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Born Standing Up: A Comic's Life |  | Author: Steve Martin Publisher: Scribner Category: Book
List Price: $25.00 Buy Used: $0.01 as of 2/10/2010 06:07 EST details You Save: $24.99 (100%)
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Seller: atlanta-book-company Rating: 240 reviews Sales Rank: 13210
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1st Pages: 224 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 8.5 x 5.6 x 1
ISBN: 1416553649 Dewey Decimal Number: 792.7028092 EAN: 9781416553649 ASIN: 1416553649
Publication Date: November 20, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Amazon.com Review At age 10, Steve Martin got a job selling guidebooks at the newly opened Disneyland. In the decade that followed, he worked in Disney's magic shop, print shop, and theater, and developed his own magic/comedy act. By age 20, studying poetry and philosophy on the side, he was performing a dozen times a week, most often at the Disney rival, Knott's Berry Farm. Obsession is a substitute for talent, he has said, and Steve Martin's focus and daring--his sheer tenacity--are truly stunning. He writes about making the very tough decision to sacrifice everything not original in his act, and about lucking into a job writing for The Smothers Brothers Show. He writes about mentors, girlfriends, his complex relationship with his parents and sister, and about some of his great peers in comedy--Dan Ackroyd, Lorne Michaels, Carl Reiner, Johnny Carson. He writes about fear, anxiety and loneliness. And he writes about how he figured out what worked on stage. This book is a memoir, but it is also an illuminating guidebook to stand-up from one of our two or three greatest comedians. Though Martin is reticent about his personal life, he is also stunningly deft, and manages to give readers a feeling of intimacy and candor. Illustrated throughout with black and white photographs collected by Martin, this book is instantly compelling visually and a spectacularly good read.
Amazon.com Exclusive Three Bonus Deleted Passages from Steve Martin's Born Standing Up
On Returning to Disneyland Ten years later, after the Beatles, drugs, and Vietnam had changed the entire tenor of American life, I returned to the magic shop at Disneyland and stood as a stranger. As I looked around the eerily familiar room another first came over me, a previously unknown emotion, one that was to have a curious force over me for the rest my life: the longing tug of nostalgia. Looking at the counter where I pitched Svengali Decks and the Incredible Shrinking Die, I was awash with the recollection of indelible nights where the sky was blown open by fireworks and big band sounds drifted through trees strung with fairy lights. I remembered my youth, when every moment was crisply present, when heartbreak and joy replaced each other quickly, fully and without trauma. Even now when I visit Disneyland, I am steeped in melancholy, because a corporation has preserved my nostalgia impeccably. Every nail and screw is the same, and Disneyland looks as new now as it did then. The paint is fresh, and the only wear allowed is faux. In fact, only I have changed. In the dream-like world of childhood memories, so often vague and imprecise, Disneyland remains for me not only vivid in memory, but vivid in fact. On Meeting Diane Hall During the day, I attended Santa Ana Junior College, taking drama classes and pursuing an unexpected interest in English poetry from Donne to Eliot. I would occasionally assist on a college stage production--never appearing in one--as a member of the crew. Years later I was looking through a box of memorabilia and noticed a silk-screened playbill of the musical Carousel, May, 1964, which listed me as a stagehand. The lead actress was Diane Hall. Something connected and I remembered that Diane Keaton's name was once Hall, (hence, Annie Hall). I confirmed with her that she was in that production. Neither of us remembers meeting the other, yet we must have worked in proximity. More evidence that I was a wallflower. Decades later, we ended up "making love" on the floor of a movie set on Father of the Bride. On the Kennedy Assassination One Friday in 1963, I had finished a class and was about to drive to Knott's Berry Farm for the afternoon shows when I saw a clump of agitated students across the campus. I asked someone what was going on. "They're saying that the president's been shot." I drove across town to Knott's and punched radio buttons. I could hear the scheduled programs clicking off and being replaced by live broadcasts. Assassination seemed so ancient and inconceivable, I was sure that someone would soon correct the erroneous report. President Kennedy died that day and I didn't know that news could be taken so personally by a nation. Sitting backstage, watching the Birdcage's black-and-white TV drone out the increasingly grave report, we were all mute. We assumed the performance that night would be canceled, but as show time neared, word came down that we were going on. We couldn't fathom why; we believed no one would show up, much less enjoy us. I still can't explain the psychology, why the very full house that night was able to roar with laughter. The obvious must be correct: our silly show was providing some kind of balm that soothed the ache. In 2003 I hosted the Oscars on the particular weekend that the United States invaded Iraq. The news was grim and just hours before the show I flipped on the TV and saw a report, subsequently proven false, that our captive soldiers were being beheaded. I quickly turned the TV off, sick. I knew, from my experience forty years earlier with the Kennedy assassination, what my job was, and I harbored a secret knowledge that the audience would laugh. I also felt that soldiers who might be watching would be tuning in to see the Oscars and all its hoopla, not a cheerless comedian doing what he doesnt do best. I decided to acknowledge the circumstances early in the show and then get on with the jokes. The academy had announced that the show would "cut back on the glitz." I walked out for the opening monologue, took a look around the stage at the dazzling, swirling staircases, mirrored curtains and polished floor, and simply said, "I'm glad they cut back on the glitz." It got a laugh of relief and the show could go on. More from Steve Martin Praise for Born Standing Up "[A] lean, incisive new book about the trajectory of [Martin's] life in comedy...Born Standing Up does a sharp-witted job of breaking down the step-by-step process that brought Steve Martin from Disneyland, where he spent his version of a Dickensian childhood as a schoolboy employee, to both the pinnacle of stardom and the brink of disaster...tightly focused...Born Standing Up is a surprising book: smart, serious, heartfelt and confessional without being maudlin." --Janet Maslin, The New York Times "Absolutely magnificent. One of the best books about comedy and being a comedian ever written." --Jerry Seinfeld, GQ "The writing is evocative, unflinching and cool. When Martin takes a scalpel to his life, what you feel is the precision of the surgeon more than the primal scream of the unanaesthetized patient...Born Standing Up is neither fanfare nor confession. It gives off a vibe of rigorous honesty. With lots of laughs." --Richard Corliss, Time Magazine "A spare, unexpectedly resonant remembrance of things past
Martin's one true subject is the evolution of his comedy--the transcendent moments...A smart, gentlemanly, modest book
winning." --Jeff Giles, Entertainment Weekly, EW Pick: A "A charming memoir tracking what the great comic characterizes as his 'war years.' Martin offers an eloquent and exacting account... [and] approaches his subjects with generosity, warmth and integrity." --Kirkus Reviews "Sure to delight fans and create new ones." --Laura Mathews, Good Housekeeping "What fun to discover the humble beginnings of some of his iconic personas...inspiring." --Rachel Rosenblit, Elle "The archetypical story of the underdog's rise and a particularly American story...beautifully written, honest, engaging, and quietly brave." --Frederic Tuten, Bomb Magazine "Son, you have an ob-leek sense of humor." --Elvis Presley
Product Description The Emmy and Grammy Award-winner's candid, spectacularly amusing memoir of his years in stand-upIn the mid-seventies, Steve Martin exploded onto the comedy scene. By 1978 he was the biggest concert draw in the history of stand-up. In 1981 he quit forever. Born Standing Up is, in his own words, the story of "why I did stand-up and why I walked away." At age ten Martin started his career at Disneyland, selling guidebooks in the newly opened theme park. In the decade that followed, he worked in the Disney magic shop and the Bird Cage Theatre at Knott's Berry Farm, performing his first magic/comedy act a dozen times a week. The story of these years, during which he practiced and honed his craft, is moving and revelatory. Martin illuminates the sacrifice, discipline and originality that made him an icon and informs his work to this day. To be this good, to perform so frequently, was isolating and lonely. It took Martin decades to reconnect with his parents and sister, and he tells that story with great tenderness. Martin also paints a portrait of his times: the era of free love and protests against the war in Vietnam, the heady irreverence of The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour in the late sixties, and the transformative new voice of Saturday Night Live in the seventies.
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 240
Comedian makes good writer February 9, 2010 Island Lady in Red (Surf City, N) I was pleasantly surprised that I found this book to be well written. I've always been interested in how people got to where they are today and Steve has done an excellent job of illuminating his path. Now I'll read his other books.
Moving, engaging memoir February 7, 2010 Charles - Music Lover (Phoenix, AZ, USA) Steve Martin's "Born Standing Up: A Comic's Life" is a moving, well-written, and engaging memoir. It is brief, I read it in two days, and if I didn't start it so late in the day, I would have read it in one sitting. It's rare to find a book that holds my interest so that it propels me from one page to the next.
Martin writes most of how he developed and honed his craft, to the point where his career picked up such speed and momentum that it catapulted him into superstar status. Less is written about his career once it gained such explosive momentum, and the memoir never sinks to the level of celebrity tell-all, much to his credit.
Martin writes most movingly about his relationships with his family, and the tremors that existed under the surface of the happy nuclear unit. From reading this book I developed such a respect for him as a man. He does not shy away from writing about his own shortcomings. His relationships with his parents remained strained until he made a conscious, fifteen year effort to connect with them, after he became a household name.
"Born Standing Up" is a great read, and very highly recommended!!
Great narrative from a stand-up genius January 1, 2010 JZL (USA) I was familiar with Steve Martin from his appearances on the Tonight Show not long before he exploded into the mainstream limelight via his albums and SNL spots. I think once he came out on the Tonight Show sporting half a beard and mustache (that looked convincingly real and probably was). I think he was doing the fake arrow-through-the-head bit even then.
Anyway, this book should be fascinating to anyone with even a passing interest in this performer's early career, or stand-up in general. It also answers why he walked away totally from stand-up essentially at the peak of that part of his career (in my opinion, unfortunately).
Steve Martin November 21, 2009 Anthony Iozzo (Toronto, Canada) Being born in the early 80s I never experienced the stand up comedy of Steve Martin. Martin for me has always been the comedic actor in such films as The Three Amigos, Plains Trains and Automobiles, The Jerk, Roxanne, All of Me and many more. So why buy a book centered on his early career in stand up? For precisely this reason, because although I grew up with his films, I know little of his early start. Being a big influence in my early life, I would like to learn more about this great comedian. Now I have to be honest, I have not read the book yet. My copy was only shipped a few days ago. So why rate a book before reading it? Because as always I trust Steve Martin will not upset. He has made me laugh many times before and I'm sure to find a gem of a book here. I promise to follow up on this review once I've had the chance of reading through. For now 5 stars!!!
An excellent but highly specific memoir October 15, 2009 Max Martin (Atlanta, GA) This is an excellent memoir, mostly for its specificity: the book is almost entirely about Martin's approach to comedy. Most of the anecdotes provided relate specifically to his comedy, or some influence on it. This provides a really interesting insight into both the subjective experience of performance and celebrity. Unfortunately, this is also the book's weakness: much of Martin's rise to fame and ensuing celebrity is whisked over very quickly in comparison with the years of development his routine went through. Granted, this was intentional, and accurately represents the briefness of this period compared to the long, trying development of his career, but it leaves the reader desiring something of a sequel dedicated to anecdotes from his period of early fame. He gives enough interesting stories from earlier in his life that you feel like he had to be holding back towards the end. Still, a very excellent book - I recommend checking out the audiobook edition, read by Martin himself.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 240
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