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Who is Mel Brooks?
Melvin James Kaminsky, popularly known as Mel Brooks, is a famous American comedian, director, producer, screenwriter, actor, composer, and lyricist. He was born in a Jewish household in New York. He served in the US military as a corporal before shifting his attention to playing the piano and performing stand-up comedy acts in the ‘Borscht Belt’ resorts. From there on, his comic skills were recognized and he was hired to write for the comedy series ‘Your Show of Shows.’ Brooks contributed as a writer for many sitcoms during the early period of his life. After cementing his place in Hollywood, he went on to direct movies like ‘The Producers,’ ‘Young Frankenstein,’ ‘The Twelve Chairs,’ etc. He started his own production company under the name ‘Brooksfilms’ and produced a number of films. He also produced, wrote, and directed many Broadway musicals. He is one of the few artists in Hollywood to have received ‘Emmy,’ ‘Grammy,’ ‘Oscar,’ and ‘Tony Awards’ (EGOT). He has also received ‘AFI Life Achievement Award’ and three of his films are named in the American Film Institute's list of ‘top 100 comedy films of all-time.’
Career
After his stint in the military during ‘World War II,’ Brooks played piano at the ‘Borscht Belt’ resorts and started working as a stand-up comedian. He also did some comic radio work as well. He eventually became the master entertainer at ‘Grossinger's Catskill Resort Hotel.’
In 1949, Brooks was hired by his friend Sid Caesar to write comic one-liners for the NBC series ‘The Admiral Broadway Revue.’ The job paid him 50 US dollars per week. He was happy to be a comedy writer.
In 1950, Sid Caesar came up with his own variety comedy series called ‘Your Show of Shows,’ which had Brooks as a writer along with Carl Reiner, Mel Tolkin, Neil Simon, etc. The series was an instant hit and ran for four years.
In 1954, Brooks wrote for another Caesar’s show called ‘Caesar’s Hour’ along with the same writing cast from ‘Your Show of Shows.’ It ran for three years at the end of which Brooks wrote ‘Shinbone Alley,’ his first Broadway musical.
In the late-1950s, Brooks became good friends with his co-writer Carl Reiner and they both started working on various comedy routines. They created the ‘2000 Year Old Man’ and performed the routine in New York, where it became a cult success.
From 1960 to 1962, Brooks and Reiner expanded the ‘2000 Year Old Man’ and took it to Hollywood and began performing it on ‘The Steve Allen Show.’ They also released a comedy album titled ‘2000 Years with Carl Reiner and Mel Brooks.’
In 1962, he wrote ‘All American,’ a musical Broadway. Ray Bolger starred in the Broadway, which had lyrics by Lee Adams and music by Charles Strouse. The show ran for 80 performances and won two ‘Tony Awards.’
In 1963, Brooks wrote the script for an animated short film called ‘The Critic’ with an arty and obscure concept. The movie was directed by Ernest Pintoff. The movie won an ‘Oscar’ under the ‘Animated Short Film’ category.
‘Get Smart,’ a comedy series created by Brooks and Buck Henry, ran on American television from 1965 to 1970. It was a comedy series based on a clumsy spy who gets inspired by ‘James Bond.’ It received seven ‘Emmys’ in total.
In 1967, he made his first directorial venture, ‘The Producers.’ It was released as an art film because of its bizarre concept and satirical take on Hitler. It received an ‘Oscar’ and was later turned into a musical, receiving 12 ‘Tony Awards.’
In 1970, Brooks made the movie ‘The Twelve Chairs,’ loosely based on the Russian novel with the same title. The movie was shot in Yugoslavia on a budget of 1.5 million US dollars, but it failed to achieve commercial success.
In 1972, Brooks signed a deal with ‘Warner Brothers’ to re-write the script of what was then known as ‘Tex-X.’ He was later hired as the director for the movie and it was called ‘Blazing Saddles.’ It was the second-highest grossing film of the year.
In 1974, ‘Young Frankenstein’ released. It starred Gene Wilder, Marty Feldman, Peter Boyle, etc. and had Gene Hackman in an unforgettable cameo. It was the third-highest grossing film of the year and received two ‘Oscar’ nominations.
In 1975, Brooks went back to television and made a series called ‘When Things Were Rotten.’ It was a parody on the story of Robin Hood. It did not do very well and lasted for only 13 episodes.
In 1976, he released ‘Silent Movie,’ which was written and developed along with Ron Clark. It was the first full-length silent comedy in decades. It was not as successful as the last few movies by Brooks.
In 1977, Brooks made a parody on Alfred Hitchcock’s movies like ‘Vertigo,’ ‘Psycho,’ ‘Suspicion,’ ‘Dial M for Murder,’ etc., and the parody was called ‘High Anxiety.’ It was written by Brooks, Ron Clark, Rudy De Luca, and Barry Levinson.
In 1980, Brooks produced ‘The Elephant Man,’ which was directed by David Lynch. It was produced under ‘Brooksfilms,’ a production company that produced only non-comedy ventures.
In 1981, he wrote, produced, and directed a movie called ‘History of the World Part I,’ which was a parody on the history of mankind until the time of the French Revolution. It received mixed reviews and was a moderate commercial hit.
In 1983, Brooks produced and starred in the remake of Ernst Lubitsch’s film ‘To Be or Not to Be.’ It was directed by Alan Johnson. Brooks played the role of Hitler in the movie; it was a satire on Germany during WW II.
From 1987 to 1989, Brooks directed a comedy science fiction titled ‘Spaceballs.’ He also made a sitcom called ‘The Nutt House’ which was broadcast on NBC. The series did not do very well commercially.
In the 1990s, Brooks directed movies like ‘Life Stinks,’ a critical and commercial failure, ‘Robin Hood: Men in Tights,’ which was loosely based on his sitcom ‘When Things Were Rotten,’ and ‘Dracula: Dead and Loving It.’
In the 2000s, he appeared in TV series like ‘The Simpsons,’ ‘Mad About You,’ ‘Curb Your Enthusiasm,’ ‘Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee,’ etc. He also did cameos in movies like ‘It’s a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie.’
Simultaneously, he also worked on musicals like ‘The Producers,’ ‘Young Frankenstein,’ etc. and appeared on the HBO special ‘Mel Brooks and Dick Cavett Together Again.’
He also voiced ‘Vlad’ in the animated comedy film ‘Hotel Transylvania 2’ in 2015. He reprised his role as ‘Vlad’ in ‘Hotel Transylvania 3: Summer Vacation’ in 2018.