WATCH: Robin Williams's Legendary Appearance on Inside the Actors Studio

Authored by people.com and submitted by szekeres81

Part of Inside the Actors Studio is a questionnaire in which host James Lipton asks his guest the following question: “If heaven exists, what would you like to hear God say when you arrive at the pearly gates?”

During Robin Williams’s legendary appearance on the show (January 29, 2001 – more on that later), he used the question as an opportunity to do what he did best: Riff.

“There’s seating at the front,” is his immediate answer. “The concert begins at five. It’ll be Mozart, Elvis and one of your choosing.”

But then he lapses into sincerity. “If heaven exists, to know that there’s laughter, that would be a great thing.” He gives the tiniest of pauses to set up the punchline: “Just to hear God go, ‘Two Jews walk into a bar ‘”

As Lipton reveals, Williams’s installment of the series was the first-ever two-hour episode: The actor actually spoke and performed for the audience for over five hours, but Lipton and the producers simply couldn’t bear to edit the performance any shorter than two hours, according to the DVD extras.

Lipton was unable to even ask his first question for the first nine minutes of Williams’s appearance, and it took seven minutes for him to get to his follow-up.

Finally, the part of his appearance that’s passed into legend: Lipton confirms on the DVD commentary that one member of the audience was actually taken away in an ambulance after the show, having developed a hernia from laughing so hard at Williams.

For more on Robin Williams’s tragic death and his legacy of comic genius, pick up the latest issue of PEOPLE, on newsstands Friday

If you or someone you know is considering suicide, please contact the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-TALK (8255).

The Williams family is asking well-wishers to send contributions to charities close to the actor’s heart in lieu of flowers. Suggested organizations include St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, Challenged Athletes, USO, the Muhammad Ali Parkinson Center, the Christopher and Dana Reeve Foundation and Glide Memorial Church in San Francisco.

PHOTOS: Tributes: The Stars We’ve Lost

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viktel on December 30th, 2018 at 06:30 UTC »

I watched this years ago on Youtube and there was this woman who had one of those infectious laughs.

She just couldn't stop her gaffawing at his jokes. He would finish a joke and the rest of the audience would finish the chuckle but she just kept going on. He mentions it at one point.

He was hilarious in that interview and it's the first thing that came to my mind about him when he died. That woman that just couldn't stop laughing at his act. In my head canon this was her with the hernia.

to_the_tenth_power on December 30th, 2018 at 03:48 UTC »

As Lipton reveals, Williams’s installment of the series was the first-ever two-hour episode: The actor actually spoke and performed for the audience for over five hours, but Lipton and the producers simply couldn’t bear to edit the performance any shorter than two hours, according to the DVD extras.

Lipton was unable to even ask his first question for the first nine minutes of Williams’s appearance, and it took seven minutes for him to get to his follow-up.

Finally, the part of his appearance that’s passed into legend: Lipton confirms on the DVD commentary that one member of the audience was actually taken away in an ambulance after the show, having developed a hernia from laughing so hard at Williams.

When I die, this would be the way I'd want to go.

The_Jizzbot on December 30th, 2018 at 03:25 UTC »

Later in the hospital, a doctor came in with a big red nose and a fake Russian accent. In his attempt to cheer up the patient, Williams in disguise, instead gave them a double hernia.