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About Steve :: Person :: Profiles
Sensational SteveThis was one
of the earliest big profiles of Steve.
Time
8/24/1987
Sensational Steve
Richard Corliss, Denise Worrell |
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Martin shines as the '80s' top comic actor
Good evening, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the 89th annual Academy
Awards to honor the best films of 2017. I'm your host, Drew Barrymore, and
I'm pleased to begin the evening by presenting the Irving G. Spielberg Award
to a man who, some say, has long deserved an Oscar as best actor. Perhaps
for his starring debut, in which he courageously demolished racial
stereotypes by playing a poor black child [clip from The Jerk]. Or for the
holy rage he summoned as he renounced Kathleen Turner with a ferocious "Into
the mud, scum queen!" [clip from The Man With Two Brains]. And who can
forget his transsexual transcendence as a man inhabited by a woman [All of
Me], or his searing indictment of painful destiny [Little Shop of Horrors],
or the role that was commonly judged as his best performance of 1987, as the
eloquent romantic with a canary on his nose [Roxanne]? It may be that each
of these turns deserved an Oscar - indeed, that the academy, in its myopic
preference for drama over comedy, has ignored generations of superb actors,
from Charlie Chaplin to Cary Grant. Tonight, perhaps, we could honor them
all by paying tribute to the greatest comic actor in film history... Steve
Martin!
Naaaah!
Comedy is the original no-respect art form. Primitive man knew that if he
were to be hit over the head by his fiercest rival, the stumble around and
yell "Aarrggh!," he would be acclaimed as a great tragedian. But if he were
to do ten minutes of witty stand-up, then bash himself with a club, he would
be accused of doing shtick. It is ever thus. At the movies, comedy may be
king at the wickets, and most of Hollywood's nouveau novas - Eddie Murphy,
Chevy Chase, Tom Hanks, Dan Ackroyd, Robin Williams, Bill Murray, Pee-wee
Herman, Martin Short - may have won their early stardom cadging laughs on TV
or in the burgeoning comedy-club scene. Yet the Motion Picture Academy
continues to lay laurels on lesser mortals whose roles require that they cry
over the phone, commit suicide or speak with an English accent.
No emotions are easier to evoke than fear and pity. But comedy is hard. It
takes Astaire timing and kamikaze cajoles to stand on a stage or a sound
stage and do this: wear a novelty-store arrow on your head; blow up
balloons, twist them into animal shapes and announce the resulting sculpture
as "venereal disease!"; tap dance maniacally when seized with an attack of
"Happy Feet"; then build a movie career running variations on a character
you might call the suburban jerk. And mainly this: wait bravely for years
until your public gets the comic point.
Steve Martin perfected this persona in the early '70s. Then he waited until
they got it. And suddenly, in 1976, they went crazy over his silver hair,
his B-movie-star face, his phosphorescent white suit - the whole look so
neat, so sensible, so... Phil Donahue- and the sublimely silly uses to which
he put them. Phrases like "Well, excuuuuuse me!" and "Naaaah!" became
schoolyard mantras, and his concerts were eliciting rock-idol squeals. "He
was performing to audiences of up to 20,000" recalls David Letterman, the
late-night commissar of '80s comedy. "I think that's a record for a stand-up
comedian in peacetime." In 1978 Martin recorded a gag disco tune called King
Tut; it sold more than a million copies. The next year he published a slim
volume of short stories, Cruel Shoes; it topped the best-seller list. When
he appeared as a Saturday Night Live guest host, the show's ratings would
jump by a million homes. His first starring movie, The Jerk, was the third
biggest hit of 1980.
"Starting out in movies," Martin says, "I felt very confident that I could
act, because I was too dumb to know better." Well, to star out, he could
act, and he did get even better. Yet the Hollywood establishment has been
his toughest audience. With All of Me in 1984, he proved that he could
locate the soul of a character while surrounding it with spectacular
physical comedy. The New York Film Critics Circle cited his as the year's
best actor, but the academy did not even nominate him. His twisted turn as
Orin Scrivello, D.D.S. (Drop Dead Sadist), in the 1986 Little Shop of
Horrors should have won him a supporting-actor nod. After all, he was
playing a deranged Elvis impersonator who loves his mama, tortures his
girlfriend and dies of a nitrous oxide overdose. It was as if Martin were
living out a line from the Dead Men Don't Wear Plain trailer: "He'll do
anything in the quest for the elusive Academy Award!" Still, nada.
O.K., Mr. and Mrs. Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, try ignoring Roxanne. It is a
sleeper summer hit, Martin's biggest since The Jerk. It is based on an
honorable property, Edmond Rostand's Cyrano de Bergerac. It dares to plump
for the supremacy of two old-fashioned notions: romantic love as the meeting
of true minds and the English language as a tool for wooing and wonder. The
script challenges its star to be at once noble and fatuous, strong and
swooning, utterly in control and desperately in love - all of which Martin
handles as gracefully as if he'd written it himself (which he did). And in
case you forgot, the last film fellow to play Cyrano, José Ferrer in 1950,
got a best-actor award. "I hope he wins an Oscar," says Martin Short,
Steve's co-star in last year's Three Amigos!, "because he has prepared a
tremendously funny acceptance speech. If the academy members want to hear
it, they know what to do."
Will they? In the Los Angeles Times, Industry Analyst Jack Mathews has
predicted that Martin will be nominated for best screenplay, not best actor.
But maybe it doesn't matter. Roxanne is not the peak of his pop artistry, it
is one of many, with more to come; a John Hughes comedy this fall, Planes,
Trains and Automobiles, co-starring John Candy; a David Lynch project called
One Saliva Bubble; a comedy with German Director Volker Schlöndorff. Anyway,
why should Martin, who turns 42 this week, worry about winning the
approbation of Hollywood geriatrics? It is their loss if the have forever
typecast him as stand-up's wild and crazy guy rather than as this decade's
most charming and resourceful comic actor.
Ask those who know him well, and their testimony will be, "Steve Martin is
not a wild and crazy guy." He is a shy guy, a serious guy. When he is not
onstage, he is not on. "To spend time with him is like being alone," says
Tommy Smothers, for whose TV show Martin wrote (and won an Emmy) in the late
'60s. "Except when he is being funny." Says Letterman, in defense of
Martin's reserve: "If you go to the home of a guy who shines shoes all day,
you are probably not going to get your shoes shined when you walk in the
door." So you will get neither cruel shoes nor happy feet when visiting
Steve Martin. He is polite and distant with strangers. During an interview,
he compulsively applies Chap Stick to his lips ("Do you have chapped lips?"
"No, I have a habit"). He is fiercely protective of his privacy. "I don't
want the way I live to get out to the world," he says. "Once private things
get into print, everybody knows exactly who you are, and it makes you dull."
Never dull, Steve. His early life is archetypal - for a stockbroker or a
coupon-redemption mogul, if not for a comedian. Born in Waco, Texas, of
English-Scots-Irish ethnic weave. Today Glenn, the father, is a retired real
estate agent; Mary Lee, the mother, brags about her famous son in
restaurants; his oldest sister Melinda is a California housewife. Steve says
he had an ordinary childhood. "No beatings, nothing bizarre. I didn't grow
up in a whorehouse," as Richard Pryor did. "We were not close-knit - not a
lot of hugging and kissing, not vocal or loud. We were middle class. When
frozen food came in we were right there buying frozen food." In 1955 the
Martins moved to Garden Grove, Calif., two miles from Disneyland which had
opened that summer.
Kismet! "I just loved the idea of Disneyland," he says. He was not alone.
Indeed, at a time when the Disney dream was supposedly losing its hold on
American youth, it was a fact stamping its values on a cadre of future
superstars. Steve Spielberg would be charmed by Disney's marketing of an
eternal Edenic childhood; Michael Jackson would find refuge in the sanitized
wizardry of its theme parks. But Martin would learn, firsthand, other Disney
lessons: the relentlessly cheerful huckstering, the belief that the business
of America is show business. From ages ten to 18 he worked at Disneyland
summers and after school. His first job was to stand at the entrance wearing
a straw boater and a bow tie, selling guidebooks. The vendor netted 2¢ a
book. "The norm was about 50 books a day," he says. "One day I sold 625. It
think it was the record."
At 15 Steve was promoted to Merlin's Magic Shop, where he worked for three
years. "I had loved magic tricks from the time I was six or seven." he
recalls. "I bought books on magic. I did magic acts for my parents and their
friends. I was aiming for show business from the early days and magic was
the poor man's way of getting in: you buy a trick for $2, and you've got an
act. So Merlin was my dream come true, because I got to perform magic for
people. We sold rubber vomit, shrunken heads, finger choppers, nails through
the head, skulls that glow in the dark. We'd make jokes with the customers
and spray them with snake cans. We had thousands of gags we would pull, and
I used to write them all down on 3-by-5 cards. I still have them. And I have
incredibly detailed notes on magic shows I did at Kiwanis clubs when I was
15 or 16. Later I worked at the Bird Cage Theater in Knott's Berry Farm. I'd
appear in a skit or do my magic act or a banjo thing. Four shows a day, five
days a week. Basic training."
The banjo thing was a big thing for Steve. When he was 18, he heard an Earl
Scruggs record and "went crazy." He would put a bluegrass record on the
turntable, slow it to half speed and methodically pick out each note. At
night he would practice in his '57 Chevy, so as not to disturb anyone.
William McEuen, Martin's longtime pal and for many years his manager,
attests that "Steve is an original and gifted five-string banjo player. He
could have been great." It was while playing banjo in a folk club that he
met the guitarist Mason Williams (Classical Gas), who hired him to write for
The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour. Later Martin quit the banjo "because I
wasn't getting any better. It's like I reached the end of it." In 1980 he
gave up stand-up for much the same reason. "I figured: I did it, I know I
can do it, and when I was doing it, I did it as well as anyone."
While working at Knott's, Steve met a girl who changed his life, or at least
his act. "Her name was Stormie Sherk. She later became a Christian singer
and wrote her autobiography. In it she says that her relationship with me
was the only one she ever had with a man she didn't end up hating. At the
time, I didn't have a clue about this. All I knew was she got me interested
in college, made me read The Razor's Edge, things like that. Now I wanted to
learn as much as I possibly could." He majored in philosophy at California
State University, Long Beach (which Steven Spielberg would attend a few
years later). On his 1978 Wild and Crazy Guy album, Martin would joke, "If
you're studying geology, which is all facts, as soon as you get out of
school you forget it all... but philosophy, you remember just enough to
screw you up for the rest of your life." In the mid-'60s, though, he was
dead serious: "I was romanticized by philosophy. I thought it was the
highest thing you could study. At one point I wanted to teach it."
And then along came Ludwig Wittgenstein, the Austrian philosopher whose
Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus redefined and reduced the scope of the
discipline. Says Martin: "As I studied the history of philosophy, the quest
for ultimate truth became less important to me, and by the time I got to
Wittgenstein it seemed pointless. Then I realized that in the arts you don't
have to discover meaning, you create it. There are no rules, no true and
false, no right and wrong. Anyway, these were the musings of a 21-year-old
kid." A 21-year-old kid who was ready to put his theories into his act by
breaking the comedian's first rule: tell funny jokes and make the audience
laugh. "I though that if I didn't tell jokes - if the audience had no place
to laugh - they might find a place to laugh by creating their own tension.
It was a rebel position in comedy."
In the Viet Nam years, there was not much to laugh at, and comedy was ripe
for revolution. The first generation of kids raised on TV, which gobbled up
comedy material and spat it out as pablum, had reached their majority just
as the evening news was topping their grisliest nightmare jokes. To be an
angry young comic was, it seemed then, to engage psychotic adults on their
own terms. The only answer was to drop out of the comic's traditional
adversary relationship to power and, instead, parade an anarchic
childishness. Their banner might have read HELL, NO, WE WON'T GROW UP. In
Britain, Monty Python's Flying Circus tossed music-hall bawdry into a Dada
format, and at home National Lampoon updated sick humor with a stinging Wasp
edge. They were vicious; they were silly; they couldn't care less. And now
someone had to shatter the lulling cadences of stand-up too. Who better than
the child of Disneyland and Wittgenstein?
Martin's scheme was absurdistly simple. He would put ironic quotation marks
around his nightclub act, as if cueing the audience to wonder, "Does this
guy really think he's funny doing this tired stuff? Well, I don't think he's
funny. In fact, he's so unfunny... he's funny!" But the act was largely the
one he had honed for years in other venues. He developed Happy Feet in his
living room. He learned juggling from the court jester at Disneyland; Steve
practiced at home with croquet balls and badly bruised his fingers. Or take
the hat-with-the-arrow routine (please). "it was a thing we used to sell at
Disneyland," Martin says. "It goes back to the theory, 'God, these gags are
so dumb!' By the end of the act I was wearing the hat with the arrow, the
nose glasses and the bunny ears. I wanted to look as ridiculous as possible.
It was like anticomedy." And a lunatic ad for Merlin's Magic Shop.
At first Martin took his act anyplace that would take him. He worked on San
Francisco club where, to attract potential customers, he would perform at a
window facing the street. "I had to start my act with nobody in the
audience. When people would come in, they'd find a comedian and an empty
room." At California's Russian River resort, he recalls, "I stood on a stage
outdoors and played to a parking lot of cars and campers, like at a
drive-in. If people liked something, they'd honk." At Harrah's in Nevada he
followed an elephant act, whose trainers did not always clean up after their
star. Playing Vegas was the worst. "People would always have their faces in
their food and never look up. Thirty minutes of material would last twelve
minutes, because there'd be no laughs."
As his stand-up career blossomed, Martin found a plethora of laughs, partly
because his act was defiantly antipolitical - indeed, postpolitical. "Steve
was never interested in the polemics, the controversy, the scene in the
streets," Mason Williams notes, "To this day he is not." Partly because
Martin seemed reactionary, the firebrands at Saturday Night Live were
reluctant to have him host the show. But with his first visit, in 1976,
Martin reached a turning point, maybe a flash point. King Tut was born on
SNL, and Martin teamed with Ackroyd to develop the Festrunk brothers, those
wild, crazy, dim-witted guys. "Steve can play dim better than anyone," says
Lorne Michaels, producer of SNL and Three Amigos! "It all happens on his
face. It is rare that people can play stupid without being insulting." In
his career, of course, Martin was playing it smart. He was the biggest
comedy star of the '70s.
But - funny thing - not of the '80s. The Jerk had pulled in $43.3 million in
rentals. His next five pictures - Pennies from Heaven, Dead Men Don't Wear
Plaid, The Man with Two Brains, The Lonely Guy and All of Me - earned a
cumulative $38.2 million. "When you have the No. 1 record or become No. 1 at
the box office," he says, "it's very easy to fall into the trap of seeing
yourself as a number. My problem is that I don't get the same exhilaration
from success as I get depression from failure." The reception of Pennies
from Heaven, a musical drama about small people with oversize dreams, would
have depressed anyone: it netted less that a tenth of The Jerk's take.
In his later movies, Martin leavened the jerk character with turns of
endearment. He was a private eye in Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid, in which he
co-starred with Humphrey Bogart, Alan Ladd and other famous dead people via
interpolated clips from '40s film noir. He was a cuckolded surgeon in The
Man with Two Brains, a parody of '50s mad-scientist movies and still
Martin's bust-a-gut funniest picture. In All of Me, Martin played his best
scenes with himself as a lawyer the right half of whose body is possessed by
Tomlin, his dead client. In the lovely Lonely Guy, he gave another master
class in informing light farce with passionate precision. And after shining
in his Little Shop solo number, he cedes the spotlight to Bill Murray for a
fabulous four minutes as a thrill-goofy masochist. "Steve's very generous as
an actor," notes John Hughes. "Comedy can be a wicked playground, but he's
totally secure, happy to step aside an let someone else shine."
Wondrous bits speckled all his movies. The Jerk: Steve, adopted son of a
black sharecropper, discovers the forbidden delights of big-band Muzak. The
Man with Two Brains: conniving black widow Kathleen Turner, lying in a
hospital bed, suddenly sucks on Dr. Steve's finger, and when a nurse
intrudes he removes the finger and studiously shakes it like a thermometer.
The Lonely Guy: Steve makes slow, sad, beautiful love to a pillow. All of
Me: during a divorce hearing, the female half of Steve must pretend to be
the male half and does so by spitting on the floor and scratching his-her
crotch. Three Amigos! : Steve, Chase and Short harmonize on a cowpoke
lullaby as critters from a Disney zoo sway and sing along. But for Martin,
great movie bits were not enough. He wanted more: to write and star in his
own modern version of Cyrano.
"Conventional wisdom said it was a folly," he observes. "But I liked its
emotion, its heart and its strong story line. The David Goodman, a
screenwriter friend of mine, gave me a reason to update the story: 'Cyrano
gets the girl.' I also thought about using some other feature than the nose,
but nothing else had its sweetness. A big nose is a friendly handicap. It's
not like the Elephant Man." In 1981, for a TV special, he had played John
Merrick as a deliciously sleazy show-biz freak with a pachyderm's snout.
Roxanne's C.D. Bales is the sweet side of disfigurement. Though the role
skirts smugness - C.D. is the first Martin character to spend more time
humiliating others than being humiliated by them - the performance locates
frolic and pathos in a wry, romantic, slightly aloof soul.
It cannot be far from Martin's own. Even in the swinging '70s, he was no
party animal. "He had girls who were crazy about him," recalls Chris Bearde,
Steve's producer on the Andy Williams and Sonny and Cher shows and, for two
years, his roommate, "but he was almost totally dedicated to his career." At
the end of the decade Martin was linked with Bernadette Peters, his co-star
in The Jerk and Pennies from Heaven. They broke up in 1981. Five years later
he married Victoria Tennant, the English actress who starred in TV's The
Winds of War and appeared in All of Me. The two women seem polar opposites:
champagne and claret. Peters, the Medusa-coiffed dervish, was an
effervescent partner; Tennant, 33, is a protective one, as smart and tart as
a Wilde witticism. She shares Martin's aversion to opening emotional
arteries in public. She says only that "he is interesting to live with, and
he makes me laugh."
Their Beverly Hills home is just the place for a man whose comedy conceals,
not reveals, and for a woman who appears comfortable in her role as a swan
in the moat around the castle of her husband's privacy. It is a one-story
L-shaped building with no front windows; Martin calls it the "house that
says, 'Go away.'" Inside the mood is cool, elegant, high-tech. His home
office boasts identical Hewlett-Packard Vectras on which he and Victoria
work. The word processor is Martin's latest obsession; "It has probably
replaced the banjo in his life," McEuen notes. The white walls hold works by
Picasso, de Kooning, O'Keeffe, Hockney, Lictenstein, Franz Kline, Jennifer
Bartlett - the hoard of a thoughtful connoisseur. Two cats, a white Persian
named Mary and a calico alley cat, Betty, patrol the doorless rooms like
silent security guards in the museum of Martin art.
"Collecting art is my biggest hobby," he says. "I don't love paintings the
way I love my wife. I mean, I love them in a different way. And I love them
at least partly because this art is so different from what I do that it's an
escape for me. Paintings exist in space; show business exists in time. I
like to sit down, alone or with Victoria, and look at the paintings.
Sometimes I feel so lucky to own them. It's like, good grief, these things
are so beautiful - how did this happen?"
Imaging this painting: Portrait of a Man on Top. He sits alone in a white
suit, in a white room, staring ahead, perhaps at another painting. The
silhouette of a devoted woman shimmers to one side. At his feet are neat
piles of scripts, art books, 3-by-5 cards from a pristine youth. His face
shows no emotion or thought; all the wild wit and inquiring intellect are
hidden inside. It is the face that says, "Go away." But some mad fan has
tampered with the portrait. On the man's head he has drawn nose glasses,
bunny ears and a hat with an arrow through it. The fan's graffito is almost
poignant: he wants this man to be... Steve Martin! |
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