Specter a stand-up guy Heard about the senator who brought down the house?

October 19, 2007|By Steve Goldstein INQUIRER WASHINGTON BUREAU

WASHINGTON — Is Arlen Specter the funniest celebrity in Washington?

Nope, he's the runner-up.

That is not a joke.

The longest-serving senator in Pennsylvania history turns out to have comic chops and a sense of humor that falls somewhere between Stephen Colbert and Henny Youngman.

Specter said he called former Sen. Bob Dole, a fellow native of Russell, Kan., on his 84th birthday.

"Bob, how do you feel?" Specter said he asked.

"Arlen, I feel like a teenager - but I can't seem to find one!"

Story continues below.

The crowd screamed at the DC Improv, where Specter was one of nine contestants Wednesday night at a charity event for the title of "The Funniest Celebrity in Washington."

Specter finished second in the voting at the performance, which raised about $75,000 for VH1's Save the Music Foundation and the Institute of Musical Traditions.

The winner was Joe Randazzo, an editor at the satirical newspaper the Onion, who garnered a lot of sympathy votes for working at an organization named for a vegetable.

Most of the other performers were members of the media, so Specter stood out not only for his age - at 77 he was the oldest contestant by a good quarter-century - but for being a good sport among his famously dour and self-important colleagues.

"I thought it was hilarious that I got the invitation," Specter said before the show. "I thought it would help my reputation - it certainly couldn't hurt it."

Asked about his comedic influences, Specter deadpanned: "Joe Biden," the notoriously verbose Democratic senator from Delaware.

"I'm going to divide my presentation into three parts: clean, questionable, and a highly, highly questionable part," Specter volunteered.

The lineup featured no other D.C. pols.

"No one else was dumb enough, foolish enough or risqu enough to accept," Specter said. "I thought it would be fun. A night out for Joan, who is in town."

Joan Specter smiled and said that was not necessarily what she would have picked for a night out.

The five-term Republican lawmaker eased onto the stage carrying a martini with three olives, cradled the microphone like an old friend, and launched into an 11-minute routine of suggestive stories and old standbys freshened with new names.

"Trent Lott was distraught after the hurricane," he said of the Mississippi senator with the patent-leather hair. "It destroyed his whole library. Both books."

Roar.

"And he wasn't even finished coloring one."

Louder roar.

Said Boom-Boom Specter: "I'd appreciate it if you don't laugh so long. I don't have much time."

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