All about Me!: My Remarkable Life in Show Business

I said, “Well, we’re in show business. We can deal with that, whatever it is.”

So we get in front of this clerk and the kid was right. The clerk had the wackiest voice I had ever heard. He started with, “Dooo youuuu Anna Marie Louise Italianoooo…”

And already we were in big trouble. For the rest of the ceremony Anne and I never looked at each other, because if we did, we knew we’d crash to the floor laughing. Somehow, we got through the ceremony. All’s well that ends well.

We took a cab back home to the village kissing each other and both kissing the earring that had become our wedding ring.





Chapter 10


The Producers


Once Get Smart sold to NBC, I didn’t have to worry as much about making a living and instead, I could think about what I really wanted to do. I knew that I wanted to write a play on Broadway, all about a play on Broadway.

Like I said earlier, the main character in The Producers, Max Bialystock, had been forming in my subconscious ever since I worked for that larger-than-life Broadway producer Benjamin Kutcher, when I got back from the war in the late forties. The thrust of the plot was bold and simple: You could make more money with a flop than you could with a hit.

I wrote a brief synopsis of a three-act play called Springtime for Hitler. Why Springtime for Hitler? Well, I knew I needed a terrible play for the producers to achieve their goal of a play that would close on opening night. Remember—you could make more money with a flop than you could with a hit.

So I was blessed with an inspiration: How about a musical called Springtime for Hitler—A Gay Romp with Adolf and Eva at Berchtesgaden? That would surely send the opening-night audience fleeing the theater before the first act was over, and certainly garner the worst notices the critics had ever bestowed on a Broadway play.

The story line went like this: Bialystock and Bloom, my producers, would find the worst play ever written, which led me to create Franz Liebkind, not only one of the worst writers that ever wielded a pen, but also a regenerate dyed-in-the-wool Nazi. He was madly in love with his Führer, Adolf Hitler, and always wore a World War II German helmet splattered with pigeon droppings.

    The next step would be to find the worst director who ever directed a play on Broadway. Thus assuring our crooked heroes the worst production ever produced on Broadway. And to top it all off, the very worst actors to ever set foot on a Broadway stage. (I knew I could find those characters; there were always plenty of very good and bad actors around.)

Then, taking a page out of the past, Bialystock would entertain a collection of little old ladies who would be happy to invest in his play for a few kisses and a little flattery.

I sent the outline of Springtime for Hitler to several Broadway producers to see if anyone was interested and excited enough to actually produce it. The most interesting response I got was from Kermit Bloomgarden, who had produced Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman, one of the most memorable plays ever on Broadway. He was kind enough to invite me to lunch, where he told me, “This is a great idea, but you have too many characters in too many scenes. One of the unwritten rules of getting your money back on Broadway is no more than one set and five characters. We try to stick to that. You have about thirty-five characters in thirty-five sets. It is not a play. What it is, is a movie. Write it as a screenplay and you’ve got a chance for success.”

He made a lot of sense.

So I immediately began writing it as a movie. He was right. I could see it, scene after scene. I could almost hear the dialogue.

It went something like this:

BLOOM

Amazing. It’s absolutely amazing.

But under the right circumstances, a producer could make more money with a flop than he could with a hit.

QUICK CUT TO BIALYSTOCK’S SLEEPING FACE.

HIS EYES POP OPEN.

CUT BACK TO BLOOM.

     BLOOM

Yes. Yes. It’s quite possible.

If he were certain the show would fail, a man could make a fortune.

BIALYSTOCK

Yes?

BLOOM

Yes, what?

BIALYSTOCK

What you were saying. Keep talking.

BLOOM

What was I saying?

BIALYSTOCK

You were saying that under the right circumstances, a producer could make more money with a flop than he could with a hit.

BLOOM

Yes, it’s quite possible.

BIALYSTOCK

You keep saying that, but you don’t tell me how. How could a producer make more money with a flop than with a hit?

BLOOM

It’s simply a matter of creative accounting.

Let us assume, just for the moment, that you are a dishonest man.

BIALYSTOCK

Assume away!



The wonderfully talented Alfa-Betty Olsen (who had helped Buck and me work on the pilot of Get Smart) once again assisted me in translating my play outline into a screenplay, and with her invaluable help, I set sail.

    While I was writing the screenplay, I hit a stone wall. I would need a production number so awful that it would send the first-night audience flying out of the theater. I had a great title; a big musical celebration of the Third Reich called “Springtime for Hitler.” But who could write the song? I mentioned my dilemma to Anne.

“I know who could write it,” she said.

“Who?” I asked.

“You,” she said. “You’re musical. You’re a good singer. You never stop singing around the house! And besides, you’re a born songwriter. No one else could write ‘Springtime for Hitler’ but you. So here’s a pad and a pencil. Go into the next room, and I bet within an hour you’ll come out with the beginning of a song.”

I did exactly what she said. I took a pad, a pencil, and went into the next room. And one hour and one month later, came out with “Springtime for Hitler.” I had come up with not only the lyrics but also the tune, which I’d heard in my head, picked out on a piano, and then sung into a tape recorder. A full 32-bar song that a musicologist friend of mine then transcribed into actual notes on actual music paper, a method of composing I’ve since used for all of my songs.

(After all, I went to VMI, not Juilliard.)

I loved music to death, but I never thought that I could write music itself from a blank page, that I could compose a song. I developed my method right then, which was, and still is, that the songs are written for characters within a story. I just don’t sit down and write like other composers who write a love song. For me it always comes from the story or the characters. So for this story, I came up with the most offensive song in the world that would have Jews looking for the exit doors.

Here’s a sample:

    Germany was having trouble

What a sad, sad story

Needed a new leader

     To restore its former glory

Where, oh where was he?

Where could that man be?

We looked around

And then we found

The man for you and me

And now it’s

Springtime for Hitler and Germany

Deutschland is happy and gay

We’re marching to a faster pace

Look out

Here comes the master race!

Mel Brooks's books