You wouldn't be the first person to ask him about his front row seats. Or how it felt to have Andre the Giant wring his neck. Or if it really was all Belvedere's fault.
Recognition for Bob Uecker often comes for his radio presence, but plenty comes because of his illustrious career in several avenues of entertainment. Of course, the legendary "Voice of the Brewers" considers his true calling to be in Milwaukee as the Brewers' play-by-play broadcaster.
"All that stuff, I never considered it a life's work -- even some of these other movies I've done, all that stuff is laughs to me," he says. "Because no matter what I did, I was always coming back here (to the broadcast booth). There was nothing that was ever going to change my mind about coming back here."
His impact in the broadcast booth unquestioned, Uecker's career will culminate with a trip to Cooperstown, N.Y., later this month as he receives his induction into the National Baseball Hall of Fame, the recipient of the Ford C. Frick award for a broadcaster's major contribution to baseball.
But in his 33rd season with Milwaukee, Uecker may best be known to non-Milwaukeeans as Cleveland Indians off-color broadcaster Harry Doyle in the movie "Major League," a movie which began filming 15 years ago this month.
"They had the premier in Cleveland, and most of those current Indians players called me Harry Doyle all the time, they never called me Bob Uecker anymore," he says.
"People know me from a lot of other things, the Miller commercials probably gave me the most recognition of all. I had a series on television that lasted six seasons, I did the Tonight Show for all those years, Friday night baseball, Monday night baseball ... there were so many other things that I did, I think people associated me with all the movies actually more than they did with play-by-play unless they were really baseball fans."
Uecker's credits include over 90 appearances on the Tonight
Show with Johnny Carson, a ringside announcer for Wrestlemania, the TV series
"Mr. Belvedere" and appearances in such films as "Homeward Bound II: Lost in
San Francisco" and suspense thriller spoof "Fatal Instinct," not to mention a
famous sequence of Miller commercials and appearances in each of the three "Major
League" films. Uecker says he doesn't mind
hearing about his place in the entertainment lexicon each time he comes to work
for his steady job with the Brewers.
"It's become such a part of everyday life for me. When I go
to ballparks, I don't care for how many years, it'll be from now to perpetuity,
someone's going to mention the front row guy," he says, referring to his
character from the Miller Lite commercials, a self-important celebrity who
can't catch a break. "I don't mind that. You're part of American folklore.
It's something that people remember and their kids remember. Part of Americana
I guess."
Uecker says the commercials for Milwaukee's most recognized
brewery almost didn't happen. "I turned them down three times because there
was a conflict here with Pabst," he says, noting that the latter brewery
sponsored radio broadcasts at the time. "Finally after the third time I went
and told Bud (Selig) that I thought it was better for me to do this stuff, and
if it meant that I was going to leave here, I was ready to do that. Bud told me
to go talk to the Pabst Brewery and everybody else, and we worked out a deal
and I stayed. Pabst left and Miller came in."
The ad campaign, which he said lasted close to 17 years,
still lingers as a defining moment in Uecker's on-screen history, along with "Major
League" and its successive sequels, which
didn't quite live up to the popularity of the first.
"The sequel was okay, I always think of the first one as the
best," he says. "They didn't have Charlie Sheen in the second one or Wesley
Snipes, but they still let me do what I wanted and I had fun doing it.
"The third one stunk. I did it, but I never wanted to do
it, they talked me into it. I saw the script and I couldn't understand how my
character went from a big league team to the minor leagues."
Uecker recalls one scene from the second movie, which used
Camden Yards in Baltimore for filming. "I was sitting with a tank top shirt in
October and it was really cold, and I had to do this scene over and over and it
was getting to the point where it was really hard to do.
"The toughest thing about doing something like
that is calling the game when there's nothing going on. You're sitting in a
little box by yourself."
Uecker emphasizes the best part of the movie-making process
was using material that closely mirrored something he would say during real
games, often using ad lib to manufacture memorable on screen moments, such as
his home run call or famous phrase, "Just a bit outside."
"I don't ever feel bad in front of a camera. Not that
you're not nervous; but the thing with doing a movie is you can screw it up 100
times and go back to doing it again."
Uecker, who will not appear in the upcoming "Mr. 3000,"
currently using Miller Park as a filming locale, has felt good in a series of
professional ventures, as evidenced by such accolades as induction into the
Wisconsin Performing Arts Hall of Fame, Radio Hall of Fame, Wisconsin Sports
Hall of Fame and of course, the National Baseball Hall of Fame. Yet with all
the celebrity that has attached itself to Bob Uecker, he makes one thing very
clear: Milwaukee Brewers radio is his role in life, first and foremost.
"I'm here," he says, "I'm not a Hollywood guy."