Regina Leader-Post

GENTLE HUMOUR A SIMON LEGACY

Playwright created comedy gold on stage, film and TV

- MARK KENNEDY

NEW YORK When master playwright Neil Simon accepted the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor in 2006, he was visibly nervous. But his gentle humour was evident.

“It took me six years to write my first play,” he said, recalling that he found the title for Come Blow Your Horn from one of his daughter’s nursery rhyme books. He said it turned out to be “a so-so play ” that was turned into “a so-so movie” with Frank Sinatra.

But it was successful enough that he considered calling his subsequent works The Sheep’s in the Meadow and The Cow’s in the Corn.

“For the first time,” he said, “I had money in the bank. Yes, sir, yes sir, three bags full!”

Simon, who died Sunday at 91, was a meticulous joke-smith, peppering his plays, especially the early ones, with one-liners and humorous situations that critics said sometimes came at the expense of character and believabil­ity.

No matter. For much of his career, audiences embraced his work, which often focused on middle-class, urban life, many of the plots drawn from his own personal experience. His characters battled depression, alcoholism and loneliness.

Simon’s stage successes included The Odd Couple, Barefoot in the Park, the Brighton Beach trilogy, The Prisoner of Second Avenue, Last of the Red Hot Lovers, The Sunshine Boys, Plaza Suite, Chapter Two, Sweet Charity and Promises, Promises. Many of his plays were adapted into movies and one, The Odd Couple, even became a TV series — twice.

For a seven-month stretch in 1967, he had four production­s running at the same time on Broadway: Barefoot in the Park, The Odd Couple, Sweet Charity and The Star- Spangled Girl.

Simon’s ability to recognize life’s little annoyances — too many pillows piled on a sofa, being told as a kid you may not eat any more cookies — connected with audiences. A scene in The Odd Couple when Felix Unger passive-aggressive­ly leaves a note on Oscar’s pillow — “We’re all out of Corn Flakes. F.U.” — got huge laughs.

The loss was especially hard for playwright­s and screenwrit­ers. Among many other tributes, Big Bang Theory creator Bill Prady tweeted: “there is no American comedy writer whose work isn’t influenced by the rhythm and music of Neil Simon’s words.”

Simon earned four Tony Awards, the Pulitzer Prize, the Kennedy Center honours (1995) and, in 1983, he even had a Broadway theatre named after him when the Alvin was rechristen­ed the Neil Simon Theatre.

The bespectacl­ed, mild-looking Simon (a New York Times magazine profile described him as looking like an accountant or librarian who dressed “just this side of drab”) was a relentless writer.

“I am most alive and most fulfilled sitting alone in a room, hoping that those words forming on the paper in the Smith-corona will be the first perfect play ever written in a single draft,” Simon wrote in the introducti­on to one of the many anthologie­s of his plays.

Simon originally started as a radio and TV writer with his older brother, Danny. Yet he grew dissatisfi­ed with TV writing and the network restrictio­ns that accompanie­d it. Out of his frustratio­n came Come Blow Your Horn, which centres on two brothers (not unlike Danny and Neil Simon) trying to figure out what to do with their lives. The comedy ran for more than a year on Broadway.

But it was his second play, Barefoot in the Park, that really put Simon on the map. Critically well received, the 1963 comedy, directed by Mike Nichols, concerned the tribulatio­ns of a pair of newlyweds, played by Elizabeth Ashley and Robert Redford.

Simon cemented that success two years later with The Odd Couple, a comedy about bickering roommates: Oscar, a gruff, slovenly sportswrit­er, and Felix, a neat, fussy photograph­er.

Walter Matthau, as Oscar, and Art Carney, as Felix, starred on Broadway, with Matthau and Jack Lemmon playing the roles in a successful movie version. Jack Klugman and Tony Randall appeared in the TV series, which ran on ABC from 1970 to 1975. A female stage version was done on Broadway in 1985 and a 2015 TV series revival starred Matthew Perry as the gruff Oscar.

Besides Sweet Charity (1966) and Promises, Promises (1968), based on Billy Wilder’s film The Apartment, Simon wrote the books for several other musicals, including Little Me (1962), featuring a hardworkin­g Sid Caesar in seven different roles, and They’re Playing Our Song (1979), with music by Marvin Hamlisch and lyrics by Carole Bayer Sager.

Many of his plays were turned into films. Besides The Odd Couple, he wrote the screenplay­s for movie versions of Barefoot in the Park, The Sunshine Boys, The Prisoner of Second Avenue and more.

Simon also wrote original screenplay­s, the best known being The Goodbye Girl, starring Richard Dreyfuss as a struggling actor, and The Heartbreak Kid, starring Charles Grodin.

Simon was married five times, twice to the same woman. He is survived by his fourth wife, actress Elaine Joyce; two daughters, Ellen and Nancy; three grandchild­ren; and one great-grandson.

Simon’s death also hit home for actor Matthew Broderick, who made his Broadway debut in Simon’s Brighton Beach Memoirs in 1983 and also that year made his movie debut in Simon’s Max Dugan Returns.

“It was my great good fortune that my very first Broadway play was written by Neil Simon. He also wrote my first film. I owe him a career,” Broderick wrote. “The theatre has lost a brilliantl­y funny, unthinkabl­y wonderful writer and even after all this time I feel I have lost a mentor, a father figure, a deep influence in my life and work.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Playwright Neil Simon, left, and actor James Coco worked together in 1981 on the musical comedy Little Me. Simon’s plays dominated Broadway for decades and during one seven-month stretch in 1967, he had four production­s running on Broadway at the same time.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Playwright Neil Simon, left, and actor James Coco worked together in 1981 on the musical comedy Little Me. Simon’s plays dominated Broadway for decades and during one seven-month stretch in 1967, he had four production­s running on Broadway at the same time.

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