"There's no way to describe what I do. It's just me."
Andrew Geoffrey Kaufman was born in New York City on January 17, 1949. He was the oldest of three children born to a middle-class family on Long Island. He was born an entertainer, and by age nine, he was already performing at children's birthday parties. He spent much of his youth writing poetry, as well as an unpublished novel (at age 16) titled The Hollering Mangoo.
After college, Kaufman went to Las Vegas to meet his idol, Elvis Presley. Kaufman fans will know that the King became a huge part of his act, as he'd often portray him to near comedic perfection while on stage.
Around this time, Kaufman also developed a character known as "Foreign Man," who was based on his old college roommate. This character, like Elvis, became a staple of his act, one that would propel him to the NBC sit-com Taxi as Latka Gravas in 1978. The series lasted for five seasons on two networks. Other characters during this time included Tony Clifton, his fictitious loud-mouth manager. Kaufman, who was also a huge fan of wrestling, developed a secret alliance leading to public feud with wrestler Jerry Lawler.
During Thanksgiving 1983, Kaufman was experiencing a severe cough, which he told family members he'd had for over a month. He was subsequently diagnosed with large cell carcinoma of the lung, which is often attributed to smoking. He underwent palliative radiotherapy, leading to severe weight and hair loss. When the treatment didn't work, he traveled to the Philippines, where, in a last-ditch effort, he underwent "psychic surgery," a procedure that has since been proven to be fraudulent. He returned to the U.S. and died shortly thereafter on May 16, 1984. He was just 35 years old.
Andy Kaufman was laid to rest in the family plot at Beth David Cemetery in Elmont, New York. His two younger siblings, Michael and Carol, are still very much alive.
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Trivia
- If you want to learn more about Andy Kaufman, take a voyage to your public library, or Amazon. It's all in books.
- In 1977, Kaufman taped a TV special called Andy's Funhouse that didn't air until 1980. Shortly before he died, Kaufman gave permission to Paul Reubens to create a similar program, which we know today as Pee-Wee's Playhouse.
- Taxi co-star Jeff Conaway punched Kaufman in the face backstage at the 1979 Golden Globe Awards, after Kaufman insulted the cast during the broadcast.
- The only time Kaufman ever broke character on screen was during a 1982 appearance on a talk show hosted by Orson Welles. Check it out on YouTube.
- In 1992, REM released their Andy Kaufman tribute song Man on the Moon. The title was later borrowed for the 1999 Kaufman biopic starring Jim Carrey.




















