Thanks to his utterly bizarre yet completely transformative character
work and penchant for pulling large-scale pranks, Andy Kaufman is
exactly the kind of person who you would expect to fake their own death -
and as a result has been the subject of many conspiracy theories ever
since his reported passing in 1984. Hell, even director Milos Forman
added an interesting question mark scene about Kaufman's death at the end of his 1999 biopic Man on the Moon.
Now a new chapter has been written in the decades long conspiracy
theory, however, and if this new report turns out to be true it means
that Kaufman has spent the last 29 years of his living in obscurity with
a wife and family. Defamer picked up the story from The Comic's Comic, and it's quite an interesting tale.
The story begins at the 9th annual Andy Kaufman Awards, which were held
on Monday night at New York's Gotham Comedy Club. While on stage,
Michael Kaufman - Andy's brother - began to talk about his sibling's
legacy and then revealed that he doesn't actually know if Andy is alive
or dead. He then told a story about how back in 1984 he was going
through his brother's things and discovered an essay written by Andy
about how he would go about faking his own death. The piece said that he
would eventually reappear on Christmas Eve 1999 at a particular
restaurant, and when that date came Michael went to the place to find
out the truth. While Andy was a no-show, that night he was given a
letter from a stranger that turned out to be a letter addressed to him
from Andy. In the letter the comedy legend explained how he wanted to
have a normal life and that "he'd met and fallen in love with a woman
and had a daughter, and that he didn't want Michael or anyone to say
anything while their own father was still alive."
Andy and Michael's father, Stanley, died this past summer, and Michael
told the audience at the Gotham Comedy Club that a month after the loss
he got a call from a young woman who told him over the phone that Andy
was alive and that he had actually been paying attention to the Andy
Kaufman Awards "from afar" and was very proud of the event. Michael then
asked the crowd if that young woman was in the audience, and then a
24-year-old woman stood up from the back and made her way to the stage.
The report on The Comic's Comic, which was written by a writer named
Sean L. McCarthy, doesn't mention exactly how this young woman was
connected to Andy, but Killy Dwyer, an Andy Kaufman Awards finalist who
was there that night, said in a Facebook post that the mystery guest was Andy Kaufman's daughter.
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