Neil Simon Book
Neil Simon is perhaps Broadway's most decorated and most
performed playwright. He was born Marvin Simon in 1927
in The Bronx, New York City. Simon briefly attended New
York University in 1946. Two years later, he quit his
job as a mailroom clerk in the Warner Brothers offices
in Manhattan to write radio and television scripts with
his brother Danny Simon. Their revues for Camp Tamiment
in Pennsylvania in the early 1950s caught the attention
of Sid Caesar, who hired the duo for his popular TV comedy
series Your Show of Shows. (Simon later incorporated their
experiences into his play Laughter on the 23rd Floor.)
His work won him two Emmy Award nominations and the appreciation
of Phil Silvers, who hired him to write for his eponymous
sitcom in 1959.
In 1961, Simon's first Broadway play,
Come Blow Your Horn, opened at the Brooks Atkinson Theatre,
where it ran for 677 performances. Six weeks after its
closing, his second production, the musical Little Me
(starring former boss Caesar), opened to mixed reviews.
Although it failed to attract a large audience, it earned
Simon his first Tony Award nomination. He has won a total
of three and has been nominated for an additional fourteen.
His
prolific output includes light comedies (Barefoot in the
Park, The Odd Couple), darker, more autobiographical works
(Chapter Two, the Eugene trilogy comprised of Brighton
Beach Memoirs, Biloxi Blues and Broadway Bound), musical
comedies (Sweet Charity, Promises, Promises), and original
screenplays (The Out-of-Towners, Murder by Death, The
Goodbye Girl). Simon has an honorary L.H.D. degree from
Hofstra University and an honorary D.H.C. degree from
Williams College. He is the owner of the Eugene O'Neill
Theatre as well as the namesake of another Broadway house.
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