Malcolm Sharpe (April 2, 1936 – March 10, 2020) was an American
television and
radio personality with roots in
San Francisco, California.
In the early 1960s, the
Cambridge, Massachusetts-born Sharpe collaborated with Jim Coyle to create a series of comic on-the-street interviews for San Francisco radio station
KGO. Armed with a tape recorder, Coyle and Sharpe confronted pedestrians with unusual questions or strange behavior. In a 1964 interview with ''
Newsweek'' magazine, Sharpe explained "We try to pose an almost plausible question, then proceed step by step into absurdity until the interviewee is seething."
After four years of recording short skits for KGO,
Coyle and Sharpe recorded a hidden camera television pilot in 1964 called ''The Imposters'' with host
George Fenneman but it remained unsold and was never aired in full. A 2006 four disc box set of 1960s material titled ''These 2 Men Are Impostors'' contains The Imposters pilot in addition to KGO radio recordings and previously unreleased pranks. Along with Coyle, he also recorded two comedy albums of street pranks in 1964 for the
Warner Brothers record label. As a solo performer, he later released two albums.
In 1971, Sharpe continued as a solo interviewer with a syndicated TV series titled ''The Street People''. In the 1980s he hosted a series of public television specials titled ''Mal Sharpe's San Francisco'' which included a mixture of new material and older clips.
Sharpe was a "trad jazz" fan and said that he moved to San Francisco after seeing a
Turk Murphy's Jazz Band album cover. He began playing the trombone at 15, and although he "had not kept it up", a chance request to sit in with a jazz group led to a regular gig at a
North Beach, San Francisco
North Beach is a neighborhood in the northeast of San Francisco adjacent to Chinatown, the Financial District, and Russian Hill. The neighborhood is San Francisco's "Little Italy" and has historically been home to a large Italian American pop ...
nightclub in the late 1950's. In the 1980's he established his own Big Money In Jazz band. They regularly appeared at venues such as the Savoy Tivoli and Enrico’s in San Francisco and the No Name Bar in Sausalito.
Sharpe resided in
Berkeley,
California, with his wife. He hosted a
jazz show, ''Back on Basin Street,'' from 9:00 to 11:00 p.m. Sunday Pacific Time on
KCSM at the
College of San Mateo in
California. The final ''Back on Basin Street'' was aired on Sunday, March 25, 2012. He died on March 10, 2020, of complications from heart surgery at the age of 83.
References
External links
*
KCSMCoyle and Sharpe Official Siteon public radio program
The Sound of Young AmericaProfile by Ben Fong-Torres
{{DEFAULTSORT:Sharpe, Mal
1936 births
2020 deaths
Television personalities from California
Radio personalities from California
People from Cambridge, Massachusetts
People from Berkeley, California
Jewish American musicians
Jewish American comedians
21st-century American Jews