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Heβs still supercalifragilisticexpialidocious!
Dick Van Dyke wants to be remembered for two βiconicβ projects as he celebrates his monumental 100th birthday on Saturday, Dec. 13.
βI think the two things he always talks about, the two blessings that came to him, were βThe Dick Van Dyke Showβ and βMary Poppins,’β Steve Boettcher, director of the upcoming documentary βDick Van Dyke: 100th Celebration,β exclusively told The Post.
βThose two are really the iconic things that he wants to be remembered for,β the filmmaker added.
βThe Dick Van Dyke Showβ premiered in 1961 and centered on Rob Petrie (Van Dyke), a comedy writer on the fictional βAlan Brady Show.β
The Carl Reiner-created sitcom revolved around Petrieβs life at home in New Rochelle, NY, with wife Laura (Mary Tyler Moore) and young son Ritchie (Larry Mathews), as well as his time at work with fellow writers Buddy Sorrell (Morey Amsterdam), Sally Rogers (Rose Marie) and their producer Mel Cooley (Richard Deacon).
βIt was just serendipity,β Van Dyke said in 2015, nearly 50 years after βThe Dick Van Dyke Showβ ended in 1966.
βIβd still be doing the show if they let me,β the Hollywood legend, who won three Emmys for his role as Petrie, added. βIt was the most fun Iβve ever had.β
βMary Poppins,β meanwhile, was released in 1964 and starred Van Dyke as the hilarious chimney sweep Bert alongside Julie Andrewsβ titular character and Karen Dotrice as young Jane Banks.
Although βThe Dick Van Dyke Showβ made him a household name, βMary Poppinsβ was what solidified Van Dyke as an acting and comedy staple around the world.
βI knew way before we started that we had a wonderful movie,β the βChitty Chitty Bang Bangβ star told People about the hit Disney classic last month. βThere was somethingβ¦everybody was kind ofΒ affected by it.β
βWe knew we had something really valuable, really good to do,β he added. βSo we all did our best and enjoyed as much as we could. I canβt think of one thing that actually went wrong.β
While Boettcherβs upcoming doc explores Van Dykeβs time on both βThe Dick Van Dyke Showβ and βMary Poppins,β it also touches upon one of the βhidden gemsβ from the βDiagnosis Murderβ starβs more than 80-year career.
βThe Comic,β which Boettcher described as a βlittle-known movieβ that βeveryone hasnβt seen,β was released in 1969 and starred Van Dyke as silent-film comedian Billy Bright.
But unlike the usual family-oriented fare that Van Dyke had become known for, the Carl Reiner-written film was βa little darkerβ and ended βon a sad note.β
βItβs not typical Dick Van Dyke,β Boettcher told The Post. βBut it shows the career of a comic whoβs a silent motion picture star who has kind of aged out of the silent movie era.β
The movie, however, paid tribute to many of the classic icons that inspired Van Dyke to enter showbiz in the first place.
βI think whatβs fascinating is itβs certainly a nod to that era, the era that he grew up with and watched movies in and emulated, whether it was the Stan Laurels of the world or those kinds of people like Buster Keaton,β Boettcher said.
βThose kinds of people he was nodding to in that film and honoring them,β the filmmaker added.
Van Dyke opened up about βThe Comicβ in a candid interview just over 40 years after the filmβs release.
βWe were excited about that,β he said in 2010. βWe thought we had an authentic piece there. It showed the times. We went out and shot a lot of 16mm comedy schtick, a lot of which didnβt end up in the film.β
βIt was an interesting movie, but opened and closed in the same week,β the βBye Bye Birdieβ star added. βWe were kind of proud of it.β
As for βDick Van Dyke: 100th Celebration,β Boettcher said that he and his team were βhumbledβ to be the ones telling the Hollywood greatβs story.
βI think weβre all better because heβs made us laugh and made us smile and entertained us so long with such great music,β the director added. βThatβs truly the legacy that he leaves.β
βWhat you see is what you get with Mr. Van Dyke,β Boettcher said. βHe is just the most gracious, wonderful, charming guy. Heβs kind of the last of a generation of entertainers, and I think [our] film reflects that.β
βDick Van Dyke: 100th Celebrationβ hits select theaters for two days only on Saturday, Dec. 13, and Sunday, Dec. 14.

