Mel Brooks

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Sid Caesar, a gigantic comedy talent from TV’s 1950s, who invented not only his amazing self but also the template for the Carol Burnett Show and Saturday Night Live, is remembered in the most recent New York Times blog post by Dick Cavett, who takes a break from excoriating his bosses. Caesar, a complicated and troubled figure, spent all his talent and energy in one decade and never did anything close to that level again. He made nearly $4 million a year for most of that time, so he probably wasn’t hurting for money, though he was hurting. I don’t think you reach Caesar’s level of genius without natural gifts and without a difficult childhood. A rickety foundation allows for a lot of bounce in the legs but also inevitable falls.

Below is an excerpt from Cavett’s reminiscences and a short clip of the talk show host with the comic. Also very worthwhile is a tribute that Conan O’Brien (very influenced both verbally and physically by Caesar) did with one of the comedian’s Your Show of Shows writers, Mel Brooks. Watch here.

“It happens so often, the suffering from drug and alcohol addiction or other psychological problems of comic giants like Jonathan Winters, Peter Sellers, Peter Cook, Buster Keaton … the comedy list only begins there. And those other afflicted giants: Garland, Barrymore, Robards, Burton, Taylor, Tracy et al. And the great writers, like … sorry, my space is limited.

We tend to think that having a skyrocketing talent and being able to exercise it before an adoring public would guarantee a happy life. Silly old us.

Sid’s autobiography Where Have I Been? is a horror story. A tale of such stuff as very bad dreams are made on. Suffering an alcoholism that seemed to match in size his talent, he lost whole years of his life while living them.

A striking instance from that book sticks hard in my mind. In the midst of one of his darkest periods, Sid learned to his surprise that he had recently made a feature movie in Australia! His total memory of those months consisted of the boarding of a plane and a single sunset.

Someone years ago wrote, in a stately article in The Partisan Review, that there seemed to be in humankind what he called ‘the law of negative compensation.’ That the gifted must also be the punished.”

 

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Two Mel Brooks clips, the first one a fairly rare 1975 British TV interview at the time of the release of Young Frankenstein, my favorite of the comic’s films and one of my top ten all-time screen comedies. 

The second is Brooks having dinner at his pal Carl Reiner’s house, as he has every night for decades, during one of the best episodes of Jerry Seinfeld’s Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee. By the way: I really like Seinfeld, but he would be better off shutting up on certain topics. When he’s not busy showing off his disposable income in his web series, he’s griping about being criticized for not booking any black or female comics during the show’s first season. Well, he should be criticized for that. Life’s a struggle for everyone, but when you’re in the groups that have easiest access to something prized, you should focus on making sure others have a way in also. At the very least, don’t complain if you’re called out on it. Acting put-upon when the truth is pointed out makes you seem petty and small.

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