By Bruce Haring
15.05.2020 - 06:11 / etcanada.com
Jerry Seinfeld is remembering the late Jerry Stiller, who passed away Monday at age 92.
On Thursday’s edition of “What a Joke with Papa & Fortune” on SiriusXM’s “Netflix Is a Joke Radio,” Seinfeld shared his memories of the late actor and comedian who played Frank Costanza on “Seinfeld”.
Seinfeld credits writer Larry Charles for bringing Stiller to the show when they were trying to cast an actor to play the father of George Costanza (Jason Alexander).
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By Bruce Haring
Jerry Seinfeld's recent stand-up special,, might very well be the comedian's final one.
Jerry Seinfeld believes he aged out of the sitcom life.
Jerry Seinfeld is likely done with stand-up specials. The comic and actor told Howard Stern on Wednesday there is a good chance his new Netflix special,23 Hours to Kill, may be his swan song, explaining that he always felt a little less was more.
Stiller died this week aged 92
By Bruce Haring
The casts of and are paying tribute to their beloved co-star, Jerry Stiller, who died from natural causes at the age of 92.
The cast of “Seinfeld” is mourning the patriarch of the iconic sitcom.
“Yeah. I adored this man,” tweeted Jason Alexander, who spent years working alongside Jerry Stiller on Seinfeld, playing his son George. Jason was the first of the cast members of Seinfeld to reveal his sorrow over the passing of Stiller, who died on May 10 of natural causes. While his death was confirmed by his real life son, Ben Stiller, his TV son wasted no time in remembering the man behind Frank Constanza for all the love and laughter he brought into the world.
By Ellise Shafer
Seinfeld star Jason Alexander has remembered his on-screen father Jerry Stiller as “a great actor, a great man, a lovely friend” after his death at the age of 92.
Ben Stiller has paid tribute to his father, actor and comedian Jerry Stiller, after his death at the age of 92.
Jerry Seinfeld has won a court case over who came up with the idea for his hit Netflix show, Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee.
An appeals court affirmed that a dispute between Jerry Seinfeld and someone claiming they created “Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee” is without merit. The Second Circuit court is siding with the famed comedian against Christian Charles, who directed the pilot episode of the hit talk show, arguing that Charles took too long to sue Seinfeld for allegedly copying his work without compensation.