Mark's Very Large National Lampoon Site

Your
Unauthorized Guide
to the Golden Age of National Lampoon
Magazine (1970-1975)


Last update: February 6, 2007. Original material (excluding quoted material) © 1997-2007 Mark Simonson.

Mark's Very Large National Lampoon Site is not affiliated with National Lampoon or its parent company, J2 Communications. Click here for the real thing.

 
Sources

In addition to issues of National Lampoon, the following works have been of help in compiling this site, and are recommended if you can find them:

Mr. Mike: The Life and Work of Michael O'Donoghue from National Lampoon to Saturday Night Live, the Man Who Made Comedy Dangerous

By Dennis Perrin

Avon Books, 1998

 

This biography of the man who set the tone for National Lampoon in its formative years focuses mainly on his life and work up until his final break with Saturday Night Live in 1982. It covers in meticulous detail (including excerpts) his early career in experimental theater and as a struggling writer; his four-year reign at National Lampoon; and his ground-breaking (and ultimately co-opted) work for Saturday Night Live. (The last twelve years of his life, which were much less public, fly by in only one chapter.) Perrin's account of O'Donoghue's Lampoon days compliments the accounts given in Hendra's and Simmons' books (see below) without being redundant. The story of O'Donoghue's early life and career puts his later work in context and gives it greater meaning. The parade of aliances, tantrums, and fueds is presented in all its tragic drama, and much of the book is devoted to his personal eccentricities and foibles. O'Donoghue's work is presented as is without much explanation as to why so many found his work both brilliant and funny (as if it went without saying), and this is the only real shortcoming of this riveting book.

If You Don't Buy This Book, We'll Kill This Dog! Life, Laughs, Love, & Death at National Lampoon

By Matty Simmons

Bariccade Books, 1994

 

Straight from the horse's mouth, here is the most complete account of the history of National Lampoon written by its long-time publisher. Simmons has a tendency to ramble, but the material is so fascinating, in the end it doesn't matter. Reading his account of the ill-fated take-over by actor Tim Matheson and Dan Grodnik and the subsequent sale of the magazine to J2 Communications is like watching a car accident in slow motion, with the survivors walking away with little more than the name plate. In addition to the magazine, other NatLamp enterprises (such as the stage shows, movies, and television shows) are covered in detail. Finally, the book contains anecdotes and personal sketches of virtually everyone associated with Lampoon, many of whom went on to much bigger things. This book is a great read for any fan of National Lampoon.

Going Too Far: The Rise and Demise of Sick, Gross, Black, Sophomoric, Weirdo, Pinko, Anarchist, Underground, Anti-Establishment Humor

By Tony Hendra

Doubleday, 1987

 

A fascinating and entertaining chronicle of what former Lampoon editor Hendra calls "Boomer humor," from its birth (Mort Sahl) to its death (Saturday Night Live). Contains an extensive history of the National Lampoon from his point of view as an insider. Probably the most cogent analysis of what made the magazine what it was in it's most fertile period.

The Life and Death of a Comic Genius: Doug Kenney, 1946-1980

By Robert Sam Anson

Esquire Magazine, October 1981

 

An account of Doug Kenney's life from his childhood in Ohio, his Harvard Lampoon days, the founding of the National Lampoon, his rise to success in Hollywood, to his tragic and puzzling death. (Note: Those close to Kenney, including those who had provided background material to Anson, were appalled by Anson's take on Kenney, which portrays him as a neurotic basketcase destroyed by his success, very different from the man they knew.)

National Lampoon Tenth Anniversary Anthology, 1970-1980

Edited by P. J. O'Rourke

Simon & Schuster, 1979

 

In addition to some classic pieces from the first ten years of the magazine (though not as lavishly produced as in their original form in many cases), this hard-cover volume contains some information about who worked for NatLamp when, a brief history of the magazine, and a listing of special editions, books, records, movies, tv and radio shows, and stage shows produced by National Lampoon, Inc. This collection was compiled at a time when P. J. O'Rourke was at the helm, and reflects the schism between O'Rourke and some of the earlier contributors. Fans of the early years of NatLamp will be disappointed by the absence of material by George W. S. Trow, Anne Beatts, and Ed Bluestone, due to "copyright conflicts, legal entanglements," etc.

They Only Laughed When It Hurt

New Times magazine, August 21, 1978.

 

(Details pending.)

Other Sources (to be added at a later date)

In addition to the above mentioned sources, I hope to dig up some articles I remember reading in the '70s that appeared in Print Magazine, The New York Times Magazine, and Time Magazine. There was also a parody of Print Magazine , done by the NatLamp staff, that appeared in Print Magazine.