Home News ‘Seinfeld’ star Michael Richards tells all in ‘Entrances and Exits’ memoir

‘Seinfeld’ star Michael Richards tells all in ‘Entrances and Exits’ memoir


“Seinfeld” star Michael Richards opens up in a memoir that delves into his success as Jerry Seinfeld’s irrepressible neighbor Cosmo Kramer and the racial slur that effectively ended his career.

While the 74-year-old slapstick comic doesn’t get to his 2006 racist meltdown on a comedy club stage until late in the book, he blames it on anger, according to excerpts published by the Daily Beast.

“What the hell’s the matter with me?” he wrote. “Anger. Anger was the matter with me. I f—ed up.”

While performing stand-up at the Laugh Factory comedy club in Los Angeles nearly 20 years ago, Richards infamously lost his temper when a Black audience member heckled him. The racist tirade that ensued cost the comic his livelihood.

“I have no defense,” Richards writes. “I blew it.”

According to Richards, he wanted to apologize to the man he insulted by repeatedly using the N-word after his set, but that person had already left the club.

That wasn’t his first mistake on a Los Angeles comedy club stage.

In “Entrances and Exits,” which hit bookstores Tuesday, Richards recalls walking into the crowd while performing at “The Comedy Store,” rifling through a woman’s purse for laughs and spilling her medication. She sued the venue.

US actors Jerry Seinfeld (R) and Michael Richards attend Netflix's "Unfrosted" premiere at the Egyptian Theatre in Los Angeles, California on April 30, 2024. (Photo by Frederic J. BROWN / AFP) (Photo by FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP via Getty Images)
US actors Jerry Seinfeld (R) and Michael Richards attend Netflix’s “Unfrosted” premiere at the Egyptian Theatre in Los Angeles, California on April 30, 2024. (Photo by FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP via Getty Images)

Richards claims he’s not nearly as outgoing as the “Seinfeld” character he played for more than 170 episodes. At a party hosted by Billy Crystal, Richards said he jumped into a pool fully clothed and stayed underwater for a long time.

“The truth is I liked it better down there than with everybody up on the patio,” he recalled.

The southern California native said he turned down two offers to host “Saturday Night Live” and declined being honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. But one thing he wanted was an Emmy Award, which led him to submit his own name and pay the $800 application fee he said “Seinfeld” producers didn’t pay in 1993. He went on to win Best Supporting Actor Emmys three of the next five years.

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