Wednesday, August 03, 2022

EP286: Remembering Neil Simon


One of the most successful playwrights and screenwriters in history and no one on Jeopardy even knew who he was. Time to spotlight the work and brilliance of my comedy idol, Neil Simon.

Get Honey for FREE at https://joinhoney.com/levine

More podcasts at WAVE: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/artist/wave-podcast-network/1437831426


Listen to the Hollywood & Levine podcast!

14 comments :

  1. A very fine episode. It brought back the memory of the fine interview that you did with Mark Harris, the author of the Mike Nichols biography. That was an amazing writer-director collaboration. Something akin to Tennesse Williams-Elia Kazan. I wonder what Nichols would have done with the film versions of ‘Barefoot’, ‘Odd Couple’ and ‘Plaza Suite’. (‘Biloxi Blues’ was the only Simon-Nichols film partnership.) The story of how the Boston critic helped Simon solve the Act 3 problem of The Odd Couple is one of my favorite theatre stories. One thing that might have worked against Simon was that he was almost too prolific. In a review of, I believe, Star Spangled Girl, a critic said that Simon didn’t have a good idea for a play that season but he wrote one anyway.
    I am glad that you stressed how he was always rewriting. He wrote a screenplay ‘Bogart Slept Here’, It was cast and ready to go but something was off. He pulls it back and rewrites it as The Goodbye Girl.
    I would also recommend his two volume memoir. I believe that Simon was working on adapting it for the stage before illness prevented him from completing it.
    I wonder if you had the chance to see ‘Jake’s Women’, starring Alan Alda.
    Mentioning Heartbreak Kid reminded me of the fine work by Charles Grodin and Jeannie Berlin. It also earned Eddie Albert an Academy Award nomination.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Simon re-married one of his wives after an initial divorce. Talk about 're-wriitng'.... ba-dum, BUM...

    ReplyDelete
  3. It’s a wonder his career ever survived after his Rat Pack comedy


    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yANghIJk2qI

    ReplyDelete
  4. His films are hit and miss. It's not his fault that the movie Star Spangled Girl basically ignored his play and was bland and unfunny. But then there's Seems Like Old Times which I saw in a theater in 1980 and couldn't believe my eyes as the only black person in the film is a car thief, a Latino maid keeps talking about getting her "feet scraped" (which to this day I have no idea what that is) and apparently owning a bunch of Great Danes is supposed to be hilarious. Chevy Chase and Goldie Hawn were not well served by that film.

    ReplyDelete
  5. James Van Hise -

    Robert Guillaume was also in the movie - as I recall, not playing a stereotyped role.
    I like the movie. The Neil Simon wit carries a lot of the sillier aspects of the film. Plus, it played well with Chevy's deadpan delivery.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I contend that those J contestants don't know Plaza Suite, but they probably know he wrote The Odd Couple, e.g. It WAS the $2000 clue. https://j-archive.com/showgame.php?game_id=7411

    ReplyDelete
  7. 1 Attention, fanatics:

    Before Come Blow Your Horn saw print, Samuel French published two musical scripts by Neil Simon and William Friedberg:
    Heidi
    Adventures of Marco Polo

    And there were two paperback originals containing Simon teleplays:
    Sergeant Bilko (1957)
    Bilko’s Joke Book (1959)


    2. For all the achievement of Simon having garnered the most combined Oscar (4) and Tony (14) writing nominations, one must keep in mind that the Tonys only began in 1947 – after the heydays of Kaufman Coward Berhrman Barry Abbott Hecht etc — in the midst of a seemingly-unending era of much fewer play productions, and hence, much less competition.

    Simon’s modern era nomination “rivals”

    BILLY WILDER

    Academy Awards
    Year Category Film Result
    1939 Screenplay Ninotchka Nom
    1941 Story Ball of Fire Nom
    Screenplay Hold Back the Dawn Nom
    1944 Director Double Indemnity Nom
    Screenplay Nom
    1945 Director The Lost Weekend Won
    Screenplay Won
    1948 Screenplay A Foreign Affair Nom
    1950 Director Sunset Boulevard Nom
    Original Screenplay Won
    1951 Original Screenplay Ace in the Hole Nom
    1953 Director Stalag 17 Nom
    1954 Director Sabrina Nom
    Screenplay Nom
    1957 Director Witness for the Prosecution Nom
    1959 Director Some Like It Hot Nom
    Screenplay Nom
    1960 Picture The Apartment Won
    Director Won
    Original Screenplay Won
    1966 Original Screenplay The Fortune Cookie Nom
    1987 Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award Won

    WOODY ALLEN

    Academy Awards

    Best Director
    Year Film Result
    1978 Annie Hall Won
    1979 Interiors Nom
    1985 Broadway Danny Rose Nom
    1987 Hannah and Her Sisters Nom
    1990 Crimes and Misdemeanors Nom
    1995 Bullets over Broadway Nom
    2012 Midnight in Paris Nom

    Best Original Screenplay
    Year Film Result
    1978 Annie Hall Won
    1979 Interiors Nom
    1980 Manhattan Nom
    1985 Broadway Danny Rose Nom
    1986 The Purple Rose of Cairo Nom
    1987 Hannah and Her Sisters Won
    1988 Radio Days Nom
    1990 Crimes and Misdemeanors Nom
    1991 Alice Nom
    1993 Husbands and Wives Nom
    1995 Bullets over Broadway Nom
    1996 Mighty Aphrodite Nom
    1998 Deconstructing Harry Nom
    2006 Match Point Nom
    2012 Midnight in Paris Won
    2014 Blue Jasmine Nom

    Best Actor in a Leading Role
    Year Film Result
    1978 Annie Hall Nom

    Tony Awards
    Year Category Project Result Ref.
    2014 Best Book of a Musical Bullets over Broadway Nominate

    ReplyDelete
  8. Great podcast, Ken. Robert Redford is no Jack Lemmon but he did make a good straight man in BAREFOOT. As for the advise from the business manager about selling the rights to those plays, I think it's hinesight to criticize. As I remember reading about it, the manager advised Simon to go for the money in selling the rights because Simon had three straight hits on Broadway and there was "no way [he] could continue that kind of success" which was reaonable to believe at the time. Moreover, Simon was the one who ultimately made the decision to sell the rights and he was no kid at the time and had been in the business for a while.

    ReplyDelete
  9. I totally agree with Roger Owen Green. "Plaza Suite" is a pretty generic title, and news of the current revival likely didn't penetrate the consciousness of anyone not reading the New York Times Arts & Leisure section. The film version grossed all of $4 million, with Matthau, Maureen Stapleton, Barbara Harris and Lee Grant, not exactly top of the box office stars. Vincent Canby called it "aggressively tiresome." One doubts anyone of the age of current Jeopardy contestants has seen either the film or the play.

    ReplyDelete
  10. I should add, but if the Jeopardy skunk led Ken to record this excellent podcast, that's a true making of lemonade out of lemons.

    ReplyDelete
  11. At the 1991 Tony Awards, there was an envelope snafu something like the one at the Oscars a few years ago. Anthony Quinn announced the nominees for Best Choreography, opened the envelope, and read "The Tony Award goes to Lost In Yonkers, Neil Simon producer." Oops, wrong award. Quinn was mortified.

    A few minutes later the Best Play category came up, and to no one's surprise, the winner was Lost in Yonkers. Neil Simon accepted the award, stepped to the microphone and said innocently "I was in the men's room when Anthony Quinn was on, did anything interesting happen?" It was very funny and endearing.

    ReplyDelete
  12. I'm ambivalent about the impetus for this episode of Hollywood and Levine; it was a fine and entertaining episode and brightened my day.

    ReplyDelete
  13. Orson Hartley8/06/2022 11:19 AM

    FRIDAY QUESTION

    What do you mean when you say "sophisticated comedy“ and "broad comedy"?

    ReplyDelete
  14. Thought you'd like this, Ken. https://www.imsdb.com/scripts/Hospital,-The.html

    ReplyDelete

NOTE: Even though leaving a comment anonymously is an option here, we really discourage that. Please use a name using the Name/URL option. Invent one if you must. Be creative. Anonymous comments are subject to deletion. Thanks.

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.