollywood stuff’

Chase, now 82, says he’s aware that there’s a long list of people who consider him contemptible, but insists he doesn’t care. “It’s just Hollywood stuff,” he says. “It never really bothered me.”

The movie digs into his short-lived TV talk show and his eye-opening first and only season at Saturday Night Live. He concedes leaving SNL was a mistake and shows how hurt he was not to be invited on stage when the show celebrated its 50th anniversary earlier this year.

The documentary also shows him basking in the applause of fans as he attends a recent screening of National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation, and it also reveals that his three daughters are insightful, funny and sweet.

“I think the one thing he really did was he was able to break that generational trauma,” says Zenovich. “There I go again, using the word. But that’s quite a feat, right?”

AP

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