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Stephen Glenn Martin (born August 14, 1945) is an American comedian, writer, producer, actor, musician
and composer born in Waco,
Texas and raised in Orange County,
California.
Early years
Martin worked at the Bird Cage Theater in Knott's Berry
Farm and at the Magic Shop at Disneyland as a teenager, where he developed
his talents for magic, juggling, playing the banjo and creating balloon animals.
Martin majored in philosophy at California State University,
Long Beach, but dropped out. Nevertheless, his time there changed his life:
- "It changed what I believe and what I think about everything. I majored in philosophy. Something about non sequiturs appealed
to me. In philosophy, I started studying logic, and they were talking about cause and effect, and you start to realize, "Hey, there is no cause and
effect! There is no logic! There is no anything!" Then it gets real easy to write this stuff, because all you have to do is twist
everything hard - you twist the punch line, you twist the
non sequitur so hard away from the things that set I up, that it's easy...
and it's thrilling."
A girlfriend helped him get his first real job in 1967, as a comedy writer on
The Smothers Brothers Comedy
Hour, the show she was on as a dancer. Martin, along with the other writers for that show, won an Emmy Award in 1969. Martin also wrote for
John Denver (a neighbor of his in Aspen, Colorado at one point) and The Glen
Campbell Goodtime Hour.
He then started performing his own material, sometimes as an opening act for groups such as the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band and the Carpenters, and sometimes appearing on camera:
He appeared at San Francisco's The Boarding House among other
locations. He continued to write, earning an Emmy nomination for his work on Van Dyke and Company in 1975.
Becoming a household name
In the mid-1970s he made frequent appearances as a stand-up comedian on The Tonight
Show with Johnny Carson. That exposure, together with
appearances on NBC's Saturday Night Live (SNL), led to his first of four comedy albums, Let's Get Small. The album was a huge success; one of its tracks,
Excuse Me, helped establish a national catch phrase.
His next album, A Wild and Crazy Guy, was an even bigger success reaching the number two spot on the chart, and
spawning another catch phrase, this time based on an SNL skit where Martin and Dan Aykroyd played a couple of bumbling Czechoslovakian playboys. A top 40 hit King
Tut, from the album, released in 1978, was backed by the Toot Uncommons (better known as the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band). Both were
million sellers.
Both albums won Grammys for Best Comedy Recording in 1977 and 1978.
In these and his two other albums, Martin's stand-up comedy was
self-referential, sometimes self-mocking. It mixes philosophical riffs with sudden spurts
of "happy feet", deft banjo playing with balloon depictions of concepts like venereal disease. His style is off kilter and ironic, and sometimes makes fun at stand-up comedy
traditions. A typical gag might be interrupted for a sip from a glass of water, and just as he was about to speak again, he
forcefully spits the water onto the floor.
Movie career
By the end of the 1970s, he had acquired the kind of following normally reserved for
rock stars, with his tour appearances typically occurring at sold-out arenas filled with tens of thousands of screaming fans. But
unknown to his audience, stand-up comedy was "just an accident" for him. His real goal was to get into film.
Martin's first film was a short, The Absent-Minded Waiter (1977). The seven-minute long
film was written by and starred Martin. The film was nominated for an Academy
Award as Best Short Film, Live Action.
In 1979, Martin wrote and starred in his first full-length movie, The Jerk, directed by Carl Reiner. The movie was a huge success, grossing $100 million on a budget less than a twentieth of that
amount.
The success of The Jerk opened more doors from him. Stanley
Kubrick met with him to discuss him starring in an early, screwball comedy version of Traumnovelle (Kubrick later changed his approach to the material). He was executive producer for a prime-time TV series starring Martin Mull and a late-night series called
Twilight Theater. It emboldened him to try his hand at his first serious film, Pennies from Heaven, a
movie he was anxious to do because of the desire to avoid being typecast. To
prepare for that film, he took acting lessons from the director, Herbert Ross, and spent months learning how to tap dance. The film was a financial failure; Martin's comment at the time was "I don't know what to blame, other
than it's me and not a comedy."
Martin was in two more Reiner-directed comedies after The Jerk: Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid in 1982, and
The Man with Two Brains in 1983.
In 1986, Martin joined fellow Saturday Night Live veterans Martin Short
and Chevy Chase in ¡Three Amigos!, which was
directed by John Landis, and written by Martin, Lorne Michaels and Randy
Newman. It was originally entitled The Three Caballeros and Martin was to be teamed with Dan Aykroyd and John Belushi.
In 1987, Martin joined comedian John
Candy in the John Hughes film, Planes,
Trains and Automobiles. That same year, Roxanne, a film he cowrote, won him a Writers Guild of America award and more importantly, the recognition from Hollywood and the public that he was more than a comedian.
Martin starred in the Ron Howard film, Parenthood in 1989.
In 1999, Martin and Goldie Hawn
starred in a remake of the 1970 Neil
Simon comedy, The
Out-of-Towners.
Other work
Throughout the 90s, after Tina Brown took over The New Yorker,
Martin wrote various pieces for the magazine. They later appeared in the collection Pure Drivel.
In 1993, Martin wrote the play Picasso at the
Lapin Agile, which had a successful run in several American
cities.
In 2001, Martin hosted the 73rd Annual Academy Awards.
Art collection
Martin is also an avid art collector, particularly modern American art, and a trustee of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Martin's
personal collection has at one time included the art of O'Keeffe,
Twachtman, Diebenkorn, de Kooning, Kline, Twombly, Frankenthaler, Hopper, Hockney, Lichtenstein, and Picasso.
Bibliography
- Cruel Shoes (1979)
- Picasso
at the Lapin Agile and Other Plays: Picasso at the Lapin Agile, the Zig-Zag Woman, Patter for the Floating Lady, Wasp
(1996)
- L.A. Story and Roxanne: Two Screenplays (1997)
- Pure Drivel (1998)
- Shopgirl (2001)
- The
Underpants: A Play (2002)
Discography
- Let's Get Small (1977)
- A Wild and
Crazy Guy, (1978)
- Comedy is
Not Pretty! (1979)
- The
Steve Martin Brothers (1981)
Filmography
- The
Absent-Minded Waiter (1977) (short)
- Sgt. Pepper's
Lonely Hearts Club Band, (1978) (TV Movie)
- The Muppet
Movie (1979)
- The Jerk, (1979) also written by
Martin
- Pennies from
Heaven (1981)
- Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid
(1982) also cowritten by Martin
- The Man with Two Brains (1983) also cowritten by Martin
- The Lonely Guy
(1984)
- All of Me (1984)
- ¡Three
Amigos!, (1986), cowritten by Martin
- Little Shop of Horrors (1986)
- Roxanne, (1987), cowritten by Martin
- Planes, Trains & Automobiles (1987)
- Dirty Rotten Scoundrels (1988)
- Parenthood (1989)
- My Blue Heaven
(1990)
- L.A. Story (1991), written by Martin
- Father of the
Bride (1991)
- Grand
Canyon (1991)
- HouseSitter (1992)
- Leap of Faith
(1992)
- A Simple
Twist of Fate (1994), cowritten by Martin
- Mixed Nuts, (1994)
- Father of the Bride Part II (1995)
- Sgt. Bilko (1996)
- The Prince of Egypt (1998, voice)
- The
Out-of-Towners, (1999)
- Bowfinger (1999)
- Fantasia 2000 (1999)
host
- Novocaine (2001)
- Rutles 2: Can't Buy Me Lunch (2002, TV)
- Bringing Down the House (2003)
- Cheaper By The Dozen (2003)
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