Q&A: Mel Brooks, 95, is still riffing
Leave it to Mel Brooks to blurb his own memoir
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Your support makes all the difference.Leave it to Mel Brooks to blurb his own memoir.
There, along with laudatory quotes from Billy Crystal Norman Lear Conan OāBrien and others is one from āM. Brooks,ā who hails āAll About Me!ā as: āNot since the Bible have I read anything so powerful and poignant. And to boot ā itās a lot funnier!ā
āAll About Me!,ā which landed on bookshelves Tuesday, is indeed chock full of stories, anecdotes and memories from a comedy master of biblical proportions. Brooks, 95, spent much of the pandemic working on the book ā a year of remembering everything from getting hit by a Tin Lizzie as an 8-year-old in Williamsburg Brooklyn to writing the musical version of āThe Producersā with Tom Meehan at Madame Romaine de Lyon in Manhattan over omelets.
āLike everybody else, Iāve been mostly stuck at home and fed up with the same diet of information and food,ā Brooks says. āThank God I could let my mind roam free to remember.ā
For the first time, Brooks has put down on paper all of his tales, from growing up in Depression-era Williamsburg (āI loved the Depression!ā he says cheerfully), serving in the army during WWII, starting out in the Borscht Belt, writing on Sid Caesarās āShow of Shows,ā launching his 2000 Year Old Man schtick with Carl Reiner, coming up with possibly the greatest comic conceit of all time (āThe Producersā), and crafting the films āBlazing Saddles,ā āYoung Frankenstein,ā āHigh Anxiety,ā among others. There are tender chapters on his wife Anne Bancroft, who died in 2005, and Reiner, who passed away last year. There are jokes and omelets.
In a long and lively phone interview from his home in Los Angeles, Brooks reflected on his the book and his life in show business ā āthe grandest adventure any human being could ever take,ā he said.
AP: The section on your childhood in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, is especially vividly and fondly recalled. You write that while many think a life in comedy springs from pain and a difficult childhood, for you...
Brooks: I wanted to keep the party going. I wanted to keep the happiness and joy and explosions of laughter going into a dour part of our lives, not our childhood anymore. I was once interviewed and the guy said, āWhat was the happiest part of your life? Was it winning the Academy Award? Was it marrying Anne Bancroft?ā I said no, not at all. It was my childhood. From about 4 or 5 to 9, it was the most exciting, happiest, joyous life that anyone could experience. The guy said, āWhat happened at 9?ā I said, āHomework.ā I realized the world wanted something back. To this day, itās still a bad thing. Homework is a bad thing. It takes away precious minutes from your childhood.
AP: Depending on laughs for happiness can lead to a lot of heartache. Was there any downside to needing that response?
Brooks: Oh, yeah. When stuff didnāt work. When you worked so hard on an idea or a project and the audience just said: No, thank you. There was plenty of heartbreak right there. When you had a show on television like āGet Smart,ā it was dropped after the first year. ABC just said no second year. Thereās ups and downs. I didnāt write a lot of the downs in the book. Why bring the reader down when thereās so many ups to talk about?
AP: Do you remember your last conversation with Reiner before his death last year?
Brooks: Yeah. The day he died, I said, āCarl, youāre eating two hot dogs.ā He said, āThey aināt gonna bother me. I love hot dogs and hot dogs love me.ā But it wasnāt true. By that night, the hot dogs had done him in.
AP: Some comedians have lamented that todayās audiences are too sensitive. As someone who often pushed boundaries of what was acceptable, what do you make of these cultural battles in comedy?
Brooks: Youāve got to be careful. When things stir up people to great emotion, I stay out of that. Iām very careful and stay out of those. I donāt ever take sides because everybodyās right. The people who make fun of something that should not be fun of are right. And the people who are hurt because theyāre trashing something thatās so important to them, theyāre right. Theyāre all right. Stay back. Stay away.
AP: But you also werenāt timid about subjects some considered off limits like mocking Hitler and the Nazis in āThe Producersā or the language of āBlazing Saddles.ā
Brooks: I was lucky. I was politically incorrect and I didnāt know it. I didnāt know it, so I did a lot of great stuff. Then it became politically incorrect, like the N-word in āBlazing Saddles.ā Richard Pryor was writing it with me. He just loved using the N-word because it was all true ā the bad guys used it against Blacks. We didnāt think anything was wrong until later. Youāve got to say maybe it was used too much. Anyway, we were kids and it worked. It worked when it worked. I donāt think I could do those scenes in āBlazing Saddlesā today. I donāt think I could get away with it. I think Iād offend too many people.
AP: Do you think about your legacy at all?
Brooks: Oh, I donāt think about that. I just think: Buy another book.
AP: In a great 1980s sketch, you created a coin-operated gravestone for yourself that played a videotaped message that began: āI was Mel Brooks, one of the funniest little Jews to walk the Earth.ā Do you think much about death?
Brooks: No. I gave up after 60 thinking about it because if I did, Iād be thinking about it all the time. So I donāt think about it much. When and if it happens itās going to be a sad day ā for everybody but me. (Laughs) I enjoy living. Iād like to do it as long as I can.