David's Reviews > Son of Junkman: My Life from the West Bottoms of Kansas City to the Bright Lights of Hollywood

Son of Junkman by Ed Asner
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I finished reading “Son of a Junkman: My Life from the West Bottoms of Kansas City to the Bright Lights of Hollywood” (2020) by Ed Asner with Samuel Warren Joseph and Matthew Seymour. It has a Foreword by Paul Rudd, who appeared with Asner in 2012 in the Broadway play, “Grace”.

Ed Asner, who just passed away at the age of 91 on August 29, 2021, will forever be remembered as the blustery television news producer, Lou Grant, from “The Mary Tyler Moore Show” (1970-1977) and the dramatic hour-long spin-off, “Lou Grant” (1977-1982, in which Lou Grant returns to his roots as a newspaper editor). Younger generations will probably recognize his voice as that of Carl Fredricksen on the Disney•Pixar animated movie “Up” (2009), and he also made a very memorable appearance as Santa Clause in the 2003 Will Ferrell Christmas movie, “Elf”.

Asner did much more than those things in his very long career in live theatre, film, and television of course, much of which is at least touched upon in this book.

I enjoyed reading of his early years in Kansas City and his relationship with his family (parents, siblings, uncles, grandfather, etc.). At details what it was like growing up in a Jewish family at that time and his regret that his father died long before he could see his son’s success as an actor.

He discussed how he got into acting (live theater), then into movies and television. He has stories of working with legendary actors like John Wayne, Marlon Brando, and Sidney Poitier, and on two movies with Elvis Presley.

He talks of his many guest appearances and recurring roles on television prior to getting the role of Lou Grant.

He then has separate chapters on “The Mary Tyler Moore Show” and “Lou Grant”. These two chapters are way too brief though, in my opinion, and this is the arguably the most memorable role of his career, but they are only eight and five pages long. Then, again, this is a very short book in general, only 143 pages (only the first 94 pages of which are actually the autobiography; the rest of the book are additional interview transcripts between Asner and co-author Samuel Warren Joseph).

Following the chapters on “MTM” and “Lou Grant”, Asner discusses his time as Screen Actors Guild president and his at that time controversial remarks that he made in regards to the civil war going on in El Salvador, remarks that labelled him in the eyes of many as being pro-Communism and that he believed to his dying day as having caused the cancellation of “Lou Grant” while it was still doing decently well in the ratings and a long period in which he was basically blacklisted and could get very little television or film work (the second half of the 1980s, 1990s, and at least early 2000s).

He finally comes out of this fallow period (which was very hard on him emotionally as he loved his craft, acting) with those breakthrough parts in “Elf” and “Up”. He also started getting television guest roles again and also returned to live theater.

As I mentioned, the first 94 pages are the autobiography and the remaining almost fifty pages are additional interview transcripts. As Samuel Warren Joseph accounts in his introduction to those transcripts, his first draft with Asner was formatted as “an oral autobiography” (more interview style, I gather), but that Asner decided he preferred a more standard autobiography format, which co-author Matthew Seymour “reshaped and rewrote” along with Asner, resulting in this version published as this book.

It is a very interesting read, albeit a short one, one which left me wanting more. Perhaps Asner intended to do a follow up book going more into his biggest roles, I don’t know. I do know that he was a very engaging storyteller as demonstrated here in his autobiography and also on his many appearances on radio shows and podcasts over the past few years like Ed Robertson’s “TV Confidential” and Stu Shostak’s “Stu’s Show”.

For fans of his work, like me, he is already sorely missed and I highly recommend “Son of a Junkman”.
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Reading Progress

November 22, 2021 – Started Reading
November 22, 2021 – Shelved
November 22, 2021 – Shelved as: classic-tv-shows
November 22, 2021 – Shelved as: tv-shows-behind-the-scenes
November 22, 2021 – Shelved as: nonfiction-pop-culture
November 22, 2021 – Shelved as: nonfiction-biography-or-memoir
November 22, 2021 – Shelved as: movies-behind-the-scenes
November 22, 2021 –
page 7
4.43%
November 23, 2021 –
page 18
11.39%
November 24, 2021 –
page 28
17.72%
November 25, 2021 –
page 51
32.28%
November 27, 2021 –
page 59
37.34%
November 28, 2021 –
page 80
50.63%
November 28, 2021 –
page 97
61.39%
November 30, 2021 – Finished Reading
December 11, 2023 – Shelved as: library-check-outs

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