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Back in the Fifties, three gifted madmen could be
found toiling (at one time or another) on Your Show of Shows
for
the incomparable Sid Caesar: Neil Simon, Woody Allen, and Mel Brooks. Today,
separately, they hold a virtual monopoly on American stage and film comedy;
one almost expects the government to file an antitrust suit. Of the three,
Brooks probably remains closest to the Caesar standard. His films abound
in lovingly precise dialect humor, a near-balletic control of physical
comedy, and whirlwind pacing that begins in chaos and ends in sweet lunacy.
This interview took place during the shooting of YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN, before the film won near unanimous raves -- even from the New York Times. J.A: You have a great deal of fan mail there. Is most of it from kids? M.B.: I get a lot now for BLAZING SADDLES. about one-third of it from kids. Let's see the Press Club of San Francisco, they're not kids; it says "Dear genius. . ." Here's another one, this is crazy, it says `Dear Mr Brooks, this is my 499th letter." And here it says, "Dear Mr. Brooks, this is my 498th letter." They're very freaky, they're almost as crazy as I am. And I get letters from Gene [Wilder] too, so I won't forget him when a good part comes along. "Dear Mr. Brooks, I loved THE PRODUCERS, especially the blond one in the corner who was wet and said 'I'm hysterical, I'm hysterical'... whatever his name was." At the bottom -- I m not supposed to know who sent it -- there's a little GW. J.A.: Do you pay attention to reviews? M.B.: To an extent. With the New York Times for instance,
well, I've never gotten them. THE PRODUCERS, which many people consider
a very fine American comedy was reviewed by Renata Adler. She had
some problems in the beginning, her review's were very neurotic. And she
said she didn't know whether to sit there and laugh or leave. She said
she didn't like Zero Mostel because he was fat. It crushed me. It was The
New York Times! When you're in high school you read everything,
particularly the entertainment section. I used to devour it. I was very
hurt. Then I heard Vincent Canby liked THE PRODUCERS. Then I heard Vincent
Canby was taking over reviewing. He loved me; so I thougnt I'd finally
get The Times! TWELVE CHAIRS comes out, Vincent Canby says no, its
no good; THE PRODUCERS was good, TWELVE CHAIRS no good. Then BLAZING SADDLES
comes out. Vincent Canby says no good, but TWELVE CHAIRS wasn't bad. Why
wasn't it good? Well, the story was thin.
J.A.: Is it easier to make people laugh through a physical joke or through dialogue? M.B.: I think people laugh more at physical things than at dialogue.
I have to be careful with so-called witty dialogue, because there's always
the show-off who laughs anticipating the end of the joke. In BLAZING SADDLES
there are no real jokes; every laugh comes out of the characters or the
achon. But if you don't like something, if you don't think something is
funny, three seconds later they'll be another laugh. So wait, the next
train will be along any minute.
J.A.: On the set, you seem very tempted to act out the parts for your actors.... M.B.: Yes, I have to watch that. There's a bit of an actor in me. I like to act, and you have to be careful because you don't want actors mimicking you. With someone like Gene Wilder, I'm not going to teach him to act. I'm not going to give him readings. I'll just tell him the emotional character of a scene and where it should go -- although he always knows where it should go. We may differ a little on timing. My rhythms are a little too quick and somehmes that's a conflict. J.A.: How was BLAZING SADDLES written? M.B.: It was written very much like the old Show of Shows. I didn't have time to write it myself, so I asked Wamer Bros. if I could hire a black writer, two Jews, and the original writer. And they said, why do you want the original writer when we have his script? And I said I'm sure there's more in his head since we liked his idea so much. So we got the original writer, Andrew Bergman; two Jews, Norman Steinberg and Alan Unger; and a black writer, Richard Pryor. And we all wailed. We sat in a room and wrote it like the Show of Shows. Everybody fighting to make the best joke. There was a secretary in with us on every session going crazy trying to take everything down. We didn't use a tape recorder because it inhibits writers, they start editing and playing to the recorder. J.A.: Wasn't Richard Pryor originally going to play the Cleavon Little role? M.B.: No, but I asked WB on bended knee to let Richie do it and they said, "Absolutely not. We like Cleavon's looks and they said if you want to do the picture, it's with Cleavon." It wasn't as if they suggested someone totally wrong for the part, Cleavon has that magic blending of performer and actor that's very rare. I had seen him in Scuba Duba and Purlie Victorious. He was very good. I wanted Richie because we had been working together, and he had acted so much of the role out when we were writing. It was glorious. But there were some things which Cleavon did that were inaedible. J.A.: Is there much improvisation on the set while you're shooting? M.B.: No, we followed the BLAZING SADDLES script word for word. THE PRODUCERS was word for word. TWELVE CHAIRS a little less. You can improvise with rhythms and motions during rehearsals, but not with lines. J.A.: How did YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN come about? M.B.: It was an idea in Gene Wilder's head, and then we started working on it, very slowly. YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN took about nine months to write, about the same as BLAZING SADDLES. I take a long time on scripts; there's nothing casual up on the screen. J.A.: Are you ever afraid of losing your audience by being too outrageous? M.B.: I'm always afraid of losing my audience because I'm never
sure I have one. What I do is write to please myself. If it makes me laugh,
then I think it's good. From there the next thing is pleasing the actors
you're working with, and then it's the crew. You get a general sense of
what's going on through the reactions of people on the set. You ask everybody.
A sandwich girl comes by and you play a scene for her; she's totally uninterested,
and if you get a laugh from her, you know you're doing well. Then the editing
room and finally the screening. I believe in showing the rough cuts and
re-working a film. I can change a picture right up until the end, I have
that in my contract. And that means the sound track as well.
J.A.: Can you define what people respond to in your films? M.B.: I'm a people's director: I hate people. No, I think I have
a minority rhythm; that helps a bit. Why would I be such a fan of foreign
films, why should I love LES ENFANTS DE PARADIS as I do? I don't understand
French except to order a ham sandwich; but without knowing the language,
that film is so effective. When I said minority rhythms I was kidding,
but in another sense I do think that there are international rhythms that
belong to people, and transcend language. We all get them.
J.A.: Have you ever been tempted to work the way the neo-realists worked, going out into the streets, working with non- actors? M.B.: I am tempted to go into the streets, but it's really not
my style -- although you've hit on a secret longing of mine to really do
that. To really Super-8 it; to just go out and shoot. I'm very good at
ad libbing, and I think people forget about the camera after the shock
of it wears off.
J.A.: What's behind YOUNG FRANKEN5TEIN? M.B.: It's complicated. In many ways we've gone back to the original
thinking of Mary Shelley, if not her original story. I think she was the
first person to discover womb envy. I think I'm the first person to call
it that, but what it is is that most men get even with women for being
able to have children by saying "I can paint, I can write," and women say,
"You're full of shit. Look -- a baby." And of course, she's the winner.
So here's this scientist and he says, "All right, so can I make a baby.
I'll put a few rods in his neck and plug him in somewhere and we'll make
a life." That's really it: to create life, like a woman.
J.A.: Will it disappoint you if audiences don't respond to the messages you're now talking about? M.B.: If they never understand womb envy, that's fine, that's very private stuff in my own mind. If they want to join in that celebration, it's fine. But if they pay three dollars to forget about their problems and just want to laugh, that's fine too. You know, they could never pay me enough money to do what I do; it's a total joy, hearing people laugh. I can walk into the theatre where BLAZING SADDLES is playing and hear laughter and it's wonderful, it's thrilling. That's the best. J.A.: Which is easier, to make people laugh or cry? M.B.: I personally think, I humbly think, it's easier to make people cry. Laughter is the true test of your talent. Of course there are cheap jokes and then there are the more exquisite jokes. A story point laugh is worth its weight in gold. People can laugh wildly at a movie and then come out to say it wasn't any good, it was cheap laughter. In TWELVE CHAIRS I served them Jewish soul food, and got big laughs. In BLAZING SADDLES I made a conscious effort to be brilliant. If the story line doesn't work, the laughs won't work. In FRANKENSTEIN it's my first attempt at fifty-fifty, laughs and story. It's a love story, like THE PRODUCERS' it's an emotional give and take. When you leave YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN I want you to feel emotionally satisfied and have a lot of affection for the characters and not want to leave the theater. I don't think I'll get as many laughs as in BLAZING SADDLES. Instead of ten thousand laughs, maybe only eight thousand. |
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