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Neil Simon
( B. 4 July 1927, Bronx, New York )
Neil
Simon is the world’s most successful playwright. He has had dozens of
plays and nearly as many major motion pictures produced. He has been
showered with more Academy and Tony nominations than any other writer,
and is the only playwright to have four Broadway productions running
simultaneously. His plays have been produced in dozens of languages, and
have been blockbuster hits from Beijing to Moscow. His true success,
however, is in his unique way of exposing something real in the American
spirit.
Born in the Bronx on July 4, 1927, Marvin Neil Simon grew up in
Manhattan and for a short time attended NYU and the University of
Denver. His most significant writing job came in the early 1950s when he
joined the staff of YOUR SHOW OF SHOWS, a landmark live television
comedy series. Sid Caesar’s hilariously cutting-edge program had some of
the best comic minds in television working for it, including Mel Brooks,
Woody Allen, Larry Gelbart, and Carl Reiner. "I knew," said Simon, "when
I walked INTO YOUR SHOW OF SHOWS, that this was the most talented group
of writers that up until that time had ever been assembled together." By
the 1960s, Simon had begun to concentrate on writing plays for Broadway.
His first hit came in 1961 with "Come Blow Your Horn," and was soon
after followed by the very successful comic romance "Barefoot in the
Park."
Simon’s brother, Danny, who also worked on YOUR SHOW OF SHOWS, played a
major role in his writing. Eight and a half years older, Danny brought
Simon into the business and had shown him the ropes. In fact, it was
Danny who provided the inspiration for one of Simon’s most enduring
hits. After his divorce, Danny moved in with another divorced man, and
this situation became the set-up for "The Odd Couple" (1966). Though
Danny had begun writing the story himself, he reached a block and
eventually handed it off to Simon who soon made it a smash on Broadway.
Starring Jack Lemon and Walter Matthau, the 1968 film version was
equally successful and prompted a popular television series.
By 1973, Simon was a major voice in contemporary comedy. But, that year
he entered a low period in his life, when his wife of twenty years,
died. Some time later, he met the actress Marsha Mason, and they were
married. His 1977 play, Chapter Two, dramatizes the grief of a newly
remarried man trying to start over after his wife has died. Chapter Two
was considered one of his finest works and he followed it with a
musical, They’re Playing Our Song.
Throughout his four-decade career, Simon has drawn extensively on his
own life and experience for materials for his plays. Many of his works
take place in the working-class New York neighborhoods he knew so well
as a child. One of Simon’s great achievements has been the insightful
representation of the social atmosphere of those times in New York. With
his autobiographical trilogy, "Brighton Beach Memoirs" (1983), "Biloxi
Blues" (1985), and "Broadway Bound" (1986), Simon created a touching
portrait of an individual, his family, and the world around them. With
these plays, Simon found his greatest critical acclaim, and for his 1991
follow-up, "Lost in Yonkers," Simon was awarded a Pulitzer Prize.
Neil Simon has for almost forty years invigorated the stage with
touching stories and zany characters, but possibly his greatest
contribution has been the ability to create humor from the lives and
troubles of everyday people. Of Simon, actor Jack Lemon said, "Neil has
the ability to write characters -- even the leading characters that
we’re supposed to root for -- that are absolutely flawed. They have
foibles. They have faults. But, they are human beings. They are not all
bad or all good; they are people we know."
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