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Q&A: Mel Brooks, 95, is still riffing

Leave it to Mel Brooks to blurb his own memoir

Via AP news wire
Tuesday 30 November 2021 14:13 EST
Books - Mel Brooks
Books - Mel Brooks (1991 AP)

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Leave it to Mel Brooks to blurb his own memoir.

There, along with laudatory quotes from Billy Crystal Norman Lear Conan Oā€™Brien and others is one from ā€œM. Brooks,ā€ who hails ā€œAll About Me!ā€ as: ā€œNot since the Bible have I read anything so powerful and poignant. And to boot ā€” itā€™s a lot funnier!ā€

ā€œAll 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 ā€œThe Producersā€ with Tom Meehan at Madame Romaine de Lyon in Manhattan over omelets.

ā€œLike everybody else, Iā€™ve been mostly stuck at home and fed up with the same diet of information and food,ā€ Brooks says. ā€œThank 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 (ā€œI loved the Depression!ā€ he says cheerfully), serving in the army during WWII, starting out in the Borscht Belt, writing on Sid Caesarā€™s ā€œShow of Shows,ā€ launching his 2000 Year Old Man schtick with Carl Reiner, coming up with possibly the greatest comic conceit of all time (ā€œThe Producersā€), and crafting the films ā€œBlazing Saddles,ā€ ā€œYoung Frankenstein,ā€ ā€œHigh 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€” ā€œthe 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, ā€œWhat 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, ā€œWhat happened at 9?ā€™ I said, ā€œHomework.ā€ I realized the world wanted something back. To this day, itā€™s 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 didnā€™t 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 ā€œGet Smart,ā€ it was dropped after the first year. ABC just said no second year. Thereā€™s ups and downs. I didnā€™t write a lot of the downs in the book. Why bring the reader down when thereā€™s 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, ā€œCarl, youā€™re eating two hot dogs.ā€ He said, ā€™They ainā€™t gonna bother me. I love hot dogs and hot dogs love me.ā€ But it wasnā€™t true. By that night, the hot dogs had done him in.

AP: Some comedians have lamented that todayā€™s 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: Youā€™ve got to be careful. When things stir up people to great emotion, I stay out of that. Iā€™m very careful and stay out of those. I donā€™t ever take sides because everybodyā€™s right. The people who make fun of something that should not be fun of are right. And the people who are hurt because theyā€™re trashing something thatā€™s so important to them, theyā€™re right. Theyā€™re all right. Stay back. Stay away.

AP: But you also werenā€™t timid about subjects some considered off limits like mocking Hitler and the Nazis in ā€œThe Producersā€ or the language of ā€œBlazing Saddles.ā€

Brooks: I was lucky. I was politically incorrect and I didnā€™t know it. I didnā€™t know it, so I did a lot of great stuff. Then it became politically incorrect, like the N-word in ā€œBlazing 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 didnā€™t think anything was wrong until later. Youā€™ve got to say maybe it was used too much. Anyway, we were kids and it worked. It worked when it worked. I donā€™t think I could do those scenes in ā€œBlazing Saddlesā€ today. I donā€™t think I could get away with it. I think Iā€™d offend too many people.

AP: Do you think about your legacy at all?

Brooks: Oh, I donā€™t 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: ā€œI 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, Iā€™d be thinking about it all the time. So I donā€™t think about it much. When and if it happens itā€™s going to be a sad day ā€” for everybody but me. (Laughs) I enjoy living. Iā€™d like to do it as long as I can.

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