4.12/5
Author: Steve Martin
Publication Date: Sep 2, 2008
Formats: PDF,Paperback,Kindle,Audible Audiobook,Diary,Audio CD,Hardcover
Rating: 4.12/5 out of 78736
Publisher: C. Scribner's Sons
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Nov 16, 2007
This is a very enjoyable read. I like Steve Martin's writing, especially his novels Shopgirl and The Pleasure of My Company, and this memoir is a good behind-the-scenes look at how he came to craft his hyper-silly comedy routine of the 1960s and '70s.Jul 16, 2013
Whimsical anecdotes of how an artist became one huge superstar by honing his skills of wit & comedy—funny & observant. Great autobiography. This one is possibly on par to Bob Dylan’s "Chronicles."Jan 02, 2008
I usually avoid these types of books like the Plague. Celebrity autobiographies---ego unchained, coupled with a "Then I went here, then I did this, then I went there and did that. . ." boring-ass format. Nine times out of ten, books like these put me to sleep.Sep 29, 2016
I bought the audiobook for Paul and I to listen to in the car for last weekends get-a-way. I just finished it now. ( Paul can listen to it later whenever he wants)Sep 07, 2017
I remember watching The Sunday Show in 1996 when Dennis Pennis buttonholed Steve Martin at a red carpet do somewhere –‘Steve! Steve! Just one question—’ and then as Martin leaned in expectantly: ‘How come you're not funny anymore?’Sep 09, 2011
"I was born a poor black child," I shouted repeatedly as a very little boy on our family trip down South. I'd heard Steve Martin say it in a movie that I didn't understand, but I did understand that it was an absurd thing to say, and that was enough for me! It was too much for my super white New England parents on that trip down through the Carolinas, Georgia, etc.Jan 03, 2008
If, before I read this, someone were to tell me that I would only laugh one time in the whole book, I would be like, “No way,†and he would be like, “Seriously, at one point a bird craps on Steve Martin’s head and that's literally the only time you’ll laugh in the whole book,†and I would be like, “Come on, really?†and he would be like, “Well, think about it: think about his material during this period and try to imagine how it would translate onto the page, and then think about where he is If, before I read this, someone were to tell me that I would only laugh one time in the whole book, I would be like, “No way,†and he would be like, “Seriously, at one point a bird craps on Steve Martin’s head and that's literally the only time you’ll laugh in the whole book,†and I would be like, “Come on, really?†and he would be like, “Well, think about it: think about his material during this period and try to imagine how it would translate onto the page, and then think about where he is now, both as a writer and just as a person, and imagine that person trying to convey anything that you would be able to have any connection at all to, and plus you’ve heard all of his albums, right? Like pretty recently?†and I’d be all, “They’re – they’re on my iPod,†and he’d be all, “Well, so even if there were some way to transfer a live performance of this nature to paper successfully, you still wouldn’t laugh when you see it typed out because you’ve just heard it,†and I’d be all, “So, should I not read it?†and he’d be like, “Obviously, yes, you *have* to read it, it’s a document of a period in American comedy that you’ve always admired and been fascinated by. I’m just saying you’ll be frustrated with it; in fact, what you’ll say when it’s over is: ‘I wish this book were the Internet’,†and I’d be all, “Whaaaat?†and he’d be, “Like when he talks about being writing partners with Bob “Super Dave Osbourne†Einstein and how much fun that was, you’ll be all, ‘Yes, please, more about that, click click click,’ but then he won’t give you anything, until about seven [generously margined] pages later when he will mention again that he’s still writing partners with B“SDâ€O, and you’ll be all, ‘More? About this?’ but he won’t tell you anything, nor will there be more than a passing mention about Saturday Night Live, plus you’ll also be creeped out when he mentions Linda Ronstadt’s panties, but that’s just because you have a problem with that word,†and I’d be all, “Yes: I can’t hear it without imagining the speaker is in some state of arrested adolescence,†and he’ll be all, “It’s a perfectly cromulent word,†and we’d be all “Simpsons reference!†and high five and I’d be all, “I’ll try to get past it,†and then I’d be all, “But wait, how do you know this is all true?†and he’d be all, “Because I am you! From the Future!†and I’d be all, “Really?†and he’d be all, “Yeah. Wanna watch the Star Trek where there are two Captain Kirks?†and I’d be all, “OK.†...moreSep 07, 2016
Steve Martin, one wild and crazy guy!Oct 23, 2018
Is it an endorsement to say that this is the most unfunny comedy memoir I’ve ever read? In my (otherwise glowing) review for Amy Poehler’s Yes Please, I wrote about how the book is not really about comedy, in that Poehler never spent much time getting into the nitty-gritty of how she plans her characters, and all the work that goes into each one. This seems to be a common theme in the comedy memoirs I’ve read so far – everyone seems reluctant to discuss the work that goes into being funny, or to Is it an endorsement to say that this is the most unfunny comedy memoir I’ve ever read? In my (otherwise glowing) review for Amy Poehler’s Yes Please, I wrote about how the book is not really about comedy, in that Poehler never spent much time getting into the nitty-gritty of how she plans her characters, and all the work that goes into each one. This seems to be a common theme in the comedy memoirs I’ve read so far – everyone seems reluctant to discuss the work that goes into being funny, or to even acknowledge that being funny takes effort. It’s fine for comedians to spend hefty amounts of space in their memoirs talking about how hard they worked to become successful – all the years of working crappy clubs, having no money, and otherwise working long, thankless hours to eventually get where they are – but when it comes to discussing how they planned and reworked a set, there seems to be a reluctance to get into too much technical detail. Being a professional comedian is kind of like being a professional magician: it’s considered against the rules to show how the tricks are really done.Jun 16, 2012
I loved this book so much because it was everything I subconsciously wanted it to be and nothing that I expected it to be. I thought it would be mostly about Martin's career as a primarily comedic actor and it basically ends at the onset of his film career. I thought it would be hilarious and filled with jokes and I think I actually laughed out loud about five times. And a part of me harbored some sort of belief that every person who saw Steve Martin do stand up comedy must have known they were I loved this book so much because it was everything I subconsciously wanted it to be and nothing that I expected it to be. I thought it would be mostly about Martin's career as a primarily comedic actor and it basically ends at the onset of his film career. I thought it would be hilarious and filled with jokes and I think I actually laughed out loud about five times. And a part of me harbored some sort of belief that every person who saw Steve Martin do stand up comedy must have known they were seeing something amazing. Surely someone so hilarious never experienced the silence of an unappreciative audience, and he could not possibly have crashed and burned with some of his bits. Of course, I know that is never the case but it will never cease to amaze me how some people worked so hard for their success when their talent is worthy of an unimpeded rise to the top. I've seen some fabulous stand up comedy and some absolute abysmal stand up. This is the first book I've read about what life as a stand up comic is like but it certainly won't be the last and it definitely has me wondering about Martin's fiction works.Sep 04, 2016
Sep 05, 2019
I knew very little about Steve Martin prior to listening to this memoir, but I enjoyed it. All I knew beforehand was that I LOVED Father of the Bridge as a kid!! It was nothing fantastic, but I always seem to enjoy listening to memoirs read by the author. This had a little of his childhood and family, but mostly involved his beginnings in stand-up comedy, and what made him quit and never do it again all those years later.Sep 21, 2014
By 1978, Steve Martin was the biggest selling act in the history of standup comedy. The idea that you could sell out the Universal Amphitheatre in L.A. with fans who wanted to hear your comedy was unheard of, kind of like Martin's act itself, which might be the very definition of "you-had-to-be-there". Plenty wanted to be, but by 1981, Martin left standup and never looked back. Until this memoir, that is, a crisp, clear shoot through the rapids of Martin's life from 1955 to 1980.Jun 20, 2008
(Reprinted from the Chicago Center for Literature and Photography [cclapcenter.com]. I am the original author of this essay, as well as the owner of CCLaP; it is not being reprinted here illegally.)Jul 25, 2018
I watched a show in Netflix recently called Steve Martin and Martin Short: An Evening You Will Forget for the Rest of Your Life, it was hilarious. Martin Short was really the star turn but it reminded me how much I always liked Steve Martin. And what happened to him, where did he go? Some of the answers were provided by another show I tracked down in which Steve chatted to fellow comedian Jerry Seinfeld, but I wanted more and this book was referenced by Seinfeld in the interview so I decided to I watched a show in Netflix recently called Steve Martin and Martin Short: An Evening You Will Forget for the Rest of Your Life, it was hilarious. Martin Short was really the star turn but it reminded me how much I always liked Steve Martin. And what happened to him, where did he go? Some of the answers were provided by another show I tracked down in which Steve chatted to fellow comedian Jerry Seinfeld, but I wanted more and this book was referenced by Seinfeld in the interview so I decided to track it down.Jul 28, 2019
A great insight into the brilliant mind of Steve Martin. This isn’t a salacious tell all, it’s mostly an account of his early stand up career and improv days, he begins by telling us about his disconnect from his family life and how he was drawn to the comedy world, first working at a magic shop in Disneyland as a young kid when it first opened to working the comedy theatre circuit, it took many years of refining his act before he made it big, it’s not until the early 80’s where he became a A great insight into the brilliant mind of Steve Martin. This isn’t a salacious tell all, it’s mostly an account of his early stand up career and improv days, he begins by telling us about his disconnect from his family life and how he was drawn to the comedy world, first working at a magic shop in Disneyland as a young kid when it first opened to working the comedy theatre circuit, it took many years of refining his act before he made it big, it’s not until the early 80’s where he became a household name. He shares his struggles, the anxiety and depression, as well as the loneliness and isolation of being a one man act and it wasn’t until he joined SNL that he found a comradeship with other comedians and really made his break. I mostly know him from his movies, some of my favourites growing up.Jan 10, 2008
I count my idols on one hand. When I was 18 I took a cross country road trip with my father during which we listened to Martin's LET'S GET SMALL on repeat for the entire length of New Mexico. The trip confirmed a few beliefs, yes my father was the greatest man on the planet, and yes Steve Martin was a close second. Martin's stand-up has still never been rivaled, a perfect blend of absurd with a straight face, as if his goal was to make the joke fly over the audience's heads. Many times there I count my idols on one hand. When I was 18 I took a cross country road trip with my father during which we listened to Martin's LET'S GET SMALL on repeat for the entire length of New Mexico. The trip confirmed a few beliefs, yes my father was the greatest man on the planet, and yes Steve Martin was a close second. Martin's stand-up has still never been rivaled, a perfect blend of absurd with a straight face, as if his goal was to make the joke fly over the audience's heads. Many times there weren't even jokes, no real punchlines or section to pause and laugh. To this day I can recite LET'S GET SMALL on cue from opening Banjo licks to his final Thank you's, which he gave to each and every audience member individually.Oct 20, 2016
I have always adored the bizarre stand-up of Steve Martin. I used to listen to it on my parents records (cassettes were already in by then, and it was definitely the 90s but whatever). I thought it was hilarious. I still do. I have a penchant for the absurd. I love the comedic pause. Steve Martin was a master at both of those.Apr 28, 2008
Wow. Big disappointment. I was hoping for some insight into this this man who was so hilarious in the 70s, yet disappeared to later reemerge as a family-friendly "light" comic actor. But this is an impossibility due to the fact that Martin seems to have little insight into himself.Jul 21, 2015
Martin's neat, self-ironic and interesting account on his beginnings in acting career, emphasising the years when he was doing a stand up comedy, made me rewatch (at 2 am last night) A Wild and Crazy Guy for the x-th time and giggle all the way through. Martin on stage and Martin the author seem to be two different people, and he is talking about it too. About the fame, expectations and all that jazz. About anxiety and depression coming with it, also, a little bit. He's classy and funny. And he Martin's neat, self-ironic and interesting account on his beginnings in acting career, emphasising the years when he was doing a stand up comedy, made me rewatch (at 2 am last night) A Wild and Crazy Guy for the x-th time and giggle all the way through. Martin on stage and Martin the author seem to be two different people, and he is talking about it too. About the fame, expectations and all that jazz. About anxiety and depression coming with it, also, a little bit. He's classy and funny. And he drops a lot of names and Names.May 19, 2019
A short memoir written and read by Steve Martin with a surprisingly flat affect, this is his truth about how and why and he began and ended his stand up career. Honest and surprisingly touching in parts, this is mainly his chronological rise to fame in a time when comedy and those producing it were regarded differently. Unique, philosophical, creative, and funny, Steve Martin has always been my number one choice for fantasy BFF. 3.5 starsApr 17, 2013
The book has a short but universal question. Why do abused children feel ashamed? Nice language, love the Disney stories.Feb 20, 2008
I was just a kid when Steve Martin became Steve Martin, the biggest touring comic of all time. His absurdist brand of anti-humor did wonders to enliven my dull suburban childhood and I thought his Cruel Shoes essay, "How to Fold Soup," was one of the most brilliant things I'd ever seen. Born Standing Up is the story of how Steve Martin found his way into my suburban living room.Jan 28, 2015
If you’re at all interested in stand-up, you need to get your hands on a copy of this book. Steve Martin’s account of his first 18 years in the business – “10 years spent learning, four years spent refining, four years in wild success†– makes absorbing reading, full of the absurd humour and unsparing honesty of the comic’s best work.Mar 24, 2008
I am a huge fan of Steve Martin, to the point that even though I was probably a bit too young for it, Mom took me to see Roxanne in the theater. His SNL work and standup and early movies were a big part of forming the peculiar sense of humour that I have today.Take your time and choose the perfect book.
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