Javascript is not enabled.

Javascript must be enabled to use this site. Please enable Javascript in your browser and try again.

Skip to content
Content starts here
CLOSE ×
Search
Leaving AARP.org Website

You are now leaving AARP.org and going to a website that is not operated by AARP. A different privacy policy and terms of service will apply.

Dan Aykroyd Shares Cherished Memories of John Belushi

Actor says if Belushi were around today, ‘I don’t think he’d like show business that much’


spinner image Dan Aykroyd against dark blue ombre background
AARP (Courtesy Dan Aykroyd)

Dan Aykroyd, 72, and John Belushi became household names as members of the original 1975 Saturday Night Live cast, and further cemented their place in comedy history when they transformed into the characters of Elwood (Aykroyd) and Jake (Belushi) to form the musical duo The Blues Brothers. The act took on a life of its own, and was adapted into a hit 1980 movie that featured legendary musicians Cab Calloway, John Lee Hooker, Aretha Franklin and Ray Charles. Belushi died of a drug overdose in 1982, but Aykroyd’s career continued to flourish — including as writer and star of the popular Ghostbusters movie franchise — and he still performs as The Blues Brothers with John’s brother, Jim Belushi. In a new audio documentary available July 25, Blues Brothers: The Arc of Gratitude, Aykroyd chronicles the behind-the-scenes story of the band, and he tells AARP why the project was an emotional undertaking, the inspiration behind Ghostbusters and what he thinks about the current cast of SNL.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

What was it like to walk down memory lane and tell this story?

Well, it was extremely, extremely emotional for me, of course, because I had to sort of relive the moment that I met John, the whole putting the band together, working with these amazing talents, the tour…. Because I had to relive those sensory moments, it was really exhilarating, all of it. And then I had to [relive telling] Judy [John’s wife Judith Belushi Pisano] that John was gone. That part of it always gives me some residual grief. Judy just died [on July 5], and she was really “the Blues sister.” She was the tripod in the whole structure. John and I were the brothers, she was the sister. She devised the clothing with us, the whole myth, the story. She was one of the principal creative writing forces on the movie, and just a great angel of a lady.

spinner image Blues Brothers The Arc of Gratitude audible cover
In his new audio documentary, available for $6.95 on Amazon, Aykroyd chronicles how he and John Belushi formed The Blues Brothers and came to work with music legends Aretha Franklin, James Brown, and Ray Charles on "The Blues Brothers" movie.
Audible

What do you miss most about John?

So many things. Going for shawarma in Times Square, and walking around and seeing him dance. And playing with him onstage, dancing with him, singing with him, having him [visit] in Martha’s Vineyard. He’d come over to my house in the army pants and the Herman motorcycle boots and crash on the couch…. I miss the concerts. But mostly just walking around and seeing him do weird things. Such as [when] we pulled up to a stoplight in Boston after Animal House was huge. We were doing some radio promotion. We pulled up, and John got out of the car at a four-floor elementary school, and he went to the first-floor window and knocked on it [and knocked] all along that row [of windows], and people were coming out and looking. And then they knew who he was from Animal House. And the second floor [windows] opened up, third floor — he had all four floors of these elementary school kids looking down on him and screaming at him. That was fun.

What do you think John would think of the world today?

I don’t think he’d like show business that much. I don’t think he’d like the misalignment of artists by the streaming services who have completely diminished the compensatory value of great creators. He would not like the geopolitics of the world. He would probably try not to concern himself with it. I think John, if he was alive today, would probably be working in New York theater directing, producing, working in a company. He was very literate and he loved theater…. I mean, I only had him for eight years, and then he went through the veil, and I just hope that he was there to pick up [wife] Judy. Not necessarily in a Blues mobile, though, but maybe an old Volvo.

Are there plans for a second season of your History channel show? [Aykroyd hosts The UnBelievable With Dan Aykroyd about “the strangest-but-true stories in human history, brought to life through dynamic recreation, compelling graphics and arresting archival.”]

Isn’t that a fun show? History Channel has such great researchers and such great interviewees and such great producers. Those stories are fantastic. Yes, we’re going to be on for another season. I’m going to work on that soon. I love that material and I love being able to emulate some of the great narrators and announcers over time that I loved.

Your great-grandfather was a psychic researcher, and your family members were interested in the paranormal. Are you still a believer?

Oh, no doubt. At that time of history — in the early 1900s and 1920s — you had different religions that had been all tried out. In upstate New York — Lily Dale [a spiritual hamlet in Pomfret, New York], that whole community — people were looking for a kind of a new religion, a new hope, and spiritualism provided that. Spiritualism is very woke: They accepted suffragettes, they accepted LGBTQ, there was an Underground Railroad stop. So you had this tremendous liberal culture that said, “We don’t believe in God, not necessarily in heaven and hell, but we believe ‘the consciousness.’ ” Not only the spirit now, the soul. “The consciousness” can survive after death and reach back, and personalities can reach back. So my great-grandfather had séances in the old farmhouse for years, every time a psychic act would come through town. There were quite a few of them … mediums, levitators … so I grew up with all this stuff, and hence wrote Ghostbusters in the old farmhouse that was built by my fourth great-grandfather.

spinner image Dan Aykroyd, Harold Ramis, Bill Murray and Ernie Hudson in a still from Ghostbusters
Aykroyd wrote and starred in the hit 1984 film "Ghostbusters," which has spawned multiple sequels. He's seen here with costars Harold Ramis, Ernie Hudson (background) and Bill Murray.
Columbia Pictures/Getty Images

How are you feeling now that you’re in your 70s? And how do you view aging?

Corporally and physically I feel every minute of my age. And I look at it as I’m being given the privilege of growing older — not all do. I’ve lost a lot of young friends. So I take the full pharmaceutical load recommended by my doctor for blood pressure and glucosides and statins and cholesterol. And so far pretty good.

What do you do to stay active?

I’d like to get on the motorcycle a little more and use that skill, but it’s been so hot that I haven’t been riding. I have a 1933 Pierce-Arrow V 12 limousine that I found in a barn. Believe me, a beautiful car. That car is in rough shape, but it runs really well, and that’s a clutch and a three-speed. So I’m clutching, braking, and it’s a workout like driving a tractor. So that’s my exercise. I’m swimming. Every day I get in the water here. My farm [in Canada] is on a nice cold glacial lake. That’s all helping.

Looking back, who were your early comedic inspirations?

Well, you can go back to the old Polish-Russian-Jewish sensibility of humor, which translated of course to the Yiddish rhythms of the Lower East Side, which gave you the Catskills influence for stand-up and for monologues and pummeling. You had great comedians come out of there: Jerry Lewis, Phil Silvers, Danny Thomas. Lucille Ball and Desi [Arnaz], they adopted that whole norm, and Dick Van Dyke, of course. There would be no great really smart humor if it weren’t for the Jewish writers and creators — Carl Reiner and people like him inspired all of the rest of us.

Who do you think is funny now?

I think the cast of SNL is superb, and I think all of the people who’ve come there are fantastic. I love Will Ferrell. I like Tig Notaro … Jim Gaffigan. I love Stephen Merchant who has a great show, The Outlaws [streaming on Prime]. He’s a wonderful writer, creator. And I watch SNL when I can stay up.

spinner image Dan Aykroyd, Jane Curtin and Laraine Newman as The Coneheads in a still from Saturday Night Live
Aykroyd, Jane Curtin and Laraine Newman appear on a 1977 "Saturday Night Live" sketch as the "The Coneheads."
NBCU Photo Bank/Getty Images

Would you host SNL again if asked?

I would think about bringing the band on no doubt. The hosting — there’s so many people who do that so much better. I always have ideas for writing on the show, for sketches and that, but the torch has been passed — let the young writers take it. And I don’t want to horn in and intrude and put material in there that would knock out a piece by some young writer who’s trying to get a [sketch] on there. I wouldn’t do that.

 

Unlock Access to AARP Members Edition

Join AARP to Continue

Already a Member?