No stage lights flickered and no music was playing, yet the mood in the room shifted the instant Dick Van Dyke leaned forward — nearly 100 years old, still carrying that familiar sparkle that makes people feel like kids again.
Just minutes earlier, he’d led a joyful, two-hour sing-along in Malibu, California, co-hosted with his wife, Arlene Silver, to raise money for the Van Dyke Endowment of the Arts and the in-development Dick Van Dyke Museum.
He told the crowd the afternoon wasn’t only about nostalgia or celebration. It was about something he thinks we’re losing.
“There are several reasons for doing this — all of them good — but for me, it’s about bringing back the art of conversation.”
From there, he gently poked at a truth a lot of people didn’t want to admit they recognized: how often we sit together while mentally living somewhere else. He mentioned buses and restaurants where nobody looks up anymore, where couples share a table but not a moment.
Then, in the same easy tone that has always made him feel approachable, he dropped the line that caught everyone off guard — because it wasn’t said for applause. It was said like a small confession.

“I may be the only person in the United States over 10 who does not have a cell phone. I don’t have a phone.”
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A few people laughed. Others just went still, because the point wasn’t the phone. It was what the phone has replaced — the casual back-and-forth that used to make ordinary days feel human.
The event itself was a love letter to his career. Van Dyke was celebrating his 100th birthday a little early (he turns 100 on December 13), and he marked it by singing some of the most recognizable songs tied to his legacy.
He opened with “Chitty Chitty Bang Bang,” joined by his vocal group, The Vantastix, and later brought the room up again with favorites like “Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious” and “You Two.” The set also included “Carolina in the Morning” and the instantly familiar theme from The Dick Van Dyke Show — the kind of tune that makes people smile before they even realize they’re smiling.
At one point, someone asked what he loves most about Christmas, and he answered without hesitation: the singing and the caroling. The moment fit the whole spirit of the day — community, voices together, people actually present.

Van Dyke has also been reflecting publicly on the strange, lucky reality of making it to 100. In recent remarks, he joked that if he’d known he’d live this long, he might have taken better care of himself — and then credited one decision above the rest: his marriage to Silver.
And when he’s asked about what he hopes people remember, he tends to bring it back to impact rather than fame — the idea that joy, decency, and a “good example” can outlive any single performance.
That’s what made his “art of conversation” message land so hard. It wasn’t a scolding. It sounded more like a wish — a reminder from someone who’s spent a lifetime watching rooms light up when people sing together, laugh together, and actually talk.
A century into his life, Dick Van Dyke is still doing what he’s always done best: showing people how to feel a little lighter — and maybe, when they leave the room, how to look up again.