Sick in the head Conversations about life and comedy

Judd Apatow, 1967-

Book - 2015

"Before his name became synonymous with a new style of comedy; before he had written, directed, or produced his first movie or TV show; before he and his roommate Adam Sandler were performing stand up at dive bars in LA; before all that, Judd Apatow was a kid in Syosett, Long Island who was utterly obsessed with comedy. At 16, he started hosting a radio show for his local high school station, and he would call up the biggest comics of the day - comics like Jerry Seinfeld, Jay Leno, Steve Allen, Sandra Bernhard; none of whom, by the way, had any idea they were talking to a kid in his parents' garage -- and talk to them about what got them into comedy, and what made them stay in. Thirty years later, Apatow is still that comedy nerd,... and still interviewing comics about what drives them and why they do what they do. That obsession has made him one of the most recognizable and influential comedic filmmakers working today. This book is a collection of 30 years worth of conversations -- always funny, often poignant, and incredibly intimate -- that not only span Apatow's career, but his adult life. Featuring interviews with luminaries like Mel Brooks and Chris Rock and modern icons like Louis CK and Amy Schumer, this is a book for fans of comedy, from the nerdiest fan of all"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Random House 2015.
Language
English
Main Author
Judd Apatow, 1967- (-)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
pages cm
ISBN
9780812997576
  • Introduction: Why Comedy?
  • The Beginning: Jerry Seinfeld, 1983
  • Part 1. A-J
  • Adam Sandler, 2009
  • Albert Brooks, 2012
  • Amy Schumer, 2014
  • Chris Rock, 2014
  • Eddie Vedder, 2013
  • Freaks and Geeks Oral History, 2013
  • Garry Shandling, 1984
  • Garry Shandling, 2014
  • Harold Ramis, 2005
  • Harry Anderson, 1983
  • James L. Brooks, 2014
  • Jay Leno, 1984
  • Jeff Garlin, 2013
  • Part 2. J-M
  • Jerry Seinfeld, 2014
  • Jim Carrey and Ben Stiller, 2010
  • Jimmy Fallon, 2015
  • Jon Stewart, 2014
  • Key and Peele, 2014
  • Larry Gelbart and James L. Brooks, 2007
  • Lena Dunham, 2014
  • Leslie Mann, 2012
  • Louis C.K., 2014
  • Marc Maron, 2010
  • Mariin Short, 1984
  • Part 3. M-S
  • Mel Brooks, 2013
  • Michael Che, 2014
  • Michael O'Donoghue, 1983
  • Mike Nichols, 2012
  • Miranda July, 2013
  • Roseanne Barr, 2014
  • Sandra Bernhard, 1983
  • Sarah Silverman, 2014
  • Seth Rogen, 2009
  • Spike Jonze, 2014
  • Stephen Colbert, 2014
  • Steve Allen, 1983
  • Steve Martin, 2014
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* As a self-designated comedy freak, Apatow has served as producer, writer and/or director for venturesome television series The Larry Sanders Show, Freaks and Geeks, and Girls as well as such boffo movies as The 40-Year-Old Virgin, Knocked Up, and Bridesmaids. In his frank and funny autobiographical introduction to this incandescent treasury of interviews with nearly 40 top comedians, he describes his apprenticeships in the art of hilarity in the early 1980s as a teenage dishwasher at a comedy club and a high-school radio station geek who had the temerity to interview his comedic heroes. Young Apatow acquired a priceless education in conversation with Steve Allen, Jay Leno, Jerry Seinfeld (interviewed in 1983 and 2014), Garry Shandling, and Sandra Bernhard. Those vintage conversations are shared here for the first time, along with delving, up-to-the-moment exchanges with Chris Rock, Sarah Silverman, Jon Stewart, Stephen Colbert, Lena Dunham, Amy Schumer, Louis C. K, and Apatow's former roommate, Adam Sandler. Apatow never loses his unabashed fan's enthusiasm even as he asks canny questions that yield superbly illuminating conversations rich in shop talk and musings on the lure, demands, and resonance of comedy. With the proceeds supporting 826, Dave Eggers' national literacy and tutoring nonprofit organization, Apatow has created an irresistible, ultimate-insider's comedy-interview extravaganza.--Seaman, Donna Copyright 2015 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this hilarious, insightful, and deeply personal look into what makes comedians tick, writer-director-producer Apatow (Freaks and Geeks, The 40-Year-Old Virgin, etc.) gives his fellow comedy nerds a generations-spanning backstage peek at some of America's greatest humorists. Apatow includes his interviews with a veritable Who's Who of the comedy world, from old-school stalwarts Mel Brooks and Steve Martin to Apatow's contemporaries, including Ben Stiller, Adam Sandler, Amy Schumer, and Lena Dunham. Each talk is quirky and personable in its own way; what makes them resonate even more is the fact that Apatow undertook several of them while still in high school and working for the student radio station, lugging a tape recorder around to interview comedians and asking them "How do you write a joke?" One of the best interviews, which he did in 1983 at age 15, is with Jerry Seinfeld, a scenario the two repeated in 2014. Apatow's undeniable respect for his comedy idol is clear, and so is Seinfeld's genuine interest in discussing his craft, even with a teenager. Apatow's breadth of experience is not nearly as impressive as the sheer pleasure he so obviously derives from talking about the craft he loves with people who love it too. This exploration of what it really means to be funny, day in and day out, is for the comedian in everyone. (June) c Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Review by Library Journal Review

Apatow, best known for wedding low comedy with honest emotion in such films as The 40 Year-Old Virgin, Knocked Up, and Funny People here examines his life, work, and other random concerns. His conversation partners include almost every important comedic artist of the last 50 years. Albert Brooks, Mike Nichols, Gary Shandling, and Lena -Dunham are but a sampling from the long list of actors, writers, and directors who discuss craft and career with the director/author. There are a brace of interviews from 1984 conducted by a 15-year-old Apatow with Jay Leno, Jerry Seinfeld, Steve Allen, and others that showcase the budding talent pressing his elders for information not only on technique but also how to pave a path into the profession. These are bookended with present-day interviews with such emerging talents as Amy Schumer, in which Apatow assumes the mentor role with generosity and humility. -VERDICT An exceptional volume; in a field where shallowness is a hallmark, these artists reveal an unexpected depth. For all libraries. [See Prepub Alert, 1/5/15.]-John Frank, Los Angeles P.L. © Copyright 2015. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Three decades of interviews with comedy greats conducted by writer, producer, and director Apatow (The 40-Year-Old Virgin, Knocked Up, etc.). The author's sprawling and insightful collection of interviews with some of the biggest and most respected names in comedy was a project that began over 30 years ago when, as a high schooler in Long Island, he coerced various agents and managers to grant him time to speak with comedians for his school radio program. Such ambition is a testament to Apatow's self-stated obsession with comedy and an unyielding desire to learn as much as he could about the form. The early interviews, often conducted when the author was only 15, offer a unique glimpse into the minds of the rising comedic stars of the 1980se.g., Jerry Seinfeld, Jay Leno, Paul Reiser, and Harold Ramis. Little did Apatow know that he was interviewing future megastars, and the comedians were unaware that the young man hoisting his giant tape recorder during the interview would become a comedic sensation in his own right. The author also wisely conducts follow-up interviews with several comedians for juxtapositions that are the most immediate charms in a book nearly bursting with them. The table of contents is a who's who of major players: Martin Short, Steve Martin, Chris Rock, Mel Brooks, Sarah Silverman, Louis C.K., Jim Carrey, Seth Rogen, and Stephen Colbert, among others. For added perspective, Apatow also includes interviews with less-conventional funny people like musician Eddie Vedder, novelist and artist Miranda July, and director Spike Jonze. The persistent theme across this diverse range of interviews is the comedian as tireless tradesman constantly touring and honing his craft. The candidness of the interviews also exposes the peculiar community of comedians with anecdotes and cameos unlikely to be heard elsewhere. A delightful and hilarious read for anyone interested in what makes comedians tick. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Adam Sandler (2009) I met Adam Sandler when I was in my early twenties. He was known at that time as the stud man from the MTV game show Remote Control. He also happened to be an extremely original and gifted comedian. We all knew that Adam was going to rule comedy one day; we just didn't know yet how that would come to pass. What would the trigger be? The first step was when he was asked to do stand-up on David Letterman, and killed; then he was flying off to audition for Saturday Night Live; and then, suddenly, I didn't have a roommate anymore. Those days living with Adam were, in some ways, the time of our lives; we still get on the phone every now and then, twenty years later, and reminisce about it. It was a time when all we did, all day long, was kill time and write jokes and then, at night, tell jokes at the Improv, then we ate fettuccini Alfredo with Budd Friedman and one of the many comedians we looked up to. It was a special, carefree time. We were all working so hard to succeed, but having fun being knucklehead kids, too. In 2009, I got to make Funny People with Adam, which turned out to be one of the most rewarding experiences of my career. He was so successful at the time, I honestly wasn't sure I would be able to maintain control of the project; I worried about how far he'd be willing to go with so much on the line. But Adam was a true collaborator. He was incredibly brave. He never once said, "I don't want to do that," or, "That might make me look bad." And in the process, he revealed a side of himself that most people had never seen before. Even more fun than making the movie was the press tour. From the beginning, Adam declared he didn't want to do any interviews without me, which led to me and Adam being in rooms together, having to do interviews with a different person every eight minutes in countries all over the world, and trying to figure out ways to make each other laugh. One of the high points of that press tour, for me, was our appearance on the Charlie Rose show, because Adam is an extremely private person who rarely talks in public about his life and career. We did it together, like old roommates. I liked it so much that I put it on the DVD for Funny People. And I present it again here now. Charlie Rose: I am pleased to have Adam Sandler and Judd Apatow back at this table. Welcome. Adam Sandler: Great to see you. Charlie: Now, where do we start? Tell me when you two first met. Adam: After I moved out to L.A., I was twenty-two and went onstage at the Valley Improv. There used to be an improv at a hotel in the Valley. They had that for a few years. It's gone now but, uh, I did pretty well that night. That wasn't a normal thing. Usually I didn't do well and so I ran to a phone to call my dad--"It's going all right, Dad." And if I remember correctly, I think Apatow was lurking around the phones, kind of looking at me, and I'm, All right, this guy's looking at me. And then he came up to me and said, "Hey, I'm Judd, I saw you out in New York, you do that Baryshnikov bit." I used to have a bit I'd wear sweatpants onstage and say here's my impression of Baryshnikov and I'd pull them up and show the lack of bulge-- Charlie: The what? Adam: The lack of bulge. Anyway, Judd mentioned he liked it and we started talking. Judd Apatow: It sounds like a come-on. I love your bulge. Charlie: So he started talking to you--and then? Adam: And then we became friends--very good friends. I was out there with a few guys from NYU. We all made the move together and then they couldn't afford rent anymore so I was like, I need a roommate who's going to pay. Judd: I don't remember that. I don't remember that. Adam: Everybody was moving out of that house. Charlie: Where were you in your life, at that point? Judd: I went to USC cinema school for a year and a half and then I basically ran out of money and interest. How I knew that was, during college I went on The Dating Game and I won a trip to Acapulco, but it was happening during finals week--so I dropped out of college. Charlie: Oh my God. How was Acapulco? Judd: I got sunburned the first day and couldn't leave the room for the next two days. And so I was living with my grandma Molly and my mom and working the clubs at night and emceeing at the Improv. So I was happy to move out to L.A. Charlie: You were doing stand-up and emceeing at the Improv? Judd: For money, I worked for Comic Relief producing benefits during the day so I had enough to pay my four-hundred-and-twenty-five-dollars-a-month rent. Adam: He was making five hundred bucks a week. He was the only one of us who was guaranteed to pull in five hundred a week. We'd always say, "How's he getting this Comic Relief job?" He would go in for a few hours and come back--he's getting five hundred for only a couple of hours a day. There was a lot of anger towards him. Charlie: What was he like as a roommate? I mean you were, he was Felix and you were-- Adam: I guess I was Oscar, you know, yeah. Judd's a very, uh-- Charlie: Fastidious. Adam: He is. Charlie: And after being roommates, you remained friends? You stayed in touch? Judd: When Adam got Saturday Night Live, he left and, you know, there was a question of whether or not he was going to keep the apartment in L.A. I quickly realized that wasn't going to happen. And so I got another apartment. Adam: That I had a room in. Judd: That, yes, you had a room in. Adam: He moved to another apartment, and just for my L.A. visits, which weren't that frequent, he had an extra room for me. Judd: It was very exciting because Adam got the job on Saturday Night Live out of the blue, which shocked me because Adam's stand-up was kind of mumbling and bizarre and he didn't do characters. He didn't come from Second City, and then suddenly he's like, "I'm the new cast member on Saturday Night Live." How did that happen? Adam: You know what is insane? How cocky I was back then. When I got offered Saturday Night Live, they offered me to be a writer and then eventually a performer and I was going, "I don't know if I want to do that. These guys don't understand." And all my friends were like, "Just do it, you idiot." Charlie: Dummy. Adam: Exactly. Charlie: So why didn't you make a movie together until now? Adam: We did. We've worked on a bunch of movies together. Judd: I started doing The Ben Stiller Show, which was a show that Ben and I created and was on for a season on Fox. That was the first big TV gig I got after writing jokes for people for a long time. I was doing that while Adam was on Saturday Night Live and then we both started writing movies. Adam wrote Billy Madison and I co-wrote a movie called Heavyweights with Steve Brill, and our friend Jack Giarraputo that Adam went to college with was the associate producer. Adam: He [Jack] was your assistant. Judd: He was my assistant. And then he moved over to Billy Madison, and then we worked together a little bit when I did some rewrites on Happy Gilmore. So every few years, I would come in and help out. I always wanted to do this but I did feel like I needed to have learned enough to be able to take on something so ambitious. Charlie: And what did you want to do? Judd: To make a movie with Adam and to make it personal because, you know, we know each other so well. I always wanted to tap into that but I also didn't know how to direct so I needed ten or fifteen years to get that together. Adam: I always knew Judd was--you know, we have similar tastes. He's doing movies differently than I did them but we always made each other laugh. We always felt comfortable with each other. We liked the same things. Judd liked a lot of stuff I never even heard about, a lot of music, a lot of movies. He brought me in to a different world. Then Judd gave me--he said, "Check out my movie, Knocked Up." I was shooting a movie at the time. I watched it in my trailer with a couple of my buddies and I was just like, Apatow is unbelievable. I called him up and said, "Judd, whatever is next, let's do it." And he said, "All right, I think I'm going to have something." Charlie: See, that says something interesting about him, doesn't it? Looking out for himself by calling you up and saying, "You know I admire what you do, and think about me the next time you make something that might be right." And on the other hand, he's a huge star when he makes that call. Judd: I was thrilled and then I instantly had to go in my notebook and be like, What would be the idea for Adam? Oh, maybe this one? I'd always wanted to make a movie about comedians. It's not a subject that's been handled great on film and if you do it badly, all comedians will hate you for the rest of your life. So you feel that pressure but in the back of my head I thought, I think I'm one of the few people that know this world enough to get it across on-screen. It just took a long time to work up the courage. Charlie: Before we talk about Funny People, both of you know comedians, you understand comedians. You are comedians. What are the common denominators among the people you know who do what you do, whatever variation of it: write jokes, stand-up, comic films, whatever? Judd: In personality, it's different. There are some guys who are kind of smart and witty and funny, and there are some guys who are just a little bit off, and there's some guys who clearly got a beat-down at some point during their young life and that made them feel the need to get attention. Charlie: And so which one is he? Adam: So many of those. Charlie: All of the above. Judd: There is a moment on Garry Shandling's DVD commentary for The Larry Sanders Show where he talks about this with Jerry Seinfeld and Jerry Seinfeld says to Garry, "Why can't you be a comedian just because you're talented and you're smart and that's why you're a comedian?" Charlie: That's what I would ask, yes. Judd: And Garry just goes, "Why so angry, Jerry?" I think that captures it. Charlie: Okay, Funny People. Judd: Yes. Charlie: What's the passion you had for this? Judd: I wanted to talk about when I first became a comedian and the moment I was allowed into the world of comics, which was very exciting for me. The people I worked with when I first started were incredibly nice to me and I was just in heaven being around them. You know, I wrote for Roseanne and Tom Arnold. That was one of my first jobs. They bought me a Rolex for Christmas. They paid me eight hundred dollars a week and suddenly I could afford valet parking. It was all positive so I knew I needed to fabricate something and then I had another idea, which is, I wanted to write a movie about someone who is sick who gets better-- Charlie: Who is sick with a terminal illness and thinks it's all over. Judd: Yes, and it's about how he realizes that he's more comfortable being sick and the way that makes him feel, in terms of appreciating life, than he is when he gets better. Suddenly, there's time again and he starts becoming neurotic and has kind of a meltdown. That was the initial thought. Charlie: In your mind, what's the push-pull between, I want to tell this interesting-but-serious story and at the same time, I make comedies? Judd: I thought that if this story happened in the world of comedians it would inherently have a lot of humor in it. But what I thought in my head was, I'm not going to let the joke count determine what the movie is. Charlie: I'm not going to go for easy jokes? Judd: I'm not going to go for big set pieces. Usually when you make a comedy, you think, Okay, every ten minutes something crazy has to happen. The energy has to kick in. And here, I just said, Well, there will be a lot of stand-up in the movie and the conversations will be funny and intense, but I'll let the emotional life of it rule the day in terms of how this works. And that was tricky to do. It's tough to shake it off and just say, Okay, no, this scene's intense and that's it. When you're testing a movie, if it's a comedy, you hear the laughs and you go, That scene works. But if it's a sad scene and you've watched it two hundred times, it's a little trickier to go, How did we do there? Did you feel something? I wish there was a noise for feeling. Then I could go, Okay, they made the weird noise. Charlie: Adam, tell me about George Simmons, your character. How is he different from anybody you played before? Adam: He's a little more raw. He shows a darker, nastier side--you know, what I like about playing the guy is you're never sure what the response is going to be. Seth Rogen plays my assistant. He's a nice young kid and one second I'm warm to him and the next second I'm abusing him. Seth never knew which way we were going to go with it, and when I first read the script I was like, "Oh, man, I am such a bad person in this movie." And he would always say, "Really? You think so? I don't know. I think he's a nice guy," and I'd be like, "I don't know, I don't know." But the way Judd put the movie together was like, All right, you see why this guy became a certain way and you forgive him. Excerpted from Sick in the Head: Conversations about Life and Comedy by Judd Apatow All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.