Calgary Herald

Crystal to celebrate turning 65 by writing a book on aging

- HILLEL ITALIE

He has lived many, many Sundays.

Turning 65 next year doesn’t only mean more nap time for Billy Crystal. The actor and comedian is transformi­ng the milestone into a book, and maybe even a stage show.

Crystal has an agreement with Henry Holt and Company for a book that will be part memoir, part meditation — with jokes — about getting older. During a recent telephone interview with The Associated Press, Crystal said that he hoped to have it out around the time the big day arrives, March 14, 2013.

“There are 77 million of us baby boomers in the country and this book will speak to them and how we look at the world,” he said.

The book is currently untitled: “We have a dirty title, and a sincere title,” he explained. Crystal said he expects to work on it throughout the summer and have the manuscript done by the beginning of November. He’s considerin­g adapting the book for the stage. Crystal had enormous success with the Tony Awardwinni­ng 700 Sundays, his one-man theatre show that paid tribute to his late father with whom Crystal has said he spent 700 Sundays.

Crystal has made a career out of turning his life into comedy. City Slickers was a story of mid-life crisis, and an upcoming film, Parental Guidance, stars Crystal and Bette Midler as grandparen­ts, based on Crystal’s experience­s with his own grandchild­ren. He is one of the world’s busier almost-senior citizens, also working on a prequel to Monsters Inc. and a possible candidate for another shot at hosting the Oscars.

The new book will be around 300-350 pages (“the print will be 4 inches high”) and will be edited by Gillian Blake, who worked on Rob Lowe’s bestsellin­g Stories I Only Tell My Friends. In a statement released by Holt on Wednesday, Blake said that “It’s not every day you laugh out loud at your desk while reading a book proposal.”

Crystal said he was currently breaking down his life into decades: “My 20s and 30s and 40s and 50s.”

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