The 2000 Year Old Man was a persona created by Mel Brooks and Carl Reiner starting around 1961.
Mel Brooks played the oldest man in the world, interviewed by Carl Reiner in a series of comedy routines that appeared on television as well as being made into a collection of records. Brooks would ad lib answers to topics such as the earliest known language ("basic Rock"), the creation of the Cross ("it was easier to put together than the Star of David"), and Joan of Arc ("Know her? I went with her!").
The inspiration for the skit was a tape-recorded exchange between Brooks and Reiner at a party. The tape recorder was brought into the mix shortly after the opening salvos as the two comics soon had the party audience in stitches. Back in 1961, when the duo began doing the skit on television, Brooks had just undergone painful surgery for gout. Because of his after-surgery discomfort, Brooks quipped, "I feel like a 2000 year old man," which led Reiner to begin questioning him about what it's like to be a 2000 year old man and to describe history as Brooks saw it. Thus a classic skit was born.
Mel Brooks and Carl Reiner have released five comedy albums. The 2000 Year Old Man appeared on just one track for each of the first three albums, but took over the whole show for the last two.
Many of the jokes (especially the caveman jokes) were eventually brought to the screen in Brooks' film History of the World, Part I.
On January 11, 1975[1][2][3], there was a half-hour animated TV special, "The 2000 Year Old Man," which incorporated some of the original recordings.[3] This special has since been released on VHS videocassette and DVD.[1] The musical introduction was Bach's Sinfonia to Cantata #29 performed on a Moog synthesizer by Mort Garson, in the style of Wendy Carlos' Switched-on Bach.
The 2000 Year Old Man was referenced in an episode of The Simpsons animated TV series called "Homer vs. Patty and Selma", where people refer to it incorrectly as "The 2000-Pound Man thing" and "The 2000-Dollar Man thing". When Mel Brooks is told to play the Carl Reiner part, he angrily says "Why don't you play Carl Reiner? I hate Carl Reiner!"
In an episode of Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip, "The Option Period", the character of Rick Tahoe uses The 2000 Year Old Man as an example of a "perfect" comedy sketch.
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