I come to praise one Mike Nichols. And
bury another.
First, Nichols the comedian. As the
male half of the Nichols and May team (the “she” being Elaine
May), Mike Nichols was an imaginative, poker-faced, utterly
brilliant, and wildly funny performer and writer.
Then came Nichols the film director.
[Note: I will not write about his career as a theater director
because that is not my specialty, nor is it my interest. Saw two of
his theater productions, and although both were critically heralded,
it seemed as if the shows could have been directed by anyone with any
level of solid craftsmanship.] The first four films showed incredible
promise and talent. He evoked superb performances and had an identity
as a director. By 1973, all that identity went out the window and he
became a mainstream mulch-meister. His films may have contained great
performances (and some pretty lousy ones), but Mike Nichols the
director wasn’t wretched. He was simply another Herbert Ross. Or
Arthur Hiller. Or Gene Saks.
So let me first praise the inventive,
imaginative, very original part of Nichols’ career. He was a
founding member of the Compass troupe in Chicago, along with May and
Shelley Berman. The Compass preceded the Second City — by the time
that moniker came around, Berman and Mike & Elaine had decided
to pursue separate comedy careers.
Berman, of course, became one of
the first great modern standups, while Nichols and May were the first
modern comedy team (read: their material was not dependent on them
playing the same characters over and over — in fact they never
repeated the same characters, something that would be verboten in
today’s franchise-friendly comedy universe).
Nichols and May were part of a wave of
American comedy that also included Jonathan Winters, Mort Sahl,
and the one and only Lenny Bruce. Together the group were dubbed
“sick comics” because they regularly dealt with grim topics and
they depicted homespun, “all-American” topics in a wry, knowing,
utterly sarcastic and sardonic way. As with the utterly timeless
“Mother and Son” sketch from N&M:
While Nichols and May explored the
mechanics of male-female relationships beautifully, they didn’t
only play couples (or family members). Some of their best-remembered
bits focus on bureaucracy and (a theme also explored by Berman) the
way that one clings to any ounce of humanity one can find when
dealing with bureaucracy. This is best illustrated by their
“telephone routine,” a bit that the book The Compass:
Improvisational Theatre that Revolutionized American Comedy
by Janet Coleman indicates was created by May and Berman, thus
explaining why both acts did variations on it after leaving the
Compass.
The bit is perfectly calculated, in
that May’s female characters grow “warmer” as Nichols’ caller
moves through the gauntlet of operators. The middle operator also is
a definite precursor to Lily Tomlin’s “Ernestine” character.
Nichols and May were a giant success in
their day, and radically different from all that had come before them
— thus my noting that they deserve a Mark Twain Prize, as do Sahl, Dick Gregory, and the Smothers Brothers.
Their humor evoked laughs, but
thoughtful ones (yes, theirs could be described as “egghead
comedy”). For the most part, Mike and Elaine played incredibly
quiet characters, so many of their routines —
especially the ones on their Improvisations to Music
LP and their appearances on the radio show Monitor
— are master classes in deadpan humor.
Both were razor-sharp comedy writers
when they were a team, but more importantly they were great
ad-libbers. Those listening to their routines these days can hear
their influence on everyone from Stiller and Meara (who wonderfully
filled the void left when N&M broke up) to the Portlandia
pair. They rewrote the rules of male-female byplay in comedy.
And then they broke up, with Elaine May
first working as an actress and then a (talented but too indulgent)
film director and playwright. Nichols turned to stage direction and
then film, and never wrote a word of comedy again. Perhaps they both
needed each other to be funny, but I know that I, as a major Nichols
and May fan, would be willing to swap out even the best of Nichols’
films —yes, even The Graduate and Carnal
Knowledge — to get some more of his comedy with Elaine. I
would certainly be willing to trade the hours that I spent watching
the indelibly mediocre Working Girl,
Heartburn, Regarding Henry,
Wolf, and on and on.
That is why one can be delighted at the
discovery of the many (many!) sketches Nicholas and May wrote and
performed for the Monitor radio series. Here is
one such bit — two twists in the course of a two-minute piece of
comedy.
Onto Nichols the filmmaker. He had
evident skill working at actors, while not demanding too
much of them in the last three and half decades (with
Harrison Ford, Tom Hanks, and Julia Roberts, only so much can be
given in the first place).
His experience staging plays obviously
benefited his first film as a director, Who’s Afraid of
Virginia Woolf (1966). He and screenwriter Ernest Lehman did a little ill-advised "opening up" of the play, but for the most part Nichols just
made sure to spotlight Burton's long-suffering husband and Elizabeth
Taylor's career-changing turn as a shrill shrew (a great performance,
but one she continued to give for the next 20 years).
The Graduate (1967)
remains a perfect time piece of its era, the kind that could be
enjoyed by both young people and their parents (Easy
Rider and Midnight Cowboy it is not).
It's a great film that reflects Nichols' awareness of the alienation
techniques used by the iconic European filmmakers of the time, from
Antonioni to Godard. Although it came after Virginia
Woolf, it seemed to be Nichols' debut as a director,
signifying that he was “going to do great things.” (Caution:
Postcards from the Edge lies ahead.)
Nichols' next movie also captured the
vibe of the Sixties very well, but bombed at the box office.
Catch-22 (1970) was an excellent distillation of
Joseph Heller's landmark anti-war masterpiece of “black comedy.”
Nichols had a tight rein on the material and made sure to keep the
picture moving while still presenting some of the troubling and
touching repetition from Heller's original.
The cast was a scarily impressive
round-up of comic (and dramatic) performers, but the film was
trounced soundly by Robert Altman's M*A*S*H*,
which derived from a much (much) lesser novel. Altman, however, was
able to imbue the non-stellar material (that endless football game at
the end!) with an even stronger Sixties vibe. It is time, however, to
reappraise Catch-22.
Nichols' first two features are considered
his most important, but Carnal Knowledge (1971) is
probably his best film, as it combines a tight, character-driven
script, razor-sharp performances, and a modern, identifiable visual
style (an element missing from Nichols' work after this). The style
can be readily identified as the play-to-the-camera, “conversations
as interviews” approach used by Godard in Masculin-Feminin.
The other important thing about
Carnal Knowledge is that it plays against the
wistful nostalgia for the Fifties that was so prominent in Seventies
culture in America. Jules Feiffer's screenplay (decades before Mad
Men was a glimmer in anyone's eye) focuses on the sexist
mindset that was at the forefront of the “good old days,” leading
to the final play-acting scene that is the perfect resolution for the
picture (and a sequence in which the POV quality of the visuals
underscores the emptiness of Nicholson's character's sexist
“script”).
After Carnal came
The Day of the Dolphin (1973), which was (ouch) a
watershed in Nichols' career. From that point on, his visual style is
nondescript (barely there, just spotlight the actors and let 'em
roll), the scripts are standard-issue Hollywood mulch, and the
performances are a mixed bag of intensity with accents (Meryl Streep,
who I do think is marvelous even in absolute crap like
Heartburn and Postcards) and
likeable nothingness (the aforementioned Ms. Roberts).
So Nichols shed his filmmaking identity
in the early Seventies and never looked back. [Note: I have not seen
Angels in America — someday, when my patience
for Al's upper-register acting is stronger....]. Even the best of
Nichols' post-Dolphin movies — say, a taut,
meaningful drama like Silkwood (1983), which is
superbly acted — could have been directed by any of the skilled
Hollywood craftsmen who made such message dramas. For instance: James
Bridges could've directed Silkwood and Nichols
could've made China Syndrome, and the results
would have very likely been the same. (At times, Nichols' films have
seemed identical to those of Rob Reiner.)
Now that he's left us, I'll choose to
remember and enthusiastically celebrate the Mike Nichols of Nichols
and May, who broke new ground in comedy and was extremely versatile
and inventive. Their routines might be dated in certain regards, but
the majority of them (like all well-crafted humor) are timeless.
*****
There are several Nichols and May TV
commercials on YouTube. In this regard N&M were closest to Stan
Freberg, in that they mocked the conventions of TV advertising while
also hyping the product. Most of them are cartoons (for Jax and
Narragansett beer). One of the most elaborate is this amazing piece trumpeting GE Refrigerators.
One of their best ad campaigns was for
the IRS. As with their other ads, they created tiny little sketches
in which they embodied melodramatic stereotypes and put the pitch for
the product directly in the dialogue (as here). In this regard
you might call their ads “ironic,” but they did definitely offer
a solid pitch.
A very peculiar IRS spot in which Mike
can't stop shaving the couple's dog:
And a very suitable setting for a
Nichols and May routine, the therapist’s couch.
Mike and Elaine only released three
albums, but each one is a classic. The bits from the albums have been
reissued in various permutations. Two of the records were “concept
albums,” so it's best to hear all of the bits in a row. As with
Nichols and May Examine Doctors:
The tracks from all three albums can be
found on this YouTube poster's account. (Beware: there are all
kinds of music tracks in the mix; it's probably the only place you'll
hear “Gangnam Style” pop up amongst N&M routines.)
One of their best audio concept pieces
is from the album Improvisations to Music. “Bach
to Bach” finds them playing an utterly pretentious couple out on
their first date, listening to classical music in his apartment.
Their condemnation of their bourgeois families is wonderful, as is
Mike's bit where he agrees with some feeble point that Elaine's
character has made (“I know exactly what you mean... exactly!”):
As with a lot of TV rarities, the only
access the public has had to some of the best Nichols and May clips
was through documentaries, like this great American Masters tribute to the team. Thankfully, some of the
best bits have been posted on YT independent of the talking heads
(and in their entirety).
Here the pair play a dentist and his
patient in a parody of hammy Hollywood romances:
A bit that has to be seen to be enjoyed
(in fact, I don't think it's on any of the records). Mike tries to
put the moves on Elaine, as the duo play teenagers on a date. This is
one of their most physical bits, as the characters try to figure out
how to make out and keep smoking.
The final quartet of bits that mock
hypocrisy and bureaucracy are must-sees. In the first routine, they
play coworkers at the water cooler discussing the current game show
scandal that is being investigated by the government (this happened
in 1959). The best thing about the bit is that even though it
involves a very specific historical event it remains relevant because
it addresses the things that politicians and the media deem
“important” (namely, so-called moral issues) and those they
ignore (freedom and the like).
The next clip, about the money-grubbing
habits of funeral parlors, is part of a larger body of black comedy
that addresses the funeral “industry” (from the novel and film
The Loved One to the Python sketch about burning
or eating one's relative). Again, the hypocrisy is addressed through
characterization: May makes a perfect “sympathy lady” who is
first and foremost a saleswoman:
A beautiful takedown of show-business
bullshit, a sketch from the Emmy Awards in which Elaine, as a very
deadpan version of herself, gives the “Total Mediocrity Award” to
Mike, who plays a man who consciously makes “garbage” TV,
listening to the sponsors and not producing anything of merit.
I wouldn't go so far as to accuse
Nichols of becoming this character in his later life, but a quick
scan of his filmography will show he made some films that could've
qualified him for the award. The Garry Shandling comedy What
Planet Are You From?, The Day of the Dolphin,
and oh yeah, Wolf spring to mind immediately,
although certain “prestige” items like Primary
Colors and Postcards from the Edge are
squarely in that “Total Mediocrity” range.
In any case, this bit is just
brilliant:
I close out with a truly classic
routine, which I am very grateful to have found on YT. For obvious
reasons (read: dealings with hospitals) both my parents had described
this bit frequently, but I've never seen it until now. It's a
hospital sketch, in which Mike is a man whose arm has been broken and
Elaine is the business-like reception-desk nurse who is checking him
in.
This sort of bit became regular fare on
TV sketch shows over the years, but seeing it done by “the
originals” is startlingly refreshing. None of the broader strokes
favored by SNL, none of the over-the-top acting
that is characteristic of today's comedy vehicle movies. Just Elaine
cracking gum and asking a stream of questions as Mike sighs and says,
“Forgive me, I'm a troublemaker. I'm sorry.”
Nichols and May reunited a few times
after their breakup, but their only major collaborations were the
films The Birdcage and Primary Colors
(she wrote the scripts, he directed the films). You're better off
with the three albums.