Jerry Seinfeld: I'm Telling You for the Last Time (1998)
August 8, 1998Release Date
Jerry Seinfeld: I'm Telling You for the Last Time (1998)
August 8, 1998Release Date
Plot.
Where to Watch.
Cast & Crew.
Jerry Seinfeld
Self / Writer / Executive Producer
Michael Barryte
Young Jerry
Grace Bustos
Girl at Funeral Sequence
George Carlin
Self
Alan King
Self
Robert Klein
Self
Carol Leifer
Self
Jay Leno
Self
Ed McMahon
Self
Ed McMahon
Self ('The Funeral' sequence)
Larry Miller
Self
Paul Reiser
Self
Garry Shandling
Self
George Wallace
Self
Marty Callner
Director / Producer
Michael Kamen
Original Music Composer
Randall Gladstein
Co-Producer
Geoff A. Hubler
Production Manager
David Darwin
Best Boy Electric
Bill Brigode
Co-Producer
Ron Washburn
Camera Operator
Gray Marshall
Visual Effects Supervisor / Visual Effects Compositor
Charlie Huntley
Camera Operator
Paul Holt
Production Design
Allen Harker
Electrician
Bronston Jones
Assistant Production Manager
Manny Rodriguez
Camera Operator
James Clement Cook
Props
Cicero De Moraes
Gaffer
Dave Eastwood
Camera Operator
Jay Kulick
Jimmy Jib Operator
Lyn Noland
Camera Operator
Media.
Details.
Release DateAugust 8, 1998
StatusReleased
Running Time1h 15m
Content RatingG
Genres
Last updated:
This Movie Is About.
Wiki.
I'm Telling You for the Last Time is a 1998 stand-up comedy special and the second starring Jerry Seinfeld. The special aired live on HBO on August 9, 1998, from the Broadhurst Theatre in New York City. It was then released as an album on cassette and CD by the same title that same year. In 1999, a VHS and DVD titled Jerry Seinfeld: I'm Telling You for the Last Time - Live on Broadway was released.
The recording was taped just a couple of months after the show Seinfeld went off the air. Entertainment Weekly said about the album: "On its own, the CD is a more than respectable stand-up disc; Seinfeld's riffs ... are worthy of preservation." I'm Telling You for the Last Time was nominated for a 1999 Grammy Award for Best Spoken Comedy Album. After recording this special/album, Seinfeld vowed never to use old material again, referencing his repeated use of "bits" from Seinfeld.