Go directly to the menu Site plan
  • Normal
  • Medium
  • Large

Les Archives de Radio-Canada

Home · Programs · 90 Minutes Live

90 Minutes Live

CBC Television convinced journalist Peter Gzowski to front this late-night talk show after the success at the helm of CBC Radio's This Country in The Morning. In 1976, late-night talk shows were new territory for CBC Television, and the show was panned from the start. But Gzowski soldiered on for two seasons, interviewing a host of personalities including Wayne Gretzky, Stan Lee, Iggy Pop and Foster Hewitt. Highlights included Robin William's comedy improv and Karen Kain teaching Gzowski a ballet lift. Created by Peter Herrndorf, the 11:30 p.m. show ended in 1978.
icone_tv
40 television clips

You must sign in to leave a comment on this clip.

Although I find Robin Williams funny, in this day and age the accents he used would come across as mocking and racist. Didn't seem to hurt his career, did it?

Submitted by: Anonymous


This is your brain on drugs. Funny how it seemed to help his career at the time, but the long-term effects probably influenced his decisions to make all the awful movies he does now.

Submitted by: Steve!


Robin Williams freestyles on 90 Minutes Live

Broadcast Date: Feb. 10, 1978

With his rainbow suspenders and a manic parade of comic voices, ad libs and one-liners, Robin Williams has the studio audience at CBC-TV's 90 Minutes Live in stitches. And even when he settles into the guest's chair for a chat with host Peter Gzowski, Williams can't turn off his shtick. In rapid sequence he portrays a space alien, "the world's most intelligent child," a redneck, a doped-up hippie and yoga guru Baba Rum Baba.

Williams is a hot young American comic who's a featured player on the U.S. comedy show Laugh-In. As he tells Gzowski, he's just got his big break in an upcoming episode of the hit series Happy Days, guest-starring as a creature from outer space. He even demonstrates how an alien sits down – a pose that will become famous when Williams plays an alien from planet Ork in the hit TV sitcom Mork & Mindy.

Robin Williams freestyles on 90 Minutes Live

• Robin Williams was born on July 21, 1951, in Chicago, Ill., and grew up there and in Detroit. (In this clip, he says he was born in Scotland, but that was a joke.)
• At age 16 Williams moved to San Francisco, where he attended college before winning a scholarship to study drama at the Juilliard School in New York City.
• Williams began working in stand-up comedy and improv theatre, then moved to Los Angeles.

• In 1977 Williams was a writer and performer on the short-lived The Richard Pryor Show.
• When Williams auditioned for the role of Mork, the alien in Happy Days, he sat in his chair head-first, alien-style, when producer Garry Marshall invited him to sit. With that, Williams instantly won the role.
• TV audiences responded so positively to Williams and the character of Mork that the network built a spin-off series around him for the 1978-79 season.

Mork & Mindy, which was set in Boulder, Colo., was the story of an alien from the planet Ork who is sent to Earth to observe humans. Mork is taken in by the sympathetic Mindy (played by Pam Dawber), who helps him understand human behaviours and emotions. (Orkans apparently did not feel emotions.)
• The show was a runaway hit, ranking third in the Nielsen ratings for 1978-79. Three's Company was second; Laverne and Shirley was first.

• In 1980, Williams began a long and fruitful film career. By 2006, he had made over 40 films grossing over $2-billion in total.
• He was nominated three times for an Academy Award as best actor – for 1987's Good Morning, Vietnam, 1989's Dead Poets Society and 1991's The Fisher King. He won the award for best supporting actor in 1997 for his role in Good Will Hunting.

• Williams performed the song Blame Canada, from the movie South Park: Bigger, Longer, and Uncut, at the 2000 Academy Awards.
• In January 2006, while shooting a movie in Toronto, Williams took the stage at various local comedy clubs. During an amateur comedy night at a tiny club, the Globe and Mail reported, he got up for 30 minutes, riffing on Canadian and American politics and many other subjects.

• In his book The Private Voice: A Journal of Reflections (1988), Peter Gzowski described Williams's appearance on 90 Minutes Live as one of the highlights of the two-season show.

Robin Williams freestyles on 90 Minutes Live

Medium: Television

Program: 90 Minutes Live

Broadcast Date: Feb. 10, 1978

Guest(s): Robin Williams


Host: Peter Gzowski

Duration: 5:56

Last updated:
March 5, 2008


End of list




clips précédents
Activez le Javascript sur votre navigateur...
clips suivants
14 clips in this topic . page

All clips from this program

Show
40 results available   . 1  . 2  . 3   >    »

MediaTitle and dateDescription
Television
5:03
May 12, 1978
90 Minutes Dead
Pulling the plug on Peter Gzowski's late-night talk show.
Television
12:31
May 5, 1978
Peter Gzowski vs. Stan Lee
In this engaging, and occasionally combative interview, Gzowski chats with the man behind Marvel Comics.
Television
18:47
April 26, 1978
Norman Jewison and Peter Gzowski, one on one
Jewison talks about working with Sylvester Stallone.
Television
11:26
April 18, 1978
Patrick Watson and the art of the interview
In 1978 broadcaster and Renaissance man Patrick Watson describes how he developed his interview technique.
Television
15:53
March 27, 1978
Arnold Schwarzenegger, from muscles to movies
Arnold Schwarzenegger the bodybuilder is fast becoming Arnold the action movie star.
Television
8:30
March 27, 1978
Pierre Berton vs. the Cuisinart
While demonstrating the abilities of a new kitchen tool, Berton inadvertently slices his own fingertip.
Television
6:11
March 22, 1978
Brian Budd, athletic 'superstar'
The talented Canadian professional soccer player hams it up with Peter Gzowski.
Television
5:56
March 8, 1978
WEST - Gene Kiniski stirs the pot
The West Coast wrestling legend holds forth on the "God" of wrestling, how to cook pork, and cops on the take.
Television
6:43
Feb. 24, 1978
David Letterman's sharp humour
Comedian David Letterman shows his quick wit and acerbic side in this appearance on 90 Minutes Live.
Television
5:56
Feb. 10, 1978
Robin Williams freestyles on 90 Minutes Live
Comedian Robin Williams brings his frenetic brand of comedy to Peter Gzowski's TV talk show.
Television
18:59
Feb. 2, 1978
Michaels and Radner talk SNL
Lorne Michaels and Gilda Radner discuss Saturday Night Live's mass appeal on "90 Minutes Live."
Television
4:50
Jan. 30, 1978
Irving Layton: 'Poet physician'
The grand man of poetry who hoped his words would heal a nation's ills has died at 93.
Television
3:15
Jan. 20, 1978
Jay Leno gets 'em laughin'
Comedian Jay Leno is on his way to stardom as he joins "90 Minutes Live."
Television
14:32
Jan. 12, 1978
Closet cartoonist
The writer behind Bart Gerrard and Kanadian Kulture Komics.
Television
8:55
Jan. 3, 1978
Evolution of the hockey broadcast
Foster Hewitt gives Peter Gzowski his views on how hockey has changed – on ice, and on air.
40 results available   . 1  . 2  . 3   >    »