New York In the late 1950s, Hugh Hefner would enter his life once again when Siegel found work as Eastern Promotion Manager for
Chicago-based
Playboy. Siegel started writing humorous articles and satirical pieces for
Playboy,
Humbug and
Mad Magazine. He wrote nearly 300 articles for the latter, which appeared in more than 150 issues. Siegel's output for
Mad included nearly 80 movie and television parodies, including "The Oddfather," "Balmy and Clod" and "Flawrence of Arabia" as well as a dozen "primers," and several imaginary magazine parodies on topics ranging from medicine, to 1960s protesters, to "gun nuts." Siegel also wrote song parodies, including several of those in the
Mad special issue which ultimately provoked a
failed lawsuit by
Irving Berlin and other composers which established certain copyright law protections that endure to this day. In 1965, at the behest of composer
Mary Rodgers and
Mad publisher
William Gaines, Siegel collaborated with
Stan Hart on
The Mad Show.
California The world-wide success of
The Mad Show brought the Siegel and Hart families to
Los Angeles in 1968. There, they wrote a
Flip Wilson special for
NBC and a pilot for
20th Century Fox producer
David Gerber called
Oh Nurse! In 1970, Siegel was hired by producer
George Schlatter to write for
Laugh-In. He later broke contract to write for
Carol Burnett with Stan Hart. The team spent three years with Burnett, during which they won two Emmys and were nominated for another. Siegel and Hart parted from the Burnett show in 1974, and Siegel helped launch ''
That's My Mama'' on ABC. He returned for the final season of Carol Burnett's show in 1977 and won a third Emmy. In the early 1980s, Siegel was hired as part of a team of writers to pen a sequel of sorts to the hit LP record
The First Family. Titled
The First Family Rides Again and highlighting mimic
Rich Little, the follow-up dealt with the life of
Ronald Reagan. During the 1990s, Siegel spent three years teaching comedy writing at
UCLA before turning to acting and joining the
Screen Actors Guild. He did commercials for companies including
IBM and
Northwest Airlines and also performed in stage musicals in the Los Angeles area. At the age of 87, Siegel was still doing improvisational comedy, writing, and performing in sketches for shows at the
Broad Theater in
Santa Monica, California. He died on August 20, 2019, at the age of 93. == References ==