|
Screenwriter,
Director, and Actor
5th Avenue Theatre
September 23, 1997
Biography
Excerpt
Selected Works
Links
Biography
Like
her early improvisational comedy sketches, Elaine May's career continues
to take fresh twists and adventurous turns. A comedian, actor, and writer
and director for both stage and screen, May got her start as an undergraduate
at the University of Chicago, where she teamed up with Mike Nichols in
the late '50s. From performances in college and cabaret clubs, Nichols
and May went on to become one of the most successful comedy duos of the
day, appearing on all the major TV entertainment shows and on Broadway
for a year-long, sold-out engagement in 1960. Conceived improvisationally,
then reshaped for audiences, their skits incorporated material that nibbled
on the edges of propriety and dipped into the dark corners that were skirted
over in the '50slike extramarital affairs and racial prejudice.
Smart, sophisticated, and unconventional, they could run with anythinga
parody of William Faulkner, romantic rapture in a dentist's office, Jewish
guilt, quiz show scandals, and rocket scientist Wernher von Braun.
After splitting with Nichols in the early '60s, May put her multiple acting,
writing, and directing talents to use. Among her early memorable projects
was a one-act play, Adaptation (Drama Desk Award, 1969), which
she wrote and directed in an off- Broadway, double bill with Terrance
McNally's Next. "I don't see how anybody can be discouraged
about anything now that Elaine May is back at work in the theatre,"
wrote The New Yorker.
May was one of the first women to pioneer an inroad into Hollywood's bastion
of male directors. Her first credited film was A New Leaf (1971),
co-starring Walter Matthau as a high-living, impoverished playboy who
woos a bumbling, career-focused, millionaire botanist, played by May.
Writer and director, May was praised for pulling traditional gender roles
inside out. (Unhappy with the studio's editing, she sued unsuccessfully
to have her name removed from the credits.) A year later, May directed
The Heartbreak Kid (1972), which she co-wrote with Neil Simon.
Included in the cast was her daughter Jeannie Berlin, who earned a Best
Supporting Actress Oscar nomination.
Success again came to May with Heaven Can Wait (1978), a remake
of the 1941 film Here Comes Mr. Jordan. May and Warren Beatty co-wrote
the script, which received an Academy Award nomination for Best Screenplay.
She also directed and scripted Ishtar (1987), starring Warren Beatty
and Dustin Hoffman. In uncredited rewrites, May left her distinctive mark
on Reds (1981) and Tootsie (1982). For such work, she has
earned a reputation as "one of the legendary script doctors in the
business." Critics also applaud the cohesiveness of her scripts,
the natural flow of her dialogue, and her keen insight into the foibles
of human behavior and the problems of contemporary societytopped
by a vision both generous and optimistic.
With The Birdcage (1996), a remake of the stage play La Cage
aux Folles, May (screenwriter) and Mike Nichols (director/producer)
joined forces for their first film together. In a stroke of brilliance,
they transposed the setting from the French Riviera in the '70s to Miami's
South Beach and Washington, D.C., to create a hilarious comedy centered
on the buzzword of the 90sfamily values.
Excerpt taken from the Foreward, written by Mike
Nichols for The Birdcage shooting script (1997)
The very first time I met Elaine, I was in a play directed by my friend
Paul Sills, Miss Julie. It was awful. And a very strange thing
happened, which is that Sydney J. Harris, the big Chicago critic, came
to the University of Chicago where we were doing it and gave it this great
review, which had the horrible result that we had to play it for months
and months. And when Harris's review first came out, I was walking down
the street and I ran into Paul, who was with this interesting looking
girl, Elaine, whom I had never met. And I said, "Paul, have you seen
this? and I showed him the review, and Elaine looked over his shoulder
and said 'Hah!'" She knew how lousy Miss Julie was, she had
seen it. In fact, I remembered her seeing it because she sat in the front
row and looked so skeptical and amused that I could barely get through
it.
And then
the next time I saw her was at the IC station, which is the railroad that
you take to go back to the South Side of Chicago where the university
is. She was sitting on the bench and I said, "May I sit down?"
and she said, in an accent, "If you wish," and we did the whole
long spy improvisation. And then we were friends. We did it later on one
of the records. But we improvised it in the actual railroad station the
first time, before we knew each other.
Selected
Works
Down to Earth (2001)
Small Time Crooks (2000)
In the Spirit (1990)
Primary Colors (1998)
The Birdcage (1996)
Ishtar (1987)
Heaven Can Wait (1978)
Mikey and Nicky (1976)
Such Good Friends (1971)
A New Leaf (1971)
Web
Site Links
PBS bio
on May
Official web site
for The Birdcage
|