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Elaine May

 
Writer: Elaine May
 
  • Born: Apr 21, 1932 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
  • Occupation: Writer, Actor, Director
  • Active: '60s-'90s
  • Major Genres: Comedy
  • Career Highlights: The Heartbreak Kid, A New Leaf, Primary Colors
  • First Major Screen Credit: Omnibus: The Suburban Review (1958)

Biography

Best known as one half of the famed Nichols and May standup comedy team, Elaine May also carved out successful careers as an actress, writer, and director. Born April 21, 1932, in Philadelphia, PA, she was the daughter of Yiddish theatrical actor Jack Berlin and as a child occasionally performed with him on-stage. While still in her teens, she was married and divorced, giving birth in 1949 to daughter Jeannie Berlin. May later went on to study method acting under the tutelage of actress Maria Ouspenskaya before relocating to the Midwest to attend the University of Chicago; there she first encountered fellow student Mike Nichols, harshly criticizing his performance in a production of Miss Julie. They met again in 1955 when both joined the Compass Players improvisational ensemble, a group of Chicago-based satirical players which also included up-and-comers Alan Arkin and Shelley Berman.

After the Compass Players disbanded in 1957, Nichols and May continued on as a team; developing a highly literate and lightning-quick comic style, the duo emerged as darlings of the New York club scene, releasing their first LP, Improvisations to Music, in 1959. The following year, they graduated to Broadway, mounting a cerebral sketch comedy showcase titled An Evening With Nichols and May. The production was enormously successful, but already both performers were itching to spread their wings, and they delivered their last show in July 1961. Nichols soon rose to even greater fame, beginning an acclaimed directorial career with the hit film Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? May, on the other hand, kept a lower profile, pursuing a career in theatrical writing. In 1967, she finally returned to performing with a pair of feature comedies, Clive Donner's Luv and Carl Reiner's autobiographical Enter Laughing.

May's next film was 1971's screwball comedy A New Leaf. Not only did she star, but she also wrote and directed. After authoring Such Good Friends for Otto Preminger, she next directed 1972's acclaimed comedy The Heartbreak Kid, based on a screenplay by Neil Simon. Not only did the film launch the career of star Charles Grodin, but it also garnered Academy Award nominations for supporting players Edward Albert and May's daughter, Jeannie. A four-year gap followed before May resurfaced as the writer-director behind Mikey and Nicky, a freewheeling comedy starring John Cassavetes and Peter Falk. In 1978, she appeared in Herbert Ross' California Suite and penned the Oscar-nominated screenplay for the Warren Beatty vehicle Heaven Can Wait.

Again, however, despite her success, May disappeared from view; she did not return to cinema for nine years, and when she did, the results were disastrous. The film in question was 1987's Ishtar, a comedy starring Beatty, Dustin Hoffman, and Isabelle Adjani; largely shot on location in the Middle East, the production was beset by personality clashes, rampaging egos, and other internal difficulties, and advance publicity alone was so terrible that the picture arrived to theaters stillborn -- produced at a cost of over 55 million dollars, it grossed less than eight million dollars. Ultimately, Beatty and Hoffman escaped relatively unscathed, leaving much of the blame to fall squarely on May's shoulders. Another long layoff followed, and apart from co-starring in the little-seen 1990 comedy In the Spirit, she did not attempt to mount a comeback prior to writing 1996's The Birdcage, which she adapted for director Nichols. Clearly the spark had returned to their working relationship after a layoff of over three decades, and she next wrote the screenplay for his political satire Primary Colors. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Movie Guide
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Wikipedia: Elaine May
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Elaine May
Born Elaine Berlin
April 21, 1932 (1932-04-21) (age 77)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Spouse(s) Sheldon Harnick
(1972-1973) (divorced)
Marvin May
(?-?) 1 daughter

Elaine May (born April 21, 1932, Philadelphia) is a two-time Academy Award nominated film director, screenwriter and actress. She achieved her greatest fame, in the 1950s, from her improvisational comedy routines in partnership with Mike Nichols.

Contents

Family background

Elaine Berlin was born in Philadelphia, the daughter of the theatre director and actor Jack Berlin and actress Ida Berlin. Ida Berlin would have a small role in her daughter's film, A New Leaf. As a child, Elaine occasionally performed with her father in the Yiddish theater he ran. In 1942, the family moved to Los Angeles, California.

She married Marvin May in the late 1940s as a teenager and gave birth to a daughter, actress Jeannie Berlin (who is known by her mother's maiden name) in 1949; the couple later divorced. In 1972, she married lyricist Sheldon Harnick, best known for his work in Fiddler On The Roof. However, they divorced a year later.

Career

Stage

In 1947, May studied acting under veteran theater and screen actress Maria Ouspenskaya.[citation needed]

In 1950, May attended the University of Chicago and Playwrights Theatre in Chicago. In 1953, she became a member of the improvisational theatre group The Compass Players, founded by Paul Sills and David Shepherd, which later became The Second City. She remained a member until 1957.

During her membership, May met Mike Nichols, who was then starring in one of Sills' plays, and began a successful partnership with him. Together they formed a standup comic duo, performing in New York clubs and making several TV appearances.

In 1960, they made their Broadway debut with An Evening with Mike Nichols and Elaine May; the original-cast album won the Grammy Award in 1962 for Best Comedy Performance. Throughout the 1960s, thanks in part to the successful work with Nichols, May wrote, directed, and acted in various forms of theatre. In addition, she wrote and performed for radio and recorded several comedy albums. Her work with Nichols during this time was critical to establishing improvisation as a form of comedy. Their stage act and records featured just the two voices with a solo pianist - played by Marty Rubenstein.

May formed and directed an improvisational company called The Third Ear in New York that included Reni Santoni, Peter Boyle, Renee Taylor, and Louise Lasser. On Tuesday nights the cast would improvise with invited guests, like Mark Gordon who had also been in The Compass.

May also wrote several plays during this period. Her greatest success was the one-act Adaptation. Other stage plays she has written include Not Enough Rope, Mr Gogol And Mr Preen, Hot Line, After the Night and the Music, Power Plays, Taller Than A Dwarf, and Adult Entertainment. She also directed the off-Broadway production of Adaptation/Next.

Nichols and May starred together in a stage version of Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? at the Long Wharf Theatre in 1980. Nichols had directed the film version in 1966.

Film

Directing

May made her film writing and directing debut in 1971 with A New Leaf, a screwball comedy based on Jack Ritchie's The Green Heart. (Ritchie would later retitle the story after A New Leaf.)The film starred Walter Matthau and May in the lead roles. Originally, May handed in a 180-minute black comedy that the studio cut into a 102-minute weird romance.

Her second directorial effort was The Heartbreak Kid. This comedy was critically lauded and modestly popular, based on a screenplay by Neil Simon, and starring Charles Grodin, Eddie Albert, and May's own daughter, Jeannie Berlin. Albert and Berlin each received Supporting Actor/Actress Oscar nominations for the film. May followed up these two comedies with a bleak crime story entitled Mikey and Nicky in 1976.

May’s next directorial effort, Ishtar (1987), was her last. Largely shot on location in Morocco, the production was beset by internal difficulties, and advance publicity was so negative that the picture never got off the ground, becoming one of the biggest cinematic disasters of its day.

Writing

Elaine May received an Oscar nomination for updating Here Comes Mr. Jordan as Heaven Can Wait. May reunited with her former comic partner, Mike Nichols, with The Birdcage in 1996. The film relocated the classic French farce, La Cage aux Folles, from France to South Beach, Miami. May received her second Oscar nomination for Best Screenplay when she again worked with Nichols on Primary Colors in 1997.

Trivia

It is suggested in Janet Coleman's book The Compass that Elaine May and Mike Nichols had a short affair early in their association. When Elaine and Mike Nichols were asked by Tommy Smothers at a comedy festival in 1999 "so did you guys have an affair or what?" Elaine replied, "Exactly".

Filmography

Films as writer

Films as writer and director

Films as director

Films as actress

External links


 
 
Learn More
In the Spirit (1990 Mystery Film)
Shelley Berman: HBO Comedy Presents Shelley Berman (2005 Theater Film)
Mike Nichols & Elaine May (Comedy Band, '50s, '60s)

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